Israel Vázquez Explained

Israel Vázquez
Nickname:Magnifico ("Magnificent")
Weight:
Height:5 ft 4+1/2 in
Reach:66+1/2 in
Birth Date:25 December 1977
Birth Place:Mexico City, Mexico
Style:Orthodox
Total:49
Wins:44
Ko:32
Losses:5

Israel Vázquez Castañeda (born December 25, 1977) is a Mexican former professional boxer who competed from 1995 to 2010. He is a three-time super bantamweight world champion, having held the IBF title from 2004 to 2005; and the WBC, The Ring titles twice from 2005 to 2008. Vázquez is best known for his series of four fights against fellow Mexican Rafael Márquez.

Professional career

In 1995, Vázquez made his professional debut in the bantamweight division at the age of 17. He stopped his first nine opponents before suffering a knock out loss himself. Fighting mainly in the US and at junior featherweight, he beat 11 opponents, most notably Óscar Larios (20-0), before losing a split decision to Marcos Licona.

Vázquez scored 12 consecutive victories, and in 2002, he met Larios in a rematch for the interim WBC Super Bantamweight Title . This time, he was outboxed and stopped in the 12th round.

Vázquez rebounded with a stoppage of ex-world title holder Jorge Eliecer Julio and won the vacant IBF Junior Featherweight title against southpaw Jose Luis Valbuena in 2004.

In the first defence of his IBF title he knocked out undefeated Armenian Artyom Simonyan in the 5th round. In 2005, Vázquez opted to fight WBC champion Óscar Larios for a third time with the WBC belt on the line instead of defending his IBF belt. He won the rubber match by technical knockout in the third round — after the fight was stopped due to a large cut over Larios's left eye, thus becoming The Ring and Lineal Junior Featherweight champion and ending Lario's streak of nine consecutive title fight victories.[1]

On June 10, 2006, Vázquez defeated former champion Ivan Hernández (23-1-1). Vázquez defeated the WBO Bantamweight champion Jhonny González on September 16, 2006 in a bout where Vázquez was knocked down twice before coming back to win the match by 10th round TKO.

Vázquez vs. Márquez

See main article: article and Márquez–Vázquez rivalry. In his next bout, on March 3, 2007, Vázquez lost his title to the number one ranked Bantamweight Rafael Márquez. Although Vazquez scored a knockdown in the third round, he retired on his stool at the end of round seven because of breathing problems arising from a broken nose. In a rematch on August 4, 2007, Vásquez regained his title. Despite suffering cuts over both eyes, he scored a knockout against Márquez in the sixth round in a fight that was named Ring Magazine's fight of the year for 2007. The third round of this fight was also named Ring Magazine round of the year.

He fought Marquez for the third time on March 1, 2008, rising from a fourth round knockdown to prevail by split decision in another great fight. Márquez was docked one point for low blows in round ten and received an eight count in the final seconds of round twelve. The fight was named 2008's Fight of the Year by The Ring Magazine and the fourth round was named Ring Magazine round of the year. The Vázquez vs Márquez trilogy has been widely heralded as one of the best boxing trilogies in recent years.[2] [3]

On December 18, 2008, Vázquez was stripped of his WBC Super Bantamweight Championship[4] after not defending the title for a certain period of time due to a detached retina he had suffered during his third fight with Márquez. Japanese fighter Toshiaki Nishioka's WBC Interim title was promoted to actual championship status after his victory over Genaro Garcia. After undergoing three surgeries, Vázquez was medically cleared to resume training on May 15, 2009.[5]

Vázquez fought Marquez for a fourth time on May 22, 2010. The bout took place in the Featherweight division and was held at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, California, United States.[6] The match was appropriately titled "Once and Four All" and carried live by Showtime. Marquez scored a third round TKO victory over Vázquez to even their series at two wins each.[7] [8] Afterwards, Marquez stated: "The fifth one could be a possibility if the fans vote for it. That is what I live for. Israel Vázquez is a great fighter." However, it was felt by some observers that the much faded Vázquez should retire. Frank Espinoza, Vázquez's longtime handler, stated that his "career is over".[9] The fourth installment of the Vázquez-Marquez rivalry was the last fight of Vázquez' career.

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
49Loss44–5Rafael MárquezKO3 (12), May 22, 2010
48Win44–4Angel Antonio PrioloKO9 (10), Oct 10, 2009
47Win43–4Rafael MárquezSD12Mar 1, 2008
46Win42–4Rafael MárquezTKO6 (12), Aug 4, 2007
45Loss41–4Rafael MárquezRTD7 (12), Mar 3, 2007
44Win41–3Jhonny GonzálezTKO10 (12), Sep 16, 2006
43Win40–3Ivan HernándezRTD4 (12), Jun 10, 2006
42Win39–3Óscar LariosTKO3 (12), Dec 3, 2005
41Win38–3Armando GuerreroUD12May 31, 2005
40Win37–3Artyom SimonyanTKO5 (12), Dec 28, 2004
39Win36–3José Luis ValbuenaTKO12 (12), Mar 25, 2004
38Win35–3Trinidad MendozaTKO7 (10), Sep 19, 2003
37Win34–3Jorge Eliécer JulioTKO10 (10), May 22, 2003
36Win33–3Justo AlmazanUD8Sep 26, 2002
35Loss32–3Óscar LariosTKO12 (12), May 17, 2002
34Win32–2Osvaldo GuerreroUD10Feb 22, 2002
33Win31–2Felipe RamirezKO5 (8), Oct 25, 2001
32Win30–2Ever BelenoKO2 (12), May 19, 2001
31Win29–2Don Don ConcepcionTKO3 (12), Jan 7, 2001
30Win28–2Eddy SaenzKO2 (10), Oct 27, 2000
29Win27–2Javier VarguezKO3 (10), Aug 17, 2000
28Win26–2Amador VasquezTKO2 (10), Jul 29, 2000
27Win25–2Eddy SaenzKO3 (12)May 6, 2000
26Win24–2Héctor VelázquezSD10Feb 4, 2000
25Win23–2Edel RuizUD8Jan 7, 2000
24Win22–2Adarryl Johnson6Oct 3, 1999
23Win21–2Nelson Ramon MedinaKO7 (10), Aug 9, 1999
22Loss20–2Marcos Licona12Mar 27, 1999
21Win20–1Agustin LorenzoTKO8 (10)Nov 30, 1998
20Win19–1Frank LizarragaUD6Oct 22, 1998
19Win18–1Juan Manuel ChavezUD10Aug 10, 1998
18Win17–1Oscar Javier GarciaTKO4Jun 8, 1998
17Win16–1Antonio Ramirez6Mar 15, 1998
16Win15–1Saul Briseno8Feb 21, 1998
15Win14–1Enrique AngelesTKO9Aug 30, 1997
14Win13–1Marcello NavaTKO4Jun 14, 1997
13Win12–1Óscar LariosKO1 (10)Apr 12, 1997
12Win11–1Erik LopezTKO3Mar 29, 1997
11Win10–1Abraham BarrientosTKO5Nov 30, 1996
10Loss9–1Ulises FloresTKO1Oct 5, 1996
9Win9–0Saul BrisenoTKO3Sep 7, 1996
8Win8–0Enrique MartinezTKO1May 3, 1996
7Win7–0Joel NolascoKO2Apr 19, 1996
6Win6–0Cecilio Marino JimenezKO7Mar 8, 1996
5Win5–0Alejandro PantaleonKO3Feb 16, 1996
4Win4–0Raul Gonzales4Sep 6, 1995
3Win3–0Jesus RomeroTKO1Jun 21, 1995
2Win2–0Sergio Lopez1Apr 19, 1995
1Win1–0Eduardo Rosas1 (4)Mar 29, 1995

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Israel Vázquez - Lineal Jr. Featherweight Champion. The Cyber Boxing Zone Encyclopedia.
  2. Web site: Boxing News: Israel Vazquez, Rafael Marquez, Gary Shaw, Ken Hershman and More Speak . 2008-04-21 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080422203607/http://www.doghouseboxing.com/Chee/Cheepress0417b08.htm . 2008-04-22 . dead .
  3. https://www.espn.com/sports/boxing/notebook?page=notebook/boxingfeb29 ESPN - Notebook: It's trilogy time - Boxing
  4. Web site: Nishioka keeps super bantamweight title. Associated Press. January 3, 2009. August 1, 2010. ESPN.com.
  5. Web site: Three Surgeries Later, Israel Vazquez Is Good To Go TheSweetScience.com Boxing . www.thesweetscience.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090517022402/http://www.thesweetscience.com/boxing-article/6816/three-surgeries-later-israel-vazquez-good/ . 2009-05-17.
  6. http://sports.sho.com/boxing/events/vazquez-marquez-may-22-2010.html Showtime Sports
  7. Web site: Vester . Mark . Rafael Marquez Destroys Israel Vasquez in Three Rounds . BoxingScene.com . May 22, 2010 . May 23, 2010.
  8. Web site: Donovan . Jake . Marquez Evens The Score; Perez-Mares Fight To A Draw . BoxingScene.com . May 23, 2010 . May 23, 2010.
  9. Web site: Vazquez-Marquez IV nothing like I, II or III. The Ring. 23 May 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100526151031/http://www.ringtv.com/blog/1957/vazquezmarquez_iv_nothing_like_i_ii_or_iii/. 26 May 2010. dead.