Jesús Chávez Explained

Jesús Chávez
Nickname:El Matador ("The Matador")
Weight:
Height:5 ft 5 in
Reach:65 in
Birth Date:12 November 1972
Birth Place:Delicias, Chihuahua, Mexico
Style:Orthodox
Total:52
Wins:44
Ko:30
Losses:8

Jesús Gabriel Sandoval Chávez (; born November 12, 1972) is a Mexican former professional boxer who competed from 1994 to 2010. He is a two-weight world champion, having held the WBC super featherweight title from 2003 to 2004, and the IBF lightweight title from 2005 to 2007.

Early life

Chávez was born in Delicias, Chihuahua, Mexico, and raised in Chicago, Illinois.[1] He became a legal U.S. resident as a child, but at age 16 he was convicted of being an accessory to armed robbery, spent four years in prison, and was subsequently deported back to Mexico. Nevertheless, he struggled to regain American citizenship and work his way up in boxing ranks.

Professional career

Chávez's first title opportunity came against WBC Super Featherweight champion Floyd Mayweather Jr. where he retired in the 9th round after an entertaining bout. He rebounded to win Mayweather's vacated WBC title on a fight for the title against 43-1 world champion Sirimongkol Eaimthuam by a twelve round unanimous decision at the Austin Convention Center in his hometown Austin, Texas on August 15, 2003, but lost it on his first defense, to the then two-time champion Erik Morales. In another exciting fight, Chávez rocked Morales early in the first round. Morales recovered and knocked Chávez down twice in the 2nd round, but Chávez came back and fought hard for the rest of the fight, despite having a torn rotator cuff and torn ACL. Morales won a close decision, but Chávez gained further respect for his effort.[2] In his next fight, he took on former IBF Champion Carlos Hernández, who in turn had also lost his own title to Morales. In an exciting 12-round war, Chávez pulled out a close decision.

IBF lightweight champion and death of Leavander Johnson

He then moved up to the Lightweight division to take on IBF champion Leavander Johnson. In an unfortunate bout, Chávez out-hustled Johnson throughout the entire fight, beating him severely for the entire fight until the referee finally stepped in and ended it. Johnson died several days later after he went into a coma. Despite being implicated in the tragedy, Johnson's family encouraged Chávez to keep fighting.

In 2007, Chávez lost his IBF title to Julio Díaz.[3] [4] [5]

On September 6, 2008, Jesús "El Matador" Chávez, (44-4 with 31 Win by TKO) knocked out visiting Andres Ledesma,of Colombia 42 seconds into the 9th round of their lightweight bout, at the Toyota Center, in Houston, Texas. Chávez, of Austin, also floored Ledesma in the 7th round.[6]

On April 4, 2009, Chávez was defeated by Michael Katsidis via 8th round TKO. He is trained by Richard Lord.

Chávez is the subject of the 2006 non-fiction book by Adam Pitluk titled Standing Eight.[7]

Personal life

His struggle to attain legal U.S. residence and work his way up the boxing ranks was documented in the film "Split Decision".[8] His life story was also documented in the book "Standing Eight: The Inspiring Story of Jesus El Matador Chavez".[9] In 2004, Chávez married US National Guard intelligence officer Aunisa Stroklund before she was deployed to the war in Iraq.[10] As of 2017 Chávez and Stroklund are divorced and Chávez now resides in Dallas, Texas.

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
52Loss44–8 Jorge LinaresRTD4 (10), Oct 24, 2010
51Loss44–7 Humberto SotoUD10Dec 19, 2009
50Loss44–6 David Díaz10Sep 26, 2009
49Loss44–5 Michael KatsidisRTD8 (10), Apr 4, 2009
48Win44–4 Andrés LedesmaTKO9 (10), Sep 6, 2008
47Win43–4 Daniel JiménezUD10Apr 4, 2008
46Loss42–4 Julio DíazKO3 (12), Feb 3, 2007
45Win42–3 Leavander JohnsonTKO11 (12), Sep 17, 2005
44Win41–3 Carlos HernándezSD12May 28, 2005
43Loss40–3 Érik MoralesUD12Feb 28, 2004
42Win40–2 Sirimongkol SingwanchaUD12Aug 15, 2003
41Win39–2 Carlos GerenaTKO6 (12), Mar 22, 2003
40Win38–2 Johnny WalkerTKO6 (10), Nov 15, 2002
39Win37–2 Julio Sánchez LeónTKO7 (10), Jun 28, 2002
38Win36–2 Gerardo ZayasKO3 (10), Mar 22, 2002
37Loss35–2 Floyd Mayweather Jr.RTD9 (12), Nov 10, 2001
36Win35–1 Juan José AriasUD12May 26, 2001
35Win34–1 Tom JohnsonTKO8 (12), Feb 23, 2001
34Win33–1 Benito RodríguezTKO6 (10), Jan 14, 2001
33Win32–1 Miguel AndradeKO2Aug 4, 2000
32Win31–1 Russell MosleyTKO2Jun 23, 2000
31Win30–1 Darryl PinckneyTKO4 (12)Mar 3, 2000
30Win29–1 Adarryl JohnsonTKO5 (12), Nov 15, 1999
29Win28–1 Armando BósquezTKO4 (12)Aug 27, 1999
28Win27–1 Bruno RabanalesTKO4Jul 31, 1999
27Win26–1 Julio ÁlvarezUD12May 22, 1999
26Win25–1 Rudolfo LunsfordTKO4 (12)Oct 2, 1998
25Win24–1 Eloy OrtegaTKO2Aug 15, 1998
24Win23–1 Moisés RodríguezTKO3Apr 18, 1998
23Win22–1 Troy DorseyRTD7 (12), Oct 4, 1997
22Win21–1 Wilfredo NegrónTKO5 (12), Aug 19, 1997
21Win20–1 John BrownUD12Jun 10, 1997
20Win19–1 Louie Espinoza8 (12)May 5, 1997
19Win18–1 Louie LeijaTKO6 (12), Mar 3, 1997
18Win17–1 Miguel TepanