Oscar de la Hoya
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| Oscar de la Hoya | |
| Statistics | |
|---|---|
| Real name | Oscar de la Hoya |
| Nickname(s) | Golden Boy |
| Rated at | Super Welterweight |
| Nationality | American |
| Birth date | February 4, 1973 |
| Birth place | Los Angeles, California |
| Stance | Orthodox |
| Boxing record | |
| Total fights | 43 |
| Wins | 38 |
| Wins by KO | 30 |
| Losses | 5 |
| Draws | 0 |
| No contests | 0 |
Oscar de la Hoya (pronounced /ˈɒskər dɛlə ˈhɔɪə/[1]) (born February 4, 1973) — nicknamed the Golden Boy — is a Mexican American boxer who won a gold medal for the United States Boxing Team at the Barcelona Olympic Games. De La Hoya comes from a boxing family, his grandfather, father and brother were all boxers but it was Oscar who took his boxing to the superstar level. De La Hoya became Ring Magazine's "Fighter of the Year" in 1995 and Ring Magazine's best "Pound for Pound" fighter in the world in 1997. His fights throughout his entire career have generated a total of almost half a billion dollars in sales alone. De La Hoya defeated over a dozen world champions and has won 6 world titles. De La Hoya's amateur career included 223 wins, 163 by way of knockout and only 5 losses. He won the United States' only boxing gold medal at the 1992 Summer Olympics, knocking down his opponent, a win which he dedicated to his deceased mother.
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On November 23, 1992, De La Hoya made his professional debut. He won titles in 6 different weight divisions including junior lightweight, lightweight, super lightweight, welterweight, junior middleweight and middleweight. He also beat former and current world champions Troy Dorsey (TKO 1), Jorge Paez (KO 2), Genaro Hernandez (TKO 6), John John Molina (W 12), Rafael Ruelas (TKO 2), Julio César Chávez (TKO 4, TKO 8), Miguel Angel Gonzalez (W 12), Jesse James Leija (TKO 2), Pernell Whitaker, Hector "Macho" Camacho (W 12), Ike Quartey (W 12), Arturo Gatti (TKO 5), Javier Castillejo (W 12), and Fernando Vargas (TKO 11). His losses include a majority-decision loss to Félix Trinidad; two decision losses (one split and one unanimous) to Shane Mosley; a split decision to Floyd Mayweather, Jr.; and the only knockout he has suffered during his career, by Bernard Hopkins (KO 9). [2]
On September 14, 2002, de la Hoya fought "Ferocious" Fernando Vargas. Their feud had begun when de la Hoya allegedly laughed at Vargas years earlier when Vargas fell into a snowbank. [3] De La Hoya won the fight at 1:48 of round 11 (TKO 11).
On May 3, 2003, as part of the Cinco de Mayo festivities, he retained his WBC and WBA world junior middleweight championships when the corner of former world champion Yory Boy Campas threw in the towel, and officially gave de la Hoya a seventh round technical-knockout win. On September 13, he and former rival Mosley met once again, in Las Vegas, and Mosley won De La Hoya's world title belts via unanimous decision. De la Hoya would later demand an investigation into the scorecards. [4]
De la Hoya next challenged Felix Sturm for the WBO world middleweight title on June 5, 2004. He was awarded a unanimous decision, to become the first boxer in history to win world titles in six different weight divisions. All three judges scored the bout 115-113 in favor of De La Hoya. Compubox statistics counted Sturm as landing 234 of 541 punches, while counting De La Hoya as landing 188 of 792. [5]
De la Hoya attempted to unify that title with the three other world middleweight championships, held by Bernard Hopkins, on September 18. He lost to Hopkins by a ninth round knockout, in a fight he was arguably winning. A left hand to the body sent him to the canvas, knocking De La Hoya out for the first time in his career. Hopkins was ahead on two scorecards by the scores of 79-73 and 78-74, while a third judge had De La Hoya winning 77-75. [6] De la Hoya made $30 million for the fight and Hopkins, who made only $300,000 in a fight just nine months before fighting de la Hoya, got a minimum of $10 million. It was the biggest payday of Hopkins's career. Hopkins would later join de la Hoya's own boxing promotion firm; he owns twelve percent of univision Golden Boy Promotions.
De la Hoya faced WBC world super welterweight champion Ricardo Mayorga on May 6, 2006 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. De la Hoya won by TKO at 1:25 in the 6th round due to referee stoppage. After the bout De la Hoya retired, for what would turn out to be only a matter of months.
De la Hoya returned in May 5, 2007 bout with Floyd Mayweather Jr., who is the welterweight champion. The fight took place at the MGM Grand Garden Arena. Early Las Vegas odds had Oscar as a 2-to-1 underdog to the younger Mayweather. De la Hoya lost his WBC junior middlewieght title as Mayweather Jr was declared the winner by split decision.The fight was close with Oscar getting the better of the early exchanges but Floyd took control and Oscar tired in the later rounds. Some critics, including Max Kellerman had Floyd winning by a landslide.
| Olympic medal record | |||
| Men's Boxing | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Gold | 1992 Barcelona | Lightweight | |
- 1990 Gold Medalist U.S. Olympic Cup
- 1990 Gold Medalist Goodwill Games
- 1990 Gold U.S. National Championships
- 1991 Gold Medalist USA vs. Olympic Festival
- 1992 Gold Medalist USA vs. Boxing National Championships
- 1992 Gold Medalist USA vs. Bulgaria
- 1992 Gold Medalist World Challenge
Amateur record: 224-5 with 164 knockouts
| Record to Date | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Won 38 (KOs 30) | Lost 5 | Drawn 0 | Total 43 |
| Date | Opponent | W-L-D | Location | Result | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007-05-05 | Floyd Mayweather Jr.
|
38-0-0 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | L SD 12 | ||||
| 2006-05-06 | Ricardo Mayorga
|
28-5-1 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 6 | ||||
| 2004-09-18 | Bernard Hopkins
|
44-2-1 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | L KO 9 | ||||
| 2004-06-05 | Felix Sturm
|
20-0-0 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W UD 12 | ||||
| 2003-09-13 | Shane Mosley
|
38-2-0 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | L UD 12 | ||||
| 2003-05-03 | Luis Ramon Campas
|
80-5-0 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 7 | ||||
| 2002-09-14 | Fernando Vargas
|
22-1-0 | Las Vegas, NV, U.S. | W TKO 11 | ||||
| 2001-06-23 | Javier Castillejo
|
51-4-0 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W UD 12 | ||||
| 2001-03-24 | Arturo Gatti | 33-4-0 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 5 | ||||
| 2000-06-17 | Shane Mosley
|
34-0-0 | Los Angeles, California, U.S. | L SD 12 | ||||
| 2000-02-26 | Derrell Coley | 34-1-2 | New York, New York, U.S. | W KO 7 | ||||
| 1999-09-18 | Felix Trinidad
|
35-0-0 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | L MD 12 | ||||
| 1999-05-22 | Oba Carr
|
48-2-1 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 11 | ||||
| 1999-02-13 | Ike Quartey
|
34-0-1 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W SD 12 | ||||
| 1998-09-18 | Julio César Chávez
|
101-2-2 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W RTD 8 | ||||
| 1998-06-13 | Patrick Charpentier
|
27-4-1 | El Paso, Texas, U.S. | W TKO 3 | ||||
| 1997-12-06 | Wilfredo Rivera
|
27-2-1 | Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S. | W TKO 8 | ||||
| 1997-09-13 | Hector Camacho
|
64-3-1 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W UD 12 | ||||
| 1997-06-14 | David Kamau
|
28-1-0 | San Antonio, Texas, U.S. | W KO 2 | ||||
| 1997-04-12 | Pernell Whitaker
|
40-1-1 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W UD 12 | ||||
| 1997-01-18 | Miguel Angel Gonzalez
|
41-0-0 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W UD 12 | ||||
| 1996-06-07 | Julio César Chávez
|
97-1-1 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 4 | ||||
| 1996-02-09 | Darryl Tyson | 47-8-1 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W KO 2 | ||||
| 1995-12-15 | Jesse James Leija
|
30-1-2 | New York, New York, U.S. | W TKO 2 | ||||
| 1995-09-09 | Genaro Hernandez
|
32-0-1 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 6 | ||||
| 1995-05-06 | Rafael Ruelas
|
43-1-0 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 2 | ||||
| 1995-02-18 | Juan Molina
|
36-3-0 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W UD 12 | ||||
| 1994-12-10 | John Avila
|
20-1-1 | Los Angeles, California, U.S. | W TKO 9 | ||||
| 1994-11-18 | Carl Griffith
|
28-3-2 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 3 | ||||
| 1994-07-29 | Jorge Paez
|
53-6-4 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W KO 2 | ||||
| 1994-05-27 | Giorgio Campanella
|
21-0-0 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 3 | ||||
| 1994-03-05 | Jimmi Bredahl
|
16-0-0 | Los Angeles, California, U.S. | W TKO 10 | ||||
| 1993-10-30 | Narciso Valenzuela | 35-13-2 | Phoenix, Arizona, U.S. | W KO 1 | ||||
| 1993-08-27 | Angelo Nuñez | 10-4-3 | Beverly Hills, California, U.S. | W TKO 4 | ||||
| 1993-08-14 | Renaldo Carter | 27-4-1 | Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, U.S. | W TKO 6 | ||||
| 1993-06-07 | Troy Dorsey | 15-7-4 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 1 | ||||
| 1993-05-08 | Frank Avelar | 15-3-0 | Primm, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 4 | ||||
| 1993-04-06 | Mike Grable | 13-1-2 | Rochester, New York, U.S. | W UD 8 | ||||
| 1993-03-13 | Jeff Mayweather | 23-2-2 | Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. | W TKO 4 | ||||
| 1993-02-06 | Curtis Strong | 14-6-2 | San Diego, California, U.S. | W TKO 4 | ||||
| 1993-01-03 | Paris Alexander | 15-6-2 | Hollywood, California, U.S. | W TKO 2 | ||||
| 1992-12-12 | Clifford Hicks | 13-6-0 | Phoenix, Arizona, U.S. | W KO 1 | ||||
| 1992-11-23 | Lamar Williams | 5-1-1 | Inglewood, California, U.S. | W KO 1 |
- Rafael Ruelas ( 5/95) 330,000 buys = $9.9 million
- Genaro Hernandez(9/95) 220,000 buys = $6.6 million
- M.A. Gonzalez(1/97) 345,000 buys = $12.1 million
- Pernell Whitaker(4/97) 720,000 buys = $28.8 million
- Hector Camacho(9/97) 560,000 buys = $22.4 million
- Wilfredo Rivera(12/97) 240,000 buys = $9.6 million
- J.C Chavez II ( 9/98) 525,000 buys = $23.6 million
- Ike Quartey ( 2/99) 570,000 buys =$25.7 million
- Felix Trinidad(9/99) 1.4 million buys = $71.4 million
- Shane Mosley(6/00) 590,000 buys = $29.5 million
- Javier Castillejo(6/01) 400,000 buys = $16.0 million
- Fernando Vargas(9/02) 935,000 buys = $47.8 million
- Yory Boy Campas(5/03) 350,000 buys = $17.5 million
- Shane Mosley II ( 9/03) 950,000 buys = $48.4 million
- Felix Sturm(6/04) 380,000 buys = $19.0 million
- Bernard Hopkins(9/04) 1 million buys = $56.0 million
- Ricardo Mayorga (5/06) 875,000 buys = $43.8 million
- Floyd Mayweather, Jr. (5/07) 2.15 million buys = $150 million
Became the richest fighter of all-time after fighting Floyd Mayweather Jr.
Totals: 11,665,000 buys, generating $594.3 million.[7]
De la Hoya has a daughter with model Shanna Moakler.
