List of Puerto Rican boxing world champions
In Puerto Rico, boxing is considered a major sport, having produced more amateur and professional world champions than any other sport in its history.[1] Puerto Rico ranks 5th worldwide between countries with most boxing world champions,[2] and is the only place to have champions accredited in all of the current boxing divisions.[3][4] This number also places the archipelago in the global lead in terms of champions per capita.[3] February 9, 2008 was the first time that boxers from Puerto Rico had held three of the four major welterweights titles (World Boxing Association, International Boxing Federation and World Boxing Organization) when Carlos Quintana defeated Paul Williams to join Miguel Cotto, and Kermit Cintron as champions in the division.[5]
Individually, Puerto Rican world champions have earned numerous achievements. These include, Wilfredo Gómez's record for most defenses in the super bantamweight division and for most successive knockouts by a titleholder. On March 6, 1976, at age 17, Wilfred Benítez became the youngest world champion in the history of the sport. On September 3, 1994, Daniel Jiménez established a world record for the quickest knockout in a championship fight, defeating Harald Geier in 17 seconds.[6] Juan Manuel López is fifth in this category, having defeated César Figueroa in 47 seconds during his first defense.[6] Ossie Ocasio was the first World Boxing Association (WBA) cruiserweight champion, winning it on February 13, 1982. This accomplishment was mimicked in other organizations: José de Jesús, José Ruíz Matos, John John Molina, Héctor Camacho and Angel "El Loco" Rios did it in their respective divisions in the World Boxing Organization (WBO), while Ángel Almena was the first pugilist to win the International Boxing Organization's super flyweight title. On June 7, 2014, Miguel Cotto made history by becoming Puerto Rico's first four-division world champion.[7] In women's boxing, Amanda Serrano was the first IBF super featherweight champion and the first Puerto Rican female boxer to win world titles in five weight classes.[8]
Boxing in Puerto Rico
Boxing was introduced and practiced in a clandestine manner in Puerto Rico while the archipelago was still a Spanish colony.[9] Fights were organized in haciendas among the workers of the sugar and coffee plantations, and the objective was to determine the best fighter among the employees. Following the culmination of the Puerto Rican Campaign and Spanish–American War, American soldiers who were stationed in the main island practiced the sport. During World War I, a championship known as Campeonato Las Casas was held as training for military personnel.[9] Nero Chen, the first Puerto Rican boxer to gain recognition, began his career in these tournaments. The Combat Maneuver Training Center followed this example and organized boxing activities, which they named Los Campeones del Campamento. These were received with enthusiasm by the young recruits. Most of these events were celebrated without restriction due to military jurisdictional limits, although prohibitions were put in place for the civilian population.[9] Illegal matches were organized on the rooftops of residences in Old San Juan, empty terrain's in El Condado and in hippodromes.[9]
By 1924, several young men were being taught to box by Gregario Rosa, a boxer who had won the featherweight championship of the Atlantic Fleet while serving in the Navy.[9] Rosa established "Jack Dempsey Physical Culture and Boxing Club", a gym where he continued instructing more pugilists; however, the local police department would go in and arrest any boxer that participated in a card (organized boxing match). At times they were surprised to discover that several members of the law enforcement agencies and government were involved. In one case they discovered a group of police officers, including a colonel, two members of the governor's cabinet, numerous legislators and a judge at an event.[9] The charges were archived; the decision was justified with a statement that said: "How will we have a boxing world champion if we don't let the boys learn how to box?"[9]
In 1926, a boxing venue was opened in a military facility known as Cuartel de Ballajá; a fight card was organized weekly. Legislator Lorenzo Coballes Gandía redacted a proposal to legalize boxing, which was signed by governor Horace Mann Towner in May 1927.[10] Consequently, the Primera Comisión Atlética de Boxeo (The First Athletic Boxing Commission) was created; this became the first organization dedicated to sanctioned boxing in Puerto Rico.[10] Estadio Universal (Universal Stadium) became the first venue to organize legal boxing cards. The first event featured a fight between Enrique Chaffardet and Al Clemens as the main event, which was declared a draw by the judges.[10] New stadiums were built in Bayamón, Caguas, Mayagüez, Ponce, Aguadilla and San Juan.[10] The first Puerto Rican to win a world championship was Sixto Escobar, who won it on June 26, 1934. During the 1960s and 1970s, there was an increase in the number of pugilists who achieved this recognition.[11] Including Wilfred Benítez who on March 6, 1976, became the youngest world champion in history at 17 years old. This tendency continued during the following two decades, reaching its peak between the 1980s and 1990s. There was a slight decline in the 1990s. Félix Trinidad was Puerto Rico's most notable champion during this period.[12] The 2000s brought another increase, as over a dozen boxers won world championships.
