Miguel Ángel González (boxer)
Miguel Ángel González | |
---|---|
Statistics | |
Real name | Miguel Ángel González Dávila |
Nickname(s) | El Mago;[1] Santa Tokyo[2] |
Rated at |
Lightweight Light Welterweight Welterweight |
Height | 1.74 m (5 ft 8 1⁄2 in)[2] |
Reach | 1.73 m (68 in)[2] |
Nationality | Mexican |
Born |
Colonia Roma, a district of Mexico City, Mexico[3] | 15 November 1970
Stance | Orthodox[2] |
Boxing record | |
Total fights | 57[2] |
Wins | 51 |
Wins by KO | 40 |
Losses | 5 |
Draws | 1 |
Miguel Ángel González Dávila, also known as El Mago[1] (born 15 November 1970 at Colonia Roma, a district of Mexico City),[3] is a Mexican professional boxer best known to be world lightweight champion as a professional. He also campaigned as a junior welterweight, as well as welterweight in his career, and is currently rated as a junior middleweight but was never as respected as in his best weightclass.
Beginnings and amateur
González grew up in a middle-class family among the suburbs of Mexico City, Mexico. At the age of 15, he began his amateur boxing career under the tutelage of legendary Mexican trainer, Pancho Rosales.
En route to an amateur record of 63-3, Gonzalez defeated future World Boxing Council (WBC) junior lightweight titleholder Gabriel Ruelas in 1988 to earn a spot on Mexico's Olympic team as a featherweight. He lost his first match to local Lee Jae-Hyuk.[4]
Pro
González turned pro at age 17 on January 21, 1989, and scored a fifth-round technical knockout over Isidro Pacheco in Ciudad Victoria, Mexico.[2]
After fighting for nearly two years in Mexico, González moved to Japan in the late 1980s and lived there through most of 1991. While residing there, he floored all five of his opponents and was a neighbor of future world champions Yuri Arbachakov and Orzubek Nazarov (also lightweight title holder). It was there that González got his nickname "Santa Tokyo".
On August 24, 1992, González received his first world title shot when he faced Colombian puncher Wilfrido Rocha for the World Boxing Council lightweight title in Mexico City. In a sensational fight, González had his hands full with Rocha, who put the Mexican native on the canvas in the second round. González also had his nose bloodied by his game opponent, but managed to roar back in rounds four and five. González eventually cut Rocha and forced the referee to halt matters in the ninth.
Following nine successful title defenses across two-and-one-half years (Dec. 1992 - June '95), he was dominant at the start KOing contenders Leavander Johnson and Jean-Baptiste Mendy but lost his form and struggled later. Gonzalez won a hard-fought, and somewhat controversial, majority decision over Lamar Murphy on Aug. 19, 1995, in Las Vegas.
Higher Weightclasses
After the Murphy fight, González decided to vacate his title. Finding it more and more difficult to maintain the lightweight limit, González moved up one weight class with the guarantee of becoming the WBC No. 1 140-pound contender and a receiving a shot at the winner of the Julio César Chávez-Oscar De La Hoya fight.
In 1996, González, campaigning at 143 and 144 pounds, notched three non-title victories, including a fifth-round TKO over Juan Soberanes on May 18, 1996, in Las Vegas.
Exactly eight months later on January 18, 1997, González faced WBC super lightweight champion Oscar De La Hoya. De La Hoya was the naturally bigger man coming into the bout. Although González lost a 12-round unanimous decision, he counter-attacked well by utilizing his right hand (which in the end caused a bad swelling on De La Hoya's left cheek) to keep the champion away. He also did, however, get two points deducted for repeated fouls which included low blows, rabbit punches, and hitting on the break.
Gonzalez rebounded quickly from the loss to de la Hoya by stopping Bert Granciosa in the third round as part of Evander Holyfield vs. Mike Tyson II undercard on June 28, 1997.
As the then-WBC No. 2 super lightweight contender, and with the belt vacant, González received his opportunity to fight for another belt and take on his own boyhood idol, Chávez. Originally scheduled for October 25, 1997, the showdown was postponed when Chávez suffered an injury during training camp. More than five months later on March 7, 1998, the war between Mexican heroes finally took place live on pay per view from Mexico City.
As the main event in both fighters' homeland, the two former champions entered as top-ranked contenders for the WBC super lightweight belt and battled for 12 grueling rounds. González came out strong in most of the rounds and dominated the first minute or two before Chávez dug down deep to dominate the remainder of the stanzas. When the scorecards were tallied, one judge had it 116-114 for González, another saw it 115-114 for Chávez, while the final judge scored it even at 115-115.
