Misplaced Pages

Juan Manuel Márquez: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 02:07, 11 June 2012 editTheShadowCrow (talk | contribs)6,258 editsNo edit summary← Previous edit Revision as of 23:18, 13 June 2012 edit undoBearMan998 (talk | contribs)1,190 edits Featherweight: Removed loaded and pov termNext edit →
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 42: Line 42:
In May 2004, Márquez fought ] & ] Featherweight Champion ] in a controversial bout that was scored a draw. In the first round Márquez was caught cold and knocked down three times by a more lively Pacquiao. However, Márquez recovered from the knockdowns and was able to counterpunch effectively, winning the middle rounds.<ref>. HBO. Retrieved on 2011-11-29.</ref> Many fans who were startled at Márquez surviving the first round thought he took control of the fight thereafter and was denied the win by the judges. The final scores were 115–110 for Márquez, 115–110 for Pacquiao and 113–113. One of the judges (who scored the bout 113–113) later admitted to making an error on the scorecards, because he had scored the first round as "10–7" in favor of Pacquiao instead of the standard "10–6" for a three-knockdown round.<ref>. Reviewjournal.com (2004-05-09). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.</ref> In May 2004, Márquez fought ] & ] Featherweight Champion ] in a controversial bout that was scored a draw. In the first round Márquez was caught cold and knocked down three times by a more lively Pacquiao. However, Márquez recovered from the knockdowns and was able to counterpunch effectively, winning the middle rounds.<ref>. HBO. Retrieved on 2011-11-29.</ref> Many fans who were startled at Márquez surviving the first round thought he took control of the fight thereafter and was denied the win by the judges. The final scores were 115–110 for Márquez, 115–110 for Pacquiao and 113–113. One of the judges (who scored the bout 113–113) later admitted to making an error on the scorecards, because he had scored the first round as "10–7" in favor of Pacquiao instead of the standard "10–6" for a three-knockdown round.<ref>. Reviewjournal.com (2004-05-09). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.</ref>


On September 18, 2004, Márquez defeated future champion ]. In 2005, Márquez was stripped of his WBA and IBF Featherweight titles for his inability to defend them against various boxers after potential bouts failed to draw a bid.<ref>. Sports.espn.go.com (2005-08-17). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.</ref> In 2006, Márquez attempted to regain a title, coming up short in a controversial decision loss to undefeated ] boxer ] for the WBA Featherweight Championship title. The disputed decision led to the ] removal of Márquez from its ]. On September 18, 2004, Márquez defeated future champion ]. In 2005, Márquez was stripped of his WBA and IBF Featherweight titles for his inability to defend them against various boxers after potential bouts failed to draw a bid.<ref>. Sports.espn.go.com (2005-08-17). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.</ref> In 2006, Márquez attempted to regain a title, coming up short in a decision loss to undefeated ] boxer ] for the WBA Featherweight Championship title. The disputed decision led to the ] removal of Márquez from its ].


In late 2006, Márquez captured the ] WBO Featherweight title by defeating ] boxer Terdsak Jandaeng. He defended it against ] boxer Jimrex Jaca with a nine round knockout in ]. Márquez was promoted to world champion status in December 2006 when previous champion ] vacated the title.<ref>. International Herald Tribune (2009-03-29). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.</ref> Márquez vacated the Featherweight title the following year to challenge ] ] Champion ]. In late 2006, Márquez captured the ] WBO Featherweight title by defeating ] boxer Terdsak Jandaeng. He defended it against ] boxer Jimrex Jaca with a nine round knockout in ]. Márquez was promoted to world champion status in December 2006 when previous champion ] vacated the title.<ref>. International Herald Tribune (2009-03-29). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.</ref> Márquez vacated the Featherweight title the following year to challenge ] ] Champion ].

Revision as of 23:18, 13 June 2012

Juan Manuel Márquez
Márquez in September 2009
BornJuan Manuel Márquez Méndez
(1973-08-23) August 23, 1973 (age 51)
Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico
NationalityMexican
Other namesDinamita
Statistics
Weight(s)Featherweight
Super Featherweight
Lightweight
Welterweight
Light Welterweight
Height1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Reach67 in (170 cm)
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights61
Wins54
Wins by KO39
Losses6
Draws1
No contests0

Juan Manuel Márquez Méndez (born August 23, 1973 in Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico), is a Mexican professional boxer. He is the fourth Mexican-born boxer to become a three-division world champion, where he won six world titles in three different boxing weight classes.

Ring Magazine currently rates Márquez as the number six pound-for-pound boxer in the world and number eight in the light welterweight division. He is considered by some analysts to be among the greatest Mexican boxers of all-time.

Personal life

Juan Manuel is the brother of Rafael Márquez, who is a former world champion in the bantamweight and super bantamweight divisions. They're both trained under Ignacio Beristain and Assistant Japanese Toshi Nakajima. At one time, the two were listed in Ring Magazine's top ten pound-for-pound list. They are one of four sets of Mexican brothers to hold world titles. He is also famous for drinking his own urine during training sessions but the doctors eventually recommended him to stop the practice Márquez and his wife, Erika, have two sons and a daughter.

Amateur career

Márquez had an amateur record of 35–1 that included two Golden Glove tournament wins.

Professional career

Featherweight

He made his professional boxing debut at age 19 on May 29, 1993 and lost his first bout via disqualification to Javier Duran. Márquez remained undefeated for another six years as he compiled a record of 29–1 that included a wins against future champions like Agapito Sanchez, Julio Gervacio and Alfred Kotey. In 1997, Márquez won the WBO NABO Featherweight title, which he defended seven times. During this time, he was referred to as the "best fighter without a world title." Márquez was WBO Featherweight Champion Naseem Hamed's mandatory challenger for 22 straight months. However, the WBO allowed Hamed to schedule other fights instead. In 1999 faced Freddie Norwood for the WBA Featherweight title instead. Márquez was knocked down in the second round. In the 8th round, Norwood's glove touched the canvas after an exchange. However, it was not ruled a knock down by the referee who was standing opposite to the action. In the 9th round, Márquez scored a knockdown after a two punch combination. The unanamous decision loss was deemed as controversial by many. HBO Punchstat had Norwood landing 73 out of 290 punches thrown to Marquez's 89 of 444.

On November 20, 1999, Márquez faced Remigio Molina and defeated him in eight rounds. In 2000, he defeated former champion Daniel Jimenez and five fights later, he defeated future champion Robbie Peden in ten rounds and captured the NABF & USBA Featherweight titles.

Márquez received his second bout for a world title on January 2, 2003 when he defeated former four-time Featherweight Champion Manuel Medina and captured the vacant IBF Featherweight title. In the 2nd round, Marquez connected with a three-punch combination that floored Medina. The fight was stopped in the 7th round after Marquez knocked Medina down for a second time.

He then defeated Derrick Gainer later in the year in a unification bout to win the WBA Featherweight title and become the WBA (Super) Champion.

In May 2004, Márquez fought Lineal & The Ring Featherweight Champion Manny Pacquiao in a controversial bout that was scored a draw. In the first round Márquez was caught cold and knocked down three times by a more lively Pacquiao. However, Márquez recovered from the knockdowns and was able to counterpunch effectively, winning the middle rounds. Many fans who were startled at Márquez surviving the first round thought he took control of the fight thereafter and was denied the win by the judges. The final scores were 115–110 for Márquez, 115–110 for Pacquiao and 113–113. One of the judges (who scored the bout 113–113) later admitted to making an error on the scorecards, because he had scored the first round as "10–7" in favor of Pacquiao instead of the standard "10–6" for a three-knockdown round.

On September 18, 2004, Márquez defeated future champion Orlando Salido. In 2005, Márquez was stripped of his WBA and IBF Featherweight titles for his inability to defend them against various boxers after potential bouts failed to draw a bid. In 2006, Márquez attempted to regain a title, coming up short in a decision loss to undefeated Indonesian boxer Chris John for the WBA Featherweight Championship title. The disputed decision led to the Ring Magazine's removal of Márquez from its pound-for-pound top 10 list.

In late 2006, Márquez captured the Interim WBO Featherweight title by defeating Thai boxer Terdsak Jandaeng. He defended it against Filipino boxer Jimrex Jaca with a nine round knockout in Hidalgo, Texas. Márquez was promoted to world champion status in December 2006 when previous champion Scott Harrison vacated the title. Márquez vacated the Featherweight title the following year to challenge WBC Super Featherweight Champion Marco Antonio Barrera.

Super Featherweight

On March 17, 2007, Márquez became the WBC Super Featherweight Champion by defeating Barrera in Las Vegas via unanimous decision, by the official scores of 116–111, 116–111 and 118–109. Márquez's first defense of his title was to be held on September 15, 2007 against Argentinian boxer Jorge Rodrigo Barrios. However, Barrios withdrew from the bout due to injury, prompting American boxer Rocky Juárez to challenge Márquez for the title on November 3, 2007 in a losing effort.