Héctor García, Dommys Delgado Berty, Francisco Varcárcel and José Peñagaricano have served as presidents of the Puerto Rico Boxing Commission. This organization gained more prominence in 1985 when it received full control as the sanctioning body in any professional fight organized in Puerto Rico.[13] In 2000, the commission's regulation was revised to exclude professional wrestling, which up to that point had been under its scope. This was Peñagaricano's first proposal on taking office, since he considered professional wrestling "a spectacle instead of a sport like boxing".[13] During the following decades, the Puerto Rico Boxing Commission became the first governing body to have a female president when Delgado Berty served from 1986 to 1988.[14] It became the first commission to require pre-fight weigh-ins, a measure that was at first criticized, but was later adopted by other boxing organizations.[15] In 2007, David Bernier, then Secretary of Recreation and Sports, approved a new rule in the boxing organization's regulation that prohibited the signing of any pugilist younger than 18 years old as a professional.[16] In 2011, women's boxing saw an increase in popularity, gaining mainstream attention. This was fueled by the championships won by Ada Veléz and Amanda Serrano, as well as Kiria Tapia becoming the first Pan American champion in her division.
List of male world champions
- M Major Sanctioning Body
- U Undisputed World Championship
- L Lineal World Championship
Note: Minor or interim titlists are not included.
Number | Name | Date of first title win | Divisions | Successful defenses | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sixto Escobar | June 6, 1934 | Bantamweight (U & L 2) | 5 [I] | [17] |
2 | Carlos Ortiz | June 12, 1959 | Light welterweight (U & L 2) | 2 and 9 [II] | [18] |
3 | José Torres | March 30, 1965 | Light heavyweight (U, M, M & L) | 3 [III] | [19] |
4 | Ángel Espada | June 28, 1975 | Welterweight (M) | 1 [IV] | [20] |
5 | Alfredo Escalera | July 5, 1975 | Super featherweight (M) | 10 [V] | [21] |
6 | Samuel Serrano | October 16, 1976 | Super featherweight (M 2 & L 2) | 14 [VI] | [22] |
7 | Wilfred Benítez | March 6, 1976 | Light welterweight (M & L), welterweight (M & L) and light middleweight (M) | 2, 1 and 2 [VII] | [23] |
8 | Esteban De Jesús | May 8, 1976 | Lightweight (M) | 3 [VIII] | [24] |
9 | Wilfredo Gómez | May 21, 1977 | Super bantamweight (M & L), featherweight (M) and super featherweight (M) | 17, 0 and 0 [IX] | [25] |
10 | Julian Solís | August 29, 1980 | Bantamweight (M & L) | 0 [X] | [26] |
11 | Carlos De León | November 25, 1980 | Cruiserweight (M 4 & L 2) | 8 [XI] | [27] |
12 | Ossie Ocasio | February 13, 1982 | Cruiserweight (M) | 3 [XII] | [28] |
13 | Juan Laporte | September 15, 1982 | Featherweight (M) | 2 [XIII] | [29] |
14 | Edwin Rosario | May 1, 1983 | Lightweight (M & M 2) and light welterweight (M) | 3 and 0 [XIV] | [30] |
15 | Héctor Camacho | August 7, 1983 | Super featherweight (M), lightweight (M), light welterweight (M) | 1, 2 and 3 [XV] | [31] |
16 | Mark Medal | March 11, 1984 | Light middleweight (M) | 0 [XVI] | [32] |
17 | Harry Arroyo | April 15, 1984 | Lightweight (M) | 2 [XVII] | [33] |
18 | Victor Callejas | May 26, 1984 | Super bantamweight (M) | 2 [XVIII] | [34] |
19 | Carlos Santos | November 2, 1984 | Light middleweight (M) | 1 [XIX] | [35] |
20 | Antonio Rivera | August 30, 1986 | Featherweight (M) | 0 [XX] | [36] |
21 | Wilfredo Vázquez | October 4, 1987 | Bantamweight (M), super bantamweight (M) and featherweight (M) | 1, 9 and 4 [XXI] | [37] |
22 | José Ruíz Matos | April 29, 1989 | Super flyweight (M) | 4 [XXII] | [38] |
23 | John John Molina | April 29, 1989 | Super featherweight (M & M 2) | 7 and 0 [XXIII] | [39] |
24 | José de Jesús | May 19, 1989 | Light flyweight (M) | 3 [XXIV] | [40] |
25 | Juan Nazario | April 4, 1990 | Lightweight (M) | 0 [XXV] | [41] |
26 | Orlando Fernandez | May 12, 1990 | Super bantamweight (M) | 1 [XXVI] | [41] |
27 | Rafael del Valle | May 13, 1992 | Bantamweight (M) | 2 [XXIX] | [41] |
28 | Josué Camacho | July 31, 1992 | Light flyweight (M) | 1 [XXXI] | [41] |
29 | Daniel Jiménez | June 9, 1993 | Bantamweight (M) and super bantamweight (M) | 4 and 0 [XXXII] | [41] |
30 | Félix Trinidad | June 19, 1993 | Welterweight (M, M) and (L) light middleweight (M & M) and middleweight (M) | 17, 2 and 0 [XXXIII] | [42] |
31 | Kevin Kelley | December 4, 1993 | Featherweight (M) | 7 [XXXIV] | [43] |
32 | Alex Sánchez | December 22, 1993 | Minimumweight (M) | 6 [XXXV] | [41] |
33 | Jake Rodríguez | February 13, 1994 | Light welterweight (M) | 2 [XXXVI] | [41] |
34 | Sammy Fuentes | September 17, 1994 | Light welterweight (M) | 2 [XXXVII] | [41] |
35 | Frank Toledo | June 9, 1996 | Featherweight (M) | 0 and 0 [XLI] | [41] |
36 | José Antonio Rivera | April 25, 1997 | Welterweight M) and light middleweight (M) | 0 [XLIII] | [41] |
37 | Lou Del Valle | September 20, 1997 | Light heavyweight (M) | 0 [XLIV] | [41] |
38 | Eric Morel | October 17, 1998 | Super flyweight (M) | 7 and 0 [XLV] | [41] |
39 | Daniel Santos | May 6, 2000 | Welterweight (M), light middleweight (M & M) | 2 and 4 [XLVI] | [41] |
40 | Nelson Dieppa | July 22, 2000 | Light flyweight (M) | 5 [XLVII] | [44] |
41 | John Ruiz | March 3, 2001 | Heavyweight (M 2) | 4 [XLVIII] | [41] |
42 | Iván Calderón | May 3, 2003 | Minimumweight (M) and light flyweight (M & L) | 11 and 4 [LI] | [45][46] |
43 | Manny Siaca | May 5, 2004 | Super middleweight (M) | 0 [LII] | [47] |
44 | Miguel Cotto | September 11, 2004 | Light welterweight (M), welterweight (M & M) light middleweight (M, M & M) & Middleweight (M & L) | 5, 5, 2 and 1 [LIII] | [48][49] |
45 | Luis Collazo | April 2, 2005 | Welterweight (M) | 1 [LIV] | [50] |
46 | Kermit Cintrón | October 28, 2006 | Welterweight (M) | 2 [LV] | [51] |
47 | Carlos Quintana | February 9, 2008 | Welterweight (M) | 0 [LVI] | [52] |
48 | Juan Manuel López | June 7, 2008 | Super bantamweight (M) and featherweight (M) | 5 and 2 [LVIX] | [53] |
49 | Román Martínez | March 14, 2009 | Super featherweight (M 3) | 2 [LX] | [54] |
50 | José López | March 28, 2009 | Super flyweight (M) | 0 [LXI] | [55] |
51 | Wilfredo Vázquez, Jr. | February 27, 2010 | Super bantamweight (M) | 2 [LXIII] | [56] |
52 | Danny García♦ | July 30, 2010 | Light welterweight (M, M & L) and welterweight (M) | 5 [LXVII] | [57] |
53 | Rico Ramos | July 9, 2011 | Super bantamweight (M) | 0 [LXV] | [58][59] |
54 | José Pedraza♦ | March 22, 2014 | Super featherweight (M) | 2 [LXVIII] | [60] |
55 | McJoe Arroyo | July 18, 2015 | Super flyweight (M) | 0 | [61] |
56 | Jason Sosa | June 24, 2016 | Super featherweight (M) | 0 | [62] |
57 | Alberto Machado | October 21, 2017 | Super featherweight (M) | 0 | [63] |
58 | Ángel Acosta | December 2, 2017 | Light flyweight (M) | 0 | [64] |
59 | Emmanuel Rodríguez | May 5, 2018 | Bantamweight (M) | 0 |
- indicates boxer of Puerto Rican heritage that is recognized by the commission due to parent's nationality, residence or other circumstances.
- ♦ García, Pedraza, Jonathan González and Dusty Harrison have won Youth World Championships for major organizations.
List of female world champions
Number | Name | Date of first title win | Divisions | Successful defenses | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Melissa Del Valle | September 12, 1998 | Super featherweight (M) and super bantamweight (M) | 1, 0 and 0 [A] | [65] |
2 | Ada Vélez | January 19, 2001 | Bantamweight (M 2) and super bantamweight (M 2 & M) | 1 and 1 [B] | [66] |
3 | Melissa Hernández | November 4, 2006 | Super batamweight (M) & M), super featherweight (M) and featherweight (M) | 0, 0, 0 and 0 [C] | [67] |
4 | Amanda Serrano | September 10, 2011 | Super featherweight (M), lightweight (M), featherweight (M) and junior featherweight (M) | 0, 0, 1 and 0 [D] | [68] |
Current titleholders
World champions
Name | Organization | Division | Date won | Record | Defenses |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ángel Acosta | World Boxing Organization | Light flyweight | December 2, 2017 | 20–1–0 (20 KO) | 3 |
Women
Name | Organization | Division | Date won | Defenses |
---|---|---|---|---|
Amanda Serrano | World Boxing Organization | Light welterweight | September 8, 2018 | 0 |
International Boxing Hall of Fame
Puerto Ricans in the International Boxing Hall of Fame |
Number | Name | Year inducted | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Carlos Ortíz | 1991 | World Jr. Welterweight Champion 1959 June 12- 1960, September 1, WBA Lightweight Champion 1962 Apr 21 – 1965 Apr 10, WBC Lightweight Champion 1963 Apr 7 – 1965 Apr 10, WBC Lightweight Champion 1965 Nov 13 – 1968 Jun 29. |
2 | Wilfred Benítez | 1994 | The youngest world champion in boxing history. WBA Light Welterweight Champion 1976 Mar 6 – 1977, WBC Welterweight Champion 1979 Jan 14 – 1979 Nov 30, WBC Light Middleweight Champion. |
3 | Wilfredo Gómez | 1995 | WBC Super Bantamweight Champion 1977 May 21 – 1983, WBC Featherweight Champion 1984 Mar 31 – 1984 Dec 8, WBA Super Featherweight Champion 1985 May 19 – 1986 May 24. |
4 | José "Chegui" Torres | 1997 | Won a silver medal in the junior middleweight at the 1956 Olympic Games. Undisputed Light Heavyweight Champion 1965 Mar 30 – 1966 Dec 16 |
5 | Sixto Escobar | 2002 | Puerto Rico's first boxing champion. World Bantamweight Champion 15 Nov 1935– 23 Sep 1937, World Bantamweight Champion 20 Feb 1938– Oct 1939 |
6 | Edwin Rosario | 2006 | Ranks #36 on the list of "100 Greatest Punchers of All Time." according to Ring Magazine. WBC Lightweight Champion 1983 May 1 – 1984 Nov 3, WBA Lightweight Champion 1986 Sep 26 – 1987 Nov 21, WBA Lightweight Champion 199 Jul 9 – 1990 Apr 4, WBA Light Welterweight Champion 1991 Jun 14 – 1992 Apr 10. |
7 | Pedro Montañez | 2007 | 92 wins out of 103 fights. Never held a title. |
8 | Joe Cortez | 2011 | The first Puerto Rican boxing referee to be inducted into the Boxing Hall of Fame |
9 | Herbert "Cocoa Kid" Hardwick | 2012 | Member of boxing's "Black Murderers' Row". World Colored Welterweight Championship - June 11, 1937 to August 22, 1938; World Colored Middleweight Championship - January 11, 1940 until the title went extinct in the 1940s; World Colored Middleweight Championship - January 15, 1943 until the title went extinct in the 1940s |
10 | Félix "Tito" Trinidad | 2014 | Captured the IBF welterweight crown in his 20th pro bout. Won the WBA light middleweight title from David Reid in March 2000 and later that year unified titles with a 12th-round knockout against IBF champ Fernando Vargas. In 2001 became a three-division champion. |
11 | Héctor "Macho" Camacho | 2016 | First boxer to be recognized as a septuple champion in history. WBC Super Featherweight Championship - August 7, 1983 – 1984, WBC Lightweight Championship - August 10, 1985 – 1987, WBO Light Welterweight Champion - March 6, 1989 – February 23, 1991, WBO Light Welterweight Champion - May 18, 1991–1992. |
12 | Mario Rivera Martino | 2019 | First Puerto Rican boxing sports writer to be inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame. He served Puerto Rican boxing for more than 50 years as a writer and eventual commissioner. |
= Indicates the person is no longer alive
See also
- Sport in Puerto Rico
- List of current world boxing champions
- List of boxing triple champions
- List of boxing quadruple champions
- List of boxing quintuple champions
- List of boxing sextuple champions
- List of WBC world champions
- List of WBA world champions
- List of IBF world champions
- List of WBO world champions
- List of IBO world champions
- Septuple Champion
References
Footnotes
- "Puerto Rico, país de tradición boxística" (in Spanish). Univision. 2007-09-13. Archived from the original on 2009-05-22. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
- "World Champions By Nationality". BoxRec.
- José Torres (2004-12-15). "Fábrica de campeones" (in Spanish). ESPN Deportes. Retrieved 2008-10-06.
- "El Consejo Mundial de Boxeo rinde un homenaje a Peñagarícano y Chade" (in Spanish). Yahoo!. 2008-07-31. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
- Sebastián Contursi (2008-06-08). "La época dorada" (in Spanish). ESPN Deportes. Retrieved 2008-08-15.
- José A. Sánchez Fournier (2008-10-06). "Deportes". En un dos por tres (in Spanish). Puerto Rico: El Nuevo Día. p.97
- https://www.thenational.ae/sport/miguel-cotto-listened-to-the-game-plan-to-beat-sergio-martinez-1.457448
- "Amanda-Serrano ties Cotto, demolishes Lazar for WBO title". BoxingScene.
- Fonseca et al., p.314
- Fonseca et al., p.315
- Fonseca et al., pp.14–16
- Fonseca et al., p.17
- Fonseca et al., p.317
- Fonseca et al., p.320
- Fonseca et al., p.326
- Fonseca et al., p.328
- Fonseca et al., p.20
- Fonseca et al., p.31
- Fonseca et al., p.39
- Fonseca et al., p.50
- Fonseca et al., p.59
- Fonseca et al., p.95
- Fonseca et al., p.70
- Fonseca et al., p.86
- Fonseca et al., p.104
- Fonseca et al., p.122
- Fonseca et al., p.134
- Fonseca et al., p.151
- Fonseca et al., p.164
- Fonseca et al., p.180
- Fonseca et al., p.198
- Fonseca et al., p.210
- Fonseca et al., p.220
- Fonseca et al., p.224
- Fonseca et al., p.240
- Fonseca et al., p.252
- Fonseca et al., p.263
- Fonseca et al., p.275
- Fonseca et al., p.293
- Fonseca et al., p.282
- "Los campeones mundiales boricuas". Primera Hora (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2007-10-29. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
- Luis Santiago Arce (2008-01-05). Rumbo a la Titomanía (in Spanish). El Nuevo Día.
- Rey Colón (2009-03-31). 'Carita' López en la lista de campeones boricuas (in Spanish). El Vocero.
- "A defender en casa" (in Spanish). ESPN Deportes. 2003-08-28. Retrieved 2008-12-27.
- Fiona Manning (2003-05-09). "Ivan Calderon: Puerto Rico's New World Champion". La Prensa San Diego. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
- José A. Sánchez Fournier (2007-08-26). Calderón vs Cázares: Doble Correa para el boricua (in Spanish). El Nuevo Día. pp. 118–119.
- "Siaca takes Mundine's crown". BBC. 2004-05-05. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
- Don Steinberg (2008-07-25). "Las peleas más importantes" (in Spanish). ESPN Deportes. Retrieved 2008-12-27.
- Dan Rafael (2006-12-02). "Cotto crushes Quintana in five". ESPN. Retrieved 2008-12-27.
- Clifton Brown (2007-02-10). "BOXING; Every Picture Tells a Story". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-12-27.
- Dan Rafael (2006-10-30). "Scorecard: Cintron gets title; Julio wins but loses luster". ESPN. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
- Carlos González (2008-02-13). ""El Indio" Quintana: "Gané por mí y por mi familia"". Primera Hora (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2014-04-21. Retrieved 2014-04-21.
- Carlos González (2008-06-07). "Fulminante Juanma". Primera Hora (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2014-04-20.
- Mark Vester (2009-03-14). "Martinez Knocks Cook Out in Four, Captures WBO title". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2009-03-14.
- Esteban Pagán Rivera (2009-03-29). ""Carita López" logró su ansiado título mundial". Primera Hora (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2014-04-21. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
- Mark Vester (2010-02-27). "Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. Knocks Out Marvin Sonsona in Four". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2010-02-27.
- Dan Rafael (2012-03-25). "Garcia outlasts Erik Morales to win title". ESPN. Retrieved 2012-03-25.
- Thomas Gerbasi (2011-06-10). "Ready Rico Preps For First World Title Shot With Shimoda". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2011-07-10.
- Lem Satterfield (2011-07-09). "Rico Ramos Knocks Out Akifumi Shimoda, Wins Title". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2011-07-10.
- "Pedraza wins IBO super featherweight belt". FightNews.com. 2014-03-22. Archived from the original on 2014-05-29. Retrieved 2014-06-14.
- "McJoe Arroyo se corona campeón de las 115 libras de la FIB". 2015-07-19.
- ""El Canito"Jason Sosa es el nuevo campeón mundial de la AMB". 2016-06-25.
- "El boxeador Alberto Machado se coronó campeón mundial en las 130 libras". 2017-10-22.
- "Puerto Rico tiene nuevo campeón mundial". 2017-12-03.
- "Women's Boxing: Melissa Del Valle Biography". Women Boxing Archive Network. Archived from the original on 2011-11-03. Retrieved 2011-09-11.
- "Women's Boxing: Ada Velez Biography". Women Boxing Archive Network. Archived from the original on 2011-10-10. Retrieved 2011-09-11.
- Ken Hissner (2011-07-20). "Melissa Hernandez - 4 Time World Champion!". Doghouseboxing.com. Retrieved 2011-12-17.
- "Amanda Serrano". Boxrec.
Sources
- Marvin Fonseca Barahona (2007). Puerto Rico: Cuna de Campeones (in Spanish) (1st ed.). Puerto Rico. ISBN 978-1-60643-254-9.
Notes
Men's titlists
- I^ :Boxing record for Sixto Escobar from BoxRec
- II^ :Boxing record for Carlos Ortiz from BoxRec
- III^ :Boxing record for Jose Torres from BoxRec
- IV^ :Boxing record for Angel Espada from BoxRec
- V^ :Boxing record for Alfredo Escalera from BoxRec
- VI^ :Boxing record for Samuel Serrano from BoxRec
- VII^ :Boxing record for Wilfred Benitez from BoxRec
- VIII^ :Boxing record for Esteban De Jesus from BoxRec
- IX^ :Boxing record for Wilfredo Gomez from BoxRec
- X^ :Boxing record for Julian Solis from BoxRec
- XI^ :Boxing record for Carlos De Leon from BoxRec
- XII^ :Boxing record for Ossie Ocasio from BoxRec
- XIII^ :Boxing record for Juan La Porte from BoxRec
- XIV^ :Boxing record for Edwin Rosario from BoxRec
- XV^ :Boxing record for Hector Camacho from BoxRec
- XVI^ :Boxing record for Mark Medal from BoxRec
- XVII^ :Boxing record for Harry Arroyo from BoxRec
- XVIII^ :Boxing record for Victor Callejas from BoxRec
- XIX^ :Boxing record for Carlos Santos from BoxRec
- XX^ :Boxing record for Antonio Rivera from BoxRec
- XXI^ :Boxing record for Wilfredo Vazquez from BoxRec
- XXII^ :Boxing record for Jose Ruiz from BoxRec
- XXIII^ :Boxing record for John John Molina from BoxRec
- XXIV^ :Boxing record for Jose De Jesus from BoxRec
- XXV^ :Boxing record for Juan Nazario from BoxRec
- XXVI^ :Boxing record for Orlando Fernandez from BoxRec
- XXVII^ :Boxing record for Rafael Del Valle from BoxRec
- XXVIII^ :Boxing record for Josue Camacho from BoxRec
- XXIX^ :Boxing record for Daniel Jimenez from BoxRec
- XXX^ :Boxing record for Felix Trinidad from BoxRec
- XXXI^ :Boxing record for Kevin Kelley from BoxRec
- XXXII^ :Boxing record for Alex Sanchez from BoxRec
- XXXIII^ :Boxing record for Jake Rodriguez from BoxRec
- XXXIV^ :Boxing record for Sammy Fuentes from BoxRec
- XXXV^ :Boxing record for Frank Toledo from BoxRec
- XXXVI^ :Boxing record for Jose Antonio Rivera from BoxRec
- XXXVII^ :Boxing record for Lou Del Valle from BoxRec
- XXXVIII^ :Boxing record for Eric Morel from BoxRec
- XXXIX^ :Boxing record for Daniel Santos from BoxRec
- XL^ :Boxing record for Nelson Dieppa from BoxRec
- XLI^ :Boxing record for John Ruiz from BoxRec
- XLII^ :Boxing record for Ivan Calderon from BoxRec
- XLIII^ :Boxing record for Manny Siaca from BoxRec
- XLIV^ :Boxing record for Miguel Cotto from BoxRec
- XLV^ :Boxing record for Luis Collazo from BoxRec
- XLVI^ :Boxing record for Kermit Cintron from BoxRec
- XLVII^ :Boxing record for Carlos Quintana from BoxRec
- XLVIII^ :Boxing record for Juan Manuel Lopez from BoxRec
- XLIX^ :Boxing record for Roman Martinez from BoxRec
- L^ :Boxing record for Jose Lopez from BoxRec
- LI^ :Boxing record for Wilfredo Vazquez Jr from BoxRec
- LII^ :Boxing record for Danny Garcia from BoxRec
- LIII^ :Boxing record for Rico Ramos from BoxRec
- LIV^ :Boxing record for Jayson Velez from BoxRec
- LV^ :Boxing record for Janiel Rivera from BoxRec
- LVI^ :Boxing record for Jose Pedraza from BoxRec
- LVII^ :Boxing record for McJoe Arroyo from BoxRec
- LVIII^ :Boxing record for Jason Sosa from BoxRec
- LIX^ :Boxing record for Jesus Rojas from BoxRec
- LX^ :Boxing record for Alberto Machado from BoxRec
- LXI^ :Boxing record for Angel Acosta from BoxRec