After fighting to a draw against Chávez, González returned four months later and tallied a fifth-round TKO over Alexis Pérez on July 11, 1998, in San Antonio, Texas. Gonzalez landed a furious barrage in the fifth and forced the stoppage.
Stepping into the ring following a 14-month layoff due to repeated injury, Gonzalez took on Interim WBC Super Lightweight Champion, Kostya Tszyu, for the vacant title on Showtime August 21, 1999, in Miami.
After suffering an incidental head butt in the first round that opened a cut over his left eye, Gonzalez responded in kind in the second and attempted to hit Tszyu with low blows. His dirty tactics did not work as Tszyu thoroughly dominated his opponent. After watching his fighter withstand brutal combinations from Tszyu for much of the bout, González' trainer, Abel Sánchez, asked Referee Frank Santore to stop the bout with 48 seconds remaining in the 10th round.
After more than 15 months outside of the ring, González returned on December 2, 2000, in Las Vegas, and earned an opening-round TKO over Alex Lubo.
Three months later in his sole 2001 outing, González dropped a stunning 10-round split decision to lightly regarded Manuel Gomez in Las Vegas. Gomez, who had not fought since November 1998, outworked the former world champion en route to winning by the scores 97-92 and 95-94 for Gomez and 95 apiece.
Again González spent more than one year outside the ring before fighting 14 months later on May 3, 2002, in Ensenada, Mexico, against Roberto Urias. Three rounds into the contest, Gonzalez sent Urias to the canvas.
In his next outing 16 months later, Gonzalez floored Christian Solano three times en route to tallying a fifth-round TKO on September 6, 2003, in Mexico City. The first knockdown occurred in round two with a right hook to the head. Gonzalez then sent Solano to the canvas again in the third with another right hook, before ending matters with a right hook to the body in the fifth.
González closed out his 15th year as a pro with an opening-round TKO over Gregorio Balcazar on October 18, 2003, and a fourth-round KO against Norberto Sandoval on November 28, 2003.
González registered a 10-round unanimous decision over Ernesto Carmona on May 22, 2004, in one of the bloodiest bouts of the year.
In his last outing, González had earned the right to face undisputed welterweight champion Cory Spinks at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas on September 4. González took the fight to the elusive Spinks from the opening bell, throwing a lot of leather, but the slick southpaw champion proved too hard to find. Gonzalez lost by decision.
The following year, he challenged (then) WBA welterweight champion, Luis Collazo. He lost by TKO in the 8th round. Then, in 2006, he fought twice against low-ranked opponents in Mexico, winning both. He is still considered active following these last two fights, and it is not clear when González is planning to announce his retirement.
Miguel Ángel González is recognized as one of the best lightweight of the early 1990s. Due to his impressive unbeaten streak, he was once held in the same regard as Julio César Chávez and Ricardo Lopez (arguably the best and most popular Mexican boxers during the same period), but his star began to fade in the latter half of the decade as he failed to recapture his dominant form once he moved up to junior welterweight. Losses to De La Hoya and Tszyu, failure to defeat the aging Chavez, repeated injury, and lack of championship titles diminished his stature as an elite boxer. His decline also coincided with the rise of fresh Mexican stars, most notably Marco Antonio Barrera and Erik Morales.
Preceded by Pernell Whitaker Vacated |
WBC Lightweight Champion 24 Aug 1992–1995 Vacates |
Succeeded by Jean-Baptiste Mendy |
External links
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "A sus 40 años de edad, el ex campeón mundial Miguel Ángel González volverá a los encordados" (in Spanish). Televisa Deportes. 17 August 2010. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 "Miguel Angel Gonzalez". BoxRec. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Zenteno, Arturo (18 July 2014). "Miguel Ángel González: Un olímpico que brilló en el profesionalismo" (in Spanish). Retrieved 21 September 2014.
El capitalino Miguel Ángel González Dávila, nacido el 15 de noviembre de 1970 en la popular colonia Roma, era una de las grandes esperanzas del equipo olímpico mexicano de boxeo que participó en los Juegos de Seúl en 1988
- ↑ González Gómez, César. "Los 7 mejores mexicanos con pasado olímpico" (in Spanish). Izquierdazo. Retrieved 21 September 2014.