Carlos De León Explained

Carlos De León
Nickname:Sugar
Weight:Cruiserweight
Light heavyweight
Nationality:Puerto Rican
Birth Date:3 May 1959
Birth Place:Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico
Death Place:Buffalo, New York
Style:Orthodox
Total:61
Wins:52
Losses:8
Draws:1
Ko:32

Carlos De León, also known as "Sugar" De Leon, (May 3, 1959 – January 1, 2020) was a Puerto Rican boxer who made history by becoming the first cruiserweight to win the world title twice. Subsequently, he kept breaking his own record for the most times as cruiserweight champion by regaining the title on two further occasions.

Career

See main article: Evander Holyfield vs. Carlos De León. De León, a native of Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico, first won a world title when he faced the WBC world champion Marvin Camel on November 25, 1980, replacing David Pearce the Great Britain boxer on the undercard of Sugar Ray Leonard and Roberto Durán's second fight in New Orleans. De León outpointed Camel over fifteen rounds. In a rematch later, De León knocked out Camel in eight rounds. When his countryman Ossie Ocasio won the WBA world title, De León and Ocasio became the second pair of Puerto Ricans to share world titles in the same division at the same time; Alfredo Escalera and Samuel Serrano had achieved the feat in the 1970s in the junior lightweight division.

Taking loss

De León lost his title in a shocking upset to former Gerry Cooney victim S. T. Gordon by a knockout in round two in Cleveland in 1982, and won a comeback fight versus former world heavyweight champion Leon Spinks by a knockout in round six in 1983. After that, he and Gordon boxed a rematch in Las Vegas, and De León dropped Gordon once in the first round and once in the twelfth, en route to a unanimous decision win in a history-making bout: De León had now become the first boxer to win the world cruiserweight title twice.

Champion again

He defended his title against Yaqui López by a knockout in four at San Jose, California, and with decisions over Anthony Davis and Bashiru Ali. The Davis bout took place in Las Vegas and the fight with Ali was in Oakland, California. De León next lost his title in Las Vegas to Alfonzo Ratliff in a decision. Ratliff was in turn beaten by Bernard Benton, who defended against De León on March 22, 1986, once again in Las Vegas. De León joined the likes of Sugar Ray Robinson and Muhammad Ali in becoming one of the few boxers ever to win one division's world championship at least three times, defeating Benton by decision.

Once more

He made a couple of defenses in Italy and then in 1988, he defended the title against Uruguayan José María Flores Burlón in Atlantic City, New Jersey, winning by twelve rounds in a unanimous decision but then he lost his titles in a unification bout with WBA and IBF world champion Evander Holyfield, by technical knockout in the eighth round, also in Las Vegas. But Holyfield soon left the division to pursue the world heavyweight championship, and De León was left with an open door to break his own record and win the title for a record fourth time. He went to London, where he beat the WBC's number two ranked contender, Sammy Reeson, by a knockout in the ninth round, breaking his own record and was crowned world cruiserweight champion once again.

Holding on

Carlos held on to the title for two years until finally losing it to Massimiliano Duran in Italy in an eleventh-round disqualification. He gained the title by his aforementioned win over Sammy Reeson. He made a defense by drawing with Johnny Nelson before the loss to Massimilano Duran mentioned earlier.

After boxing

During the 1990s, De León ran afoul of the law a number of times, once while he was carrying a rifle. He worked on helping the professional boxing career of his son, prospect Carlos de León Jr.

He died on January 1, 2020, due to a cardiac arrest.[1] He was 60.

