Antonio Gómez (boxer)

For the Spanish jurist, see Antonio Gómez.
Antonio Gomez
Statistics
Real name Antonio Gomez
Nickname(s) El León de Cumana
Rated at Featherweight
Nationality Venezuela Venezuelan
Born (1945-09-07) 7 September 1945
Cumaná, Venezuela
Boxing record
Total fights 52
Wins 43
Wins by KO 20
Losses 7
Draws 2

Antonio Gomez (born September 7, 1945 in Cumaná, Venezuela) is a former professional boxer who fought in the featherweight division. Gomez won the WBA world featherweight title in 1971.

Professional career

Gomez made his professional debut on February 28, 1967 against Eduardo Blanco in Caracas. After scoring a knockout over Blanco, Gomez won six fights, all in Caracas, before Domingo Bastidas became the first man to beat him—scoring a third round knockout in their September 2, 1967 contest. Gomez managed a run of eleven victories before losing to Gustavo Briceno, for his second defeat, on November 4, 1968.

Gomez fought for the first time outside of Venezuela on February 12, 1970, when he travelled to Inglewood, California to beat Gil Noriega by an eighth round knockout. It was in Inglewood, on September 5, 1970, that Gomez won his first title, as he beat Fernando Sotelo for the NABF featherweight title. Gomez won four more fights, one in Mexico and three in Venezuela, before making his first world title challenge.[1]

On September 2, 1971 Gomez travelled to Tokyo to successfully challenge the Japanese WBA world featherweight champion Shozo Saijo. Gomez knocked Saijo down three times in the fifth round before the referee called a halt to the action.[2] Following this fight Gomez won a non-title bout over future lightweight champion Esteban De Jesus before losing a disputed decision to Raul Martinez Mora—also in a non-title fight.

The rematch between Gomez and Mora occurred on February 5, 1972—this time for the WBA title. Gomez knocked Mora down twice in the third round before ending the fight with a seventh round knockout to retain his title.[3] In the next defence of his title Gomez fought the Panamanian challenger Ernesto Marcel in Maracay. Gomez finished the fight with a bloody face as he lost his title to Marcel by a majority decision.[4]

Gomez fought to a draw with Hyun Kim before travelling to Panama City to face Marcel in a rematch for the WBA title. Marcel, watched by 15,000 fans, dominated the fight and Gomez suffered so much punishment that he was unable to continue for the twelve round.[5] Gomez fought six more times before his final professional fight on November 1, 1975—when he fought to a draw with Miguel Betruz.

References

  1. "boxer: Antonio Gomez". Boxrec. Retrieved 5 June 2010.
  2. "Gomez Winner In Title Bout, Reading Eagle - Sep 2, 1971". Google news. Retrieved 5 June 2010.
  3. "Gomez Retains Feather Title, The Palm Beach Post - Feb 6, 1972". Google news. Retrieved 5 June 2010.
  4. "Marcel Wins Title, Herald-Journal - Aug 20, 1972". Google news. Retrieved 6 June 2010.
  5. "Sports in brief, Bangor Daily News - Jul 16, 1973". Google news. Retrieved 6 June 2010.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, May 03, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.