On November 29, 2007, Márquez announced that he would defend his title in a rematch with Pacquiao. On March 15, 2008, Márquez lost his Super Featherweight title to Pacquiao via split decision. Márquez suffered a knockdown in the third round that proved to be the difference, as the remaining rounds were scored dead even. Compubox scoring had Márquez landing 42/201 (21%) more jabs to Pacquiao's 43/314 (14%) and scoring 130/310 (42%) power punches to Pacquiao's 114/305 (37%). Richard Schaefer, Golden Boy Promotions CEO, offered a $6 million guarantee to Pacquiao for a rematch. Pacquiao's promoter, Bob Arum, said, “I’m not saying they’ll never fight again, but you have to let it bake for a while.” Pacquiao said: "I don't think so, this business is over" as he planned to move up to the lightweight division.

Lightweight

Juan Manuel Marquez vs. Joel Casamayor

Márquez moved up to the lightweight division in order to fight The Ring Lightweight Champion Joel Casamayor on the weekend leading up to Mexican Independence Day at the MGM Grand, Las Vegas, Nevada. On September 13, 2008, he defeated Casamayor in the 11th round after two knockdowns and captured his sixth world title in three different weight classes. In the first four rounds of the bout, Márquez continually walked into counter punches from Casamayor. It took Márquez until the fifth round to be able to find the range with his right hand. By the fifth round, a cut over Casamayor's right eye was opened from a clash of heads. Rounds five, six, seven and eight were rounds where Márquez landed straight punches from the outside, but he was also struck by Casamayor whenever he lunged forward. Two minutes into the eleventh round, Casamayor was knocked down by a right punch as he pulled away from an intense exchange. Casamayor was able to get on his feet, but it was clear he was still shakey from the knockdown. As soon as the action was allowed to resume, Márquez went in for the kill as he let his punches go in furious combination. Casamayor punched back, but he was knocked down again with about 7 seconds left in the round. Referee Tony Weeks stepped in the bout and stopped the fight as he deemed Casamyor unable to continue. The official judges had the fight scored 95–95, 95–95 and 97–93 for Márquez before the 11th round knockout. After the win, The Ring magazine ranked Márquez second on its pound for pound list and rated him the number one boxer in the lightweight division.

Juan Manuel Marquez vs. Juan Diaz

On February 28, 2009, Márquez defeated former WBA, WBO & IBF Lightweight Champion Juan Díaz by knockout. Díaz controlled the fight early in the bout as the two boxers exchanged punches. Díaz opened a cut above Márquez's right eye in the fifth round and looked to control the bout, but Márquez responded by opening a gash above Díaz's right eye and stunning him with a left hook before the end of the eighth round. Márquez landed two hard rights to Díaz's face in a three-punch combination that knocked Díaz down with 35 seconds remaining in the ninth round. Díaz rose, but seconds later, Márquez followed with a right uppercut to the chin that knocked Díaz down for a second time. Referee Rafael Ramos waved an end to the fight after two minutes and 40 seconds of the ninth round. With the victory, Márquez defended his The Ring Lightweight title and claimed the vacant WBO and vacant WBA (Super) Lightweight titles. This fight was named "Fight of the Year" for 2009 by ESPN.com. After the fight, Márquez expressed an interest in fighting Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Welterweight

Number One/Número Uno

Márquez moved up to the welterweight division and fought undefeated and former number one pound for pound champion Floyd Mayweather Jr. The fight was scheduled to take place at 144 lbs on July 18, 2009 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena; but was postponed due to a rib injury sustained by Mayweather. The bout was rescheduled and held on September 19, 2009. During the official weigh in for their 144 lb bout, Márquez weighed in at 142 lbs and Mayweather weighed in at 146 lbs, thereby incurring a financial penalty as he was 2 pounds over the catchweight. Although, it was later found out that both parties had agreed just before the weigh-in to allow Mayweather to come in over the catchweight. Márquez looked slightly fleshy and uncomfortable with the move up in weight. Mayweather knocked him down in the 2nd round and won the fight by unanimous decision.

This was the fifth non-heavyweight fight in boxing history to sell more than one million pay-per-views, with the official HBO numbers totaling about $52 million. It was also the first fight to sell more than one million PPVs without featuring Oscar De La Hoya. Two months later, Manny Pacquiao vs. Miguel Cotto would sell 1.25 million PPVs.

Return to Lightweight

Juan Manuel Márquez vs. Juan Díaz II

When asked upon his return to the lightweight division, Márquez said: "I came back to lightweight because at welterweight I lost a lot of speed."