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
62Loss53–8–1Brian NielsenTKO3 (8)Nov 24, 1995
61Loss53–7–1Corrie SandersTKO1 (10), Aug 13, 1994
60Win53–6–1Bobby ArthursMD10Feb 17, 1994
59Win52–6–1Brian MorganPTS8Jan 14, 1994
58Win51–6–1Jordan KeepersTKO5 (?)Nov 5, 1993
57Win50–6–1Andre CrowderKO1 (8)Jun 19, 1993
56Win49–6–1Joey ChristjohnPTS6May 15, 1993
55Win48–6–1James WilderUD10Mar 13, 1993
54Win47–6–1Rocky BentleyUD10Jan 22, 1993
53Win46–6–1Bruce JohnsonTKO4 (10)Jun 27, 1992
52Loss45–6–1Massimiliano DuranDQ11 (12)Jul 27, 1990
51Draw45–5–1Johnny NelsonSD12Jan 27, 1990
50Win45–5Sammy ReesonTKO9 (12), May 17, 1989
49Loss44–5Evander HolyfieldTKO8 (12), Apr 9, 1988
48Win44–4Jose Maria Flores BurlonUD12Jan 22, 1988
47Win43–4Larry PhelpsKO1 (10), Aug 1, 1987
46Win42–4Angelo RottoliTKO5 (12)Feb 21, 1987
45Win41–4Michael GreerTKO8 (12), Aug 10, 1986
44Win40–4Bernard BentonMD12Mar 22, 1986
43Loss39–4Alfonzo RatliffSD12Jun 6, 1985
42Win39–3Dorcey GaymonTKO9 (10)Jan 12, 1985
41Win38–3Bash AliUD12Jun 2, 1984
40Win37–3Anthony DavisUD12Mar 9, 1984
39Win36–3Yaqui LopezTKO4 (12), Sep 21, 1983
38Win35–3S.T. GordonUD12Jul 17, 1983
37Win34–3Leon SpinksRTD6 (10), Mar 6, 1983
36Win33–3Ivy BrownPTS10Nov 26, 1982
35Loss32–3S.T. GordonTKO2 (15), Jun 27, 1982
34Win32–2Marvin CamelTKO8 (15)Feb 24, 1982
33Win31–2Greg PayneTKO3 (10), Dec 12, 1981
32Win30–2Marvin CamelMD15Nov 25, 1980
31Win29–2Mario RosaPTS8Jun 28, 1980
30Win28–2Waldemar PaulinoKO1 (12), Apr 25, 1980
29Win27–2Christy ElliottTKO4 (12), Sep 25, 1979
28Win26–2Willie McIntyreTKO1 (10)Aug 25, 1979
27Win25–2Manny FreitasTKO1 (?), Apr 8, 1979
26Win24–2Bonifacio AvilaTKO2 (10), Jan 27, 1979
25Win23–2Wendell JosephPTS10Nov 18, 1978
24Win22–2Rennie PinderTKO3 (10)Sep 26, 1978
23Win21–2Roy HarryKO1 (10), Sep 8, 1978
22Win20–2Tyrone FreemanTKO3 (10), Apr 8, 1978
21Win19–2Jesse LaraTKO2 (?), Mar 25, 1978
20Win18–2Ray BryantTKO5 (10)Jan 28, 1978
19Win17–2Eddie DavisTKO5 (10)Nov 8, 1977
18Win16–2Battling DouglasTKO5 (10), Oct 14, 1977
17Loss15–2Ray HammondPTS8Sep 10, 1977
16Win15–1Mustapha AliUD10Jul 29, 1977
15Win14–1Eddie DavisTKO3 (?)Jun 25, 1977
14Win13–1Antonio ColonTKO6 (?)Feb 12, 1977
13Win12–1Carlos SotoPTS8Oct 11, 1976
12Win11–1Astor AgostoPTS8Aug 16, 1976
11Win10–1Dario de JesusPTS8Jul 19, 1976
10Win9–1Carlos SotoPTS8Apr 5, 1976
9Loss8–1Roberto ColonPTS4Feb 15, 1976
8Win8–0Larry AdkinsPTS8Sep 15, 1975
7Win7–0James JacksonTKO3 (?)Nov 11, 1975
6Win6–0Cubby JacksonTKO4 (?)May 17, 1975
5Win5–0Kid GavilanTKO6 (?)Apr 5, 1975
4Win4–0Tripodi GuadalupeTKO5 (?)Mar 17, 1975
3Win3–0Vernon LawsTKO3 (?)Nov 2, 1974
2Win2–0Jesse TorresTKO2 (?)Oct 19, 1974
1Win1–0Roy HarrisTKO4 (?)Aug 3, 1974

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Four-time world boxing champ, Hall of Fame trainer Carlos De Leon dies at 60. January 2, 2020.