De la Hoya produced a boxing show on American cable channel HBO: a Spanish-language boxing show called Boxeo de Oro. He has one clothing line through Mervyns department stores, and released a Grammy-nominated CD, entitled Oscar de la Hoya. Released through EMI International on October 10, 2000, the self-titled CD is a Latin Pop album with thirteen tracks in both English and Spanish.
In the summer of 2004, de la Hoya starred in and hosted a boxing reality television series on Fox and Fox Sports Net titled The Next Great Champ.
In September 2007, de la Hoya's company Golden Boy Enterprises acquired The Ring Magazine, KO Magazine, World Boxing Magazine and Pro Wrestling Illustrated from Kappa Publishing Group.
De La Hoya has expressed interest in buying the Houston Dynamo, and has formed a partnership with Golden Boy investor Gabriel Brener in negotiations with their current owners, Anschutz Entertainment Group.[8]
- List of Olympic medalists in boxing
- List of lightweight boxing champions
- List of male boxers
- List of WBC world champions
- Ring Magazine pound for pound
- Millie Corretjer
- ^ See inogolo:Pronunciation of Oscar de la Hoya.
- ^ http://www.maxboxing.com/Kim/kim0920b02.asp
- ^ http://www.usatoday.com/sports/boxing/2002-09-12-delahoya-vargas_x.htm
- ^ http://espn.go.com/boxing/news/2004/0109/1704287.html
- ^ http://www.thesweetscience.com/boxing-article/701/hoya-gets-decision-but-hopkins-wins/
- ^ http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2004/more/09/19/delahoya.hopkins/index.html
- ^ Jim Cawkwell. The Standard. Retrieved on 2007-01-10.
- ^ Dynamo For Sale; De La Hoya Group Interested, MyFoxHouston.com, November 22, 2007
| Preceded by Roy Jones Jr. |
Ring Magazine Fighter of the Year 1995 |
Succeeded by Evander Holyfield |
| Preceded by Andreas Zülow |
25th Olympics Boxing Lightweight Gold Medalist August 1992 |
Succeeded by Hocine Soltani |
| Preceded by Jimmi Bredahl |
5th World Super Featherweight Champion (WBO) March 5, 1994 - 1994 |
Succeeded by Regilio Tuur |
| Preceded by Giovanni Parisi |
5th World Lightweight Champion (WBO) July 29, 1994 - 1996 |
Succeeded by Artur Grigorian |
| Preceded by Rafael Ruelas |
11th World Lightweight Champion (IBF) May 6, 1995 - July, 1995 |
Succeeded by Philip Holiday |
| Preceded by Julio César Chávez |
24th World Light Welterweight Champion (WBC) June 7, 1996 - 1997 |
Succeeded by Kostya Tszyu |
| Preceded by Pernell Whitaker |
25th World Welterweight Champion (WBC) April 12, 1997 - September 18, 1999 |
Succeeded by Felix Trinidad |
| Preceded by Javier Castillejo |
32nd World Light Middleweight Champion (WBC) September 14, 2002 - 2003 |
Succeeded by Javier Castillejo |
| Preceded by Fernando Vargas |
Super World Light Middleweight Champion (WBA) September 14, 2002 - September 13, 2003 |
Succeeded by Shane Mosley |
| Preceded by Felix Sturm |
17th World Middleweight Champion (WBO) June 5, 2004 - September 18, 2004 |
Succeeded by Bernard Hopkins |
| Preceded by Ricardo Mayorga |
World Light Middleweight Champion (WBC) May 6, 2006 - May 5, 2007 |
Succeeded by Floyd Mayweather Jr. |
Categories: American boxers | World boxing champions | IBF Champions | WBA Champions | WBC Champions | WBO Champions | Welterweights | Middleweights | Olympic boxers of the United States | Boxers at the 1992 Summer Olympics | Boxing promoters | Mexican American boxers | Mexican American sportspeople | 1973 births | Living people | People from Los Angeles County | The Contender | United States Amateur Champions