Márquez then began negotiations for a rematch with Juan Díaz. Golden Boy CEO Richard Schaefer said the fight for Márquez's title was being planned for July 10 as the main event of an HBO PPV card. He said it would "probably" take place at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. After his comeback in 2010, fellow Mexican boxer Erik Morales said he would like to fight Márquez. Morales returned two divisions higher in 2010, as a welterweight. However, Márquez has also stated that he would be interested in a fight with Ricky Hatton.

The Márquez-Díaz rematch took place on July 31, 2010 at the Mandalay Bay. Márquez's titles were also at stake. Prior to the bout, the WBO ordered the Márquez-Díaz winner to fight mandatory challenger Michael Katsidis. Márquez won the fight via unanimous decision by the official scores of 117–111, 116–112 and 118–110. After the Díaz rematch, Márquez stated that he was interested in pursuing a third fight with Manny Pacquiao. There was also a possibility of him moving up to light welterweight to face any of the titleholders at the time: Timothy Bradley, Devon Alexander or Amir Khan, all of whom were fighting on HBO.

Juan Manuel Márquez vs Michael Katsidis

A few weeks after the Juan Díaz fight, Golden Boy Promotions officially announced that Márquez would defend his lightweight titles against mandatory challenger, WBO Interim Champion Michael Katsidis, on November 27, 2010 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas and that the bout would be televised live on HBO Championship Boxing. During the official weigh in for their 135 lb bout, Márquez came in at 134 pounds, while Katsidis came in on the limit of 135 pounds. Despite being knocked down in the third round, Márquez came back and defeated Katsidis by a ninth round TKO to retain the lightweight belts. At the time of the stoppage, the Mexican boxer was ahead on all the scorecards by 77–74, 78–74 and 76–75. During the post fight interview, he once again expessed his interest in a third fight with Manny Pacquiao.

Márquez holds the distinction of being the oldest champion in the history of the lightweight division. On January 4, the WBA no longer recognized Márquez has their Super Champion due to going 18 months without fighting a mandatory challenger as required by the organization’s rules. Fernando Beltrán of Zanfer Promotions stated that the WBA's decision has no validity and that he would immediately send them a letter, since the deadline of May 2012 for the mandatory defense has not expired, and Márquez paid sanctioning fees to the WBA even for the last few non-lightweight fights. On January 26, Marquez was stripped of his WBO title, as he was considered to be moving up to the welterweight division. The WBO promoted Interim titleholder Ricky Burns to full champion status. The Ring magazine stripped of him of their championship on April 17.

Light Welterweight

Márquez moved up to light welterweight division to fight Likar Ramos on July 16, 2011 at Mexico. It was considered a tune-up fight before his third battle with Manny Pacquiao. The fight only lasted one round with Marquez winning by technical knockout.

Return to Welterweight

Juan Manuel Márquez vs. Manny Pacquiao III

Pacquiao's promoter Bob Arum stated that a third meeting with Márquez could happen in November 2011, providing Pacquiao defeated his next opponent opponent Shane Mosley on May 7. On May 10, Márquez accepted an offer from Top Rank to fight Pacquiao for his WBO Welterweight title at a catchweight of 144 pounds. On May 18, Márquez signed the deal to fight Pacquiao for the third time on November 12 at Las Vegas.

On November 12, Márquez lost to Pacquiao via majority decision. Upon the results being announced, the crowd reaction was largely negative with many continuing to boo as Pacquiao spoke with Max Kellerman. Tim Smith of New York's Daily News wrote that Márquez "was robbed of a decision by judges who were either blind or corrupt." Amir Khan, who co-commentated the bout for British television, also thought Manny had lost the fight, going so far as to saying he would now like to fight Márquez. However, upon replay of the fight, Khan backtracked on those comments stating "when I saw the replay, Manny won by 2-3 rounds." Ringside punch stats showed Pacquiao landing more strikes, 176 to 138, and landing more power punches, 117 to 100. Michael Woods of ESPN stated that Marquez was not robbed noting the Compubox stats, all of which favored Pacquiao.

On November 15, Márquez announced that he wants to fight Pacquiao again for the fourth time but this time he wants it in his home country, Mexico. Because of severe disappoinment from their last fight's decision, he also added some conditions if ever they will fight. He wants their last fight to be declared a no-contest, Pacquiao must accept that he lost and he must receive a $10 million guaranteed purse.

Aside from Pacquiao, Márquez wants to return to the light welterweight division for his fourth division title against WBO titlist Timothy Bradley. He also said that he is not interested in fighting Brandon Rios and Erik Morales.

Return to Light Welterweight

On April 14, 2012, Marquez defeated Ukranian contender Serhiy Fedchenko via unanimous decision to capture the Interim WBO Light Welterweight title. A clear margin by scores of: 119-109, 118-110, 118-110. He is likely to be upgraded to the full status WBO Champion in the coming weeks since Timothy Bradley's upset controversial win over Manny Pacquiao.

Professional record

54 Wins (39 knockouts, 15 decisions), 6 Losses (5 decisions, 1 disqualification), 1 Draw
Res. Record Opponent Type Round, Time Date Location Notes
TBA 2012-07-14 Mexico Defending Interim or full WBO Light Welterweight title.
Win 54-6-1 Ukraine Serhiy Fedchenko UD 12 (12) 2012-04-14 Mexico Arena Ciudad de México, Mexico City Won Interim WBO Light Welterweight title.
Loss 53-6-1 Philippines Manny Pacquiao MD 12 (12) 2011-11-12 United States MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States For WBO Welterweight title.
Win 53-5-1 Colombia Likar Ramos KO 1 (12), 1:46 2011-07-16 Mexico Plaza de Toros, Cancun, Quintana Roo
Win 52-5-1 Australia Michael Katsidis TKO 9 (12), 2:14 2010-11-27 United States MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Retained The Ring, WBO & WBA (Super) Lightweight titles.
Win 51-5-1 United States Juan Díaz UD 12 (12) 2010-07-31 United States Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Retained The Ring, WBO & WBA (Super) Lightweight titles.
Loss 50-5-1 United States Floyd Mayweather Jr. UD 12 (12) 2009-09-19 United States MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 50-4-1 United States Juan Díaz TKO 9 (12), 2:40 2009-02-28 United States Toyota Center, Houston, Texas, United States Retained The Ring and won vacant WBO & vacant WBA (Super) Lightweight titles.
The Ring magazine's "Fight of the Year" (2009)
Win 49-4-1 Cuba Joel Casamayor TKO 11 (12), 2:55 2008-09-13 United States MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Won The Ring Lightweight title.
Loss 48-4-1 Philippines Manny Pacquiao SD 12 (12) 2008-03-15 United States Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Lost WBC Super Featherweight title.
For The Ring Super Featherweight title.
Win 48-3-1 United States Rocky Juarez UD 12 (12) 2007-11-03 United States Desert Diamond Casino, Tucson, Arizona, United States Retained WBC Super Featherweight title.
Win 47-3-1 Mexico Marco Antonio Barrera UD 12 (12) 2007-03-17 United States Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Won WBC Super Featherweight title.
Win 46-3-1 Philippines Jimrex Jaca KO 9 (12), 2:48 2006-11-25 United States Dodge Arena, Hidalgo, Texas, United States Retained Interim WBO Featherweight title.
Win 45-3-1 Thailand Terdsak Kokietgym TKO 7 (12), 1:13 2006-08-05 United StatesMontBleu Resort & Casino, Stateline, Nevada, United States Won Interim WBO Featherweight title.
Loss 44-3-1 Indonesia Chris John UD 12 (12) 2006-03-04 Indonesia Karang Melenu Sports Hall, Kutai Kartanegara Lost WBA Featherweight title.
Win 44-2-1 Colombia Victor Polo UD 12 (12) 2005-05-07 United States Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Retained WBA & IBF Featherweight titles.
Win 43-2-1 Mexico Orlando Salido UD 12 (12) 2004-09-18 United States MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Retained WBA (Super) & IBF Featherweight titles.
Draw 42-2-1 Philippines Manny Pacquiao SD 12 (12) 2004-05-08 United States MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Retained WBA (Super) & IBF Featherweight titles.
For Lineal & The Ring Featherweight titles.
Win 42–2 United States Derrick Gainer TD 7 (12), 2:37 2003-11-01 United States Van Andel Arena, Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States Retained IBF & won vacant WBA (Super) Featherweight titles.
Win 41–2 Mexico Marcos Licona TKO 9 (10), 3:00 2003-08-16 United States Mohegan Sun Arena, Montville, Connecticut, United States
Win 40–2 Mexico Manuel Medina TKO 7 (12), 1:18 2003-02-01 United States Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Won vacant IBF Featherweight title.
Win 39–2 Mexico Hector Marquez TKO 10 (10), 0:28 2002-06-21 United States The Orleans Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 38–2 Australia Robbie Peden RTD 10 (12), 3:00 2002-03-09 United States A. J. Palumbo Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States Won NABF & vacant USBA Featherweight titles.
IBF Featherweight Title Eliminator.
Win 37–2 United States Johnny Walker TKO 1 (10), 0:56 2001-10-19 United States Coeur d'Alene Casino, Worley, Idaho
Win 36–2 Nicaragua Julio Gamboa TKO 7 (10), 3:00 2001-08-19 United States Wendover, Utah, United States
Win 35–2 Philippines Baby Lorona Jr. TKO 2 (10), 2:50 2001-04-01 United States Peppermill Hotel Casino, Reno, Nevada, United States
Win 34–2 United States Sean Fletcher TKO 7 (10), 1:54 2001-02-11 United States Peppermill Hotel Casino, Reno, Nevada, United States
Win 33–2 Philippines Reynante Jamili KO 3 (1:14) 2000-10-22 United States Peppermill Hotel Casino, Reno, Nevada, United States
Win 32–2 Puerto Rico Daniel Jiménez RTD 7 (10), 3:00 2000-08-27 United States Union Plaza Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 31–2 Colombia Roque Cassiani UD 12 (12) 2000-05-20 United States Caesars Tahoe, Stateline, Nevada, United States Won vacant WBO NABO Featherweight title.
Win 30–2 Argentina Remigio Molina TKO 8 (10), 2:01 1999-11-20 United States Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Loss 29–2 United States Freddie Norwood UD 12 (12) 1999-09-11 United States Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States For WBA Featherweight title.
Win 29–1 Puerto Rico Wilfredo Vargas KO 2 (10), 2:02 1999-05-10 United States Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States
Win 28–1 Mexico Jose de Jesus Garcia KO 1 (10), 1:54 1999-02-20 United States Spotlight 29 Casino, Coachella, California, United States
Win 27–1 Mexico Francisco Arreola TKO 3 (12), 2:24 1998-10-24 United States Tropicana Resort & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Retained WBO NABO Featherweight title.
Win 26–1 Mexico Enrique Jupiter TKO 8 (12) 1998-08-22 United States Tropicana Resort & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Retained WBO NABO Featherweight title.
Win 25–1 Argentina Juan Gerardo Cabrera TKO 4 (12) 1998-06-20 United States Tropicana Resort & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Retained WBO NABO Featherweight title.
Win 24–1 Panama Luis Samudio TKO 9 (10), 2:18 1998-03-16 United States Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States
Win 23–1 Ghana Alfred Kotey UD 12 (12) 1997-11-22 United States Tropicana Resort & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States Retained WBO NABO Featherweight title.
Win 22–1 Guyana Vincent Howard TKO 12 (12) 1997-09-27 United States Caesars Tahoe, Stateline, Nevada, United States Retained WBO NABO Featherweight title.
Win 21–1 Panama Catalino Becerra TKO 7 (12), 1:37 1997-07-14 United States Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States Retained WBO NABO Featherweight title.
Win 20–1 Dominican Republic Agapito Sánchez UD 12 (12) 1997-04-21 United States Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States Retained WBO NABO Featherweight title.
Win 19–1 United States Cedric Mingosey RTD 10 (12), 3:00 1997-02-03 United States Arrowhead Pond, Anaheim, California, United States Won vacant WBO NABO Featherweight title.
Win 18–1 Mexico Rodrigo Valenzuela KO 8 (10) 1996-12-09 United States Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States
Win 17–1 United States Darryl Pinckney UD 10 (10) 1996-10-19 United States Caesars Tahoe, Stateline, Nevada, United States
Win 16–1 Dominican Republic Freddy Cruz UD 10 (10) 1996-07-08 United States Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States
Win 15–1 Dominican Republic Julio Gervacio KO 8 (10) 1996-04-29 United States Anaheim, California, United States
Win 14–1 Mexico Hector Ulises Chong KO 4 (10) 1996-03-04 United States Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States
Win 13–1 United States Julian Wheeler TKO 10 (10), 2:55 1995-11-06 United StatesGreat Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States
Win 12–1 Puerto Rico Miguel Rodriguez TKO 1 (10), 2:30 1995-09-25 United States Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States
Win 11–1 Mexico Julio Cesar Portillo KO 6 (10), 2:10 1995-07-10 United States Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States
Win 10–1 Mexico Julio Sanchez Leon UD 10 (10) 1995-04-24 United States Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States
Win 9–1 Mexico Martin Ochoa TKO 1 (?) 1995-01-30 United States Great Western Forum, Inglewood, California, United States
Win 8–1 Mexico Israel Gonzalez TKO 4 (8), 0:34 1994-12-03 United States Caesars Palace, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Win 7–1 Mexico Jose Luis Montes KO 2 (?) 1994-11-12 Mexico Plaza México, Mexico City, Distrito Federal
Win 6–1 Mexico Israel Flores UD 4 (4) 1994-10-01 Mexico Mexico City, Distrito Federal
Win 5–1 Mexico Gregorio Silva TKO 2 (?) 1994-08-27 Mexico Mexico City, Distrito Federal
Win 4–1 Mexico Roman Poblano UD 6 (6) 1994-05-07 Mexico Mexico City, Distrito Federal
Win 3–1 Mexico Isaac Cortes TKO 5 (6) 1993-10-01 Mexico Mexico City, Distrito Federal
Win 2–1 Mexico Israel Flores TKO 2 (?) 1993-09-18 Mexico Mexico City, Distrito Federal
Win 1–1 Mexico Javier Quiroz TKO 3 (?) 1993-06-26 Mexico Mexico City, Distrito Federal
Loss 0–1 Mexico Javier Duran DQ 1 1993-05-29 Mexico Mexico City, Distrito Federal Professional boxing debut.

Titles in boxing

Major World Titles:

The Ring/Lineal Championship Titles:

Regional/International Titles:

See also

References

  1. http://ringtv.craveonline.com/ratings
  2. http://www.complex.com/sports/2011/05/the-10-greatest-mexican-boxers-of-all-time/juan-manuel-marquez
  3. Marquez Brothers Co-Headline Aug 5 Card. KO Corner (2006-06-12). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  4. Juan Manuel Marquez ready to fight for crown. NevadaAppeal.com (2006-08-04). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  5. "Morales gives up top billing for Barrera match". USA Today. June 20, 2002. Retrieved May 7, 2010.
  6. Juan Angel Zurita: Is Juan Manuel Marquez the Featherweight Winky Wright?. Doghouseboxing.com (2004-05-03). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  7. MMA and Boxing News – FOX Sports on MSN. Msn.foxsports.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  8. News. Cyber Boxing Zone. Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  9. Boxing: Fighters: Bio: JUAN MANUEL MÁRQUEZ. HBO. Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  10. reviewjournal.com, Marquez, Pacquiao brawl to draw. Reviewjournal.com (2004-05-09). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  11. Failure to stage mandatory bout costs Marquez – boxing – ESPN. Sports.espn.go.com (2005-08-17). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  12. Search – Global Edition – The New York Times. International Herald Tribune (2009-03-29). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  13. "Márquez defeats Barrera for WBC title". International Herald Tribune. Retrieved 2007-03-17.
  14. 3/15 – Las Vegas, NV, Manny Pacquiao W 12 JM Marquez. CompuBox
  15. Iole, Kevin. (2008-03-16) Arum in the way of Pacquiao-Marquez III? – Boxing – Yahoo! Sports. Sports.yahoo.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  16. Márquez floors Casamayor in big Lightweight debut. USA Today. 14 September 2008
  17. The Ring Magazine Rankings. Ringtv.com (2011-11-07). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  18. Márquez stops Houston's Diaz in ninth round. Chron.com (2009-02-28). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  19. Dan Rafael: From Round 1 to Round 9, Marquez-Diaz delivered – ESPN. Sports.espn.go.com (2010-01-03). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  20. Ciaran Baynes Márquez: I want Mayweather – Setanta Sports. setanta.com. 1 March 2009
  21. Mayweather–Marquez To Take Place at 144, Not 147 – Boxing News. Boxingscene.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  22. Brian O. Blake. Bleacherreport.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  23. Pacquiao-Cotto PPV Numbers Rolling in, Nearing 1.5M Buys. Boxing.fanhouse.com (2009-11-19). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  24. ^ Rafael, Dan (05-01-2010). "Marquez, Diaz will meet again for title". ESPN.com. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  25. Rafael, Dan (2010-03-25). "Schaefer: Marquez-Diaz in the cards". ESPN.com.
  26. Vester, Mark (04-01-2010). "Erik Morales Wants Marquez, Juan Manuel Says Maybe". BoxingScene.com. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  27. Blears, James (2010-04-23). "Juan Manuel Marquez Still Wants a Crack at Ricky Hatton". BoxingScene.com.
  28. Satterfield, Lem (July 8, 2010). "Marquez Continues To Bait "Scared" Pacquiao, Arum". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
  29. Ambrose, Dan (July 12, 2010). "Marquez vs. Diaz II: Juan Manuel has big fights ahead of him if he wins this". BoxingNews24.com. Retrieved July 13, 2010.
  30. Cozzone, Chris (August 1, 2010). "Pacquiao priority for Marquez". FightNews.com. Retrieved August 3, 2010.
  31. Satterfield, Lem (August 3, 2010). "Marquez May Look To Katsidis, Pacquiao Before Khan Fight". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved August 3, 2010.
  32. Kim, Jason (August 1, 2010). "Marquez says he wants to move up to light welterweight to try and win another title". BoxingNews24.com. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  33. Rafael, Dan (September 2, 2010). "Juan Manuel Marquez has fight date". ESPN.com. Retrieved September 2, 2010.
  34. Blake, Brian O. (September 23, 2010). "Juan Manuel Marquez and Michael Katsidis In a Can't Miss Unified Title Bout". SportsBettingWorld.com. Retrieved September 23, 2010.
  35. Reeno, Rick (November 26, 2010). "Photos/Weights: Juan Manuel Marquez 134, Michael Katsidis 135". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved November 27, 2010.
  36. Vester, Mark (November 27, 2010). "Juan Manuel Marquez Stops Michael Katsidis in a War". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved November 28, 2010.
  37. CompuBox: Oldest Fighters To Hold The Lightweight Title – Boxing News. Boxingscene.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  38. Cordero, Gabriel F. (2012-01-05). "Juan Manuel Marquez stripped of WBA super belt". Fightnews.com. Retrieved 2012-01-05.
  39. Aaron King (January 6, 2012). "Zanfer Promotions protests Marquez stripping". Fightnews.com. Retrieved January 12, 2012.
  40. Jose Luis Camarillo (January 7, 2012). "Juan Manuel Marquez To Regain Standing in WBA Ranks". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved January 12, 2012.
  41. Miguel Rivera (January 6, 2012). "Juan Manuel Marquez on WBA's Decision, Pacquiao, More". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved January 12, 2012.
  42. "Burns now full WBO lightweight champ". Fightnews.com. January 26, 2012. Retrieved April 18, 2012.
  43. ringtv.craveonline.com/blog/172389-ring-ratings-update-lightweight-shakeup
  44. Manny Pacquiao vs. Juan Manuel Marquez Trilogy Planned for November. Bleacher Report. Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  45. Marquez: I've Accepted The Pacquiao Offer, 144-Pounds – Boxing News. Boxingscene.com (2011-10-05). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  46. Manny Pacquiao wins controversial majority decision over Juan Manuel Marquez to retain WBO welterweight title. NY Daily News (2011-11-13). Retrieved on 2011-11-29.
  47. "Khan changes mind about Pacquiao-Marquez III". ABS CBN. November 23, 2011. Retrieved April 19, 2012.
  48. http://espn.go.com/boxing/story/_/id/7228745/manny-pacquiao-escapes-decision-juan-manuel-marquez
  49. http://espn.go.com/blog/new-york/boxing/post/_/id/461/no-juan-manuel-marquez-was-not-robbed-against-pacquiao
  50. http://www.badlefthook.com/2011/11/15/2564148/juan-manuel-marquez-manny-pacquiao-fourth-fight-in-mexico
  51. http://209.59.190.9/cebu/sports/2011/11/16/marquez-sets-conditions-4th-fight-wants-pacquiao-s-latest-win-declared-no-con
  52. http://www.badlefthook.com/2011/12/29/2668869/juan-manuel-marquez-no-retirement-manny-pacquiao-fourth-fight-tim-bradley-boxing-news
  53. http://www.badlefthook.com/2011/12/3/2608511/juan-manuel-marquez-manny-pacquiao-fourth-fight-retirement-boxing-news
  54. Juan Manuel Marquez – Boxer. Boxrec.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-29.

External links

Achievements
VacantTitle last held byJohnny Tapia IBF Featherweight Champion
February 1, 2003 – August 15, 2005
Stripped
VacantTitle next held byValdemir Pereira
New title
Unified against Derrick Gainer
WBA Featherweight Super Champion
November 1, 2003 – August 22, 2005
Stripped
VacantTitle next held byChris John
VacantTitle last held byScott Harrison WBO Featherweight Champion
December 6, 2006 – April 1, 2007
Vacated
VacantTitle next held bySteven Luevano
Preceded byMarco Antonio Barrera WBC Super Featherweight Champion
March 17, 2007 – March 15, 2008
Succeeded byManny Pacquiao
Preceded byJoel Casamayor The Ring Lightweight Champion
September 13, 2008 – April 17, 2012
Stripped
Vacant
VacantTitle last held byNate Campbell WBA Lightweight Super Champion
February 28, 2009 – January 4, 2012
Stripped
WBO Lightweight Champion
February 28, 2009 – January 26, 2012
Stripped
VacantTitle next held byRicky Burns

Template:Persondata

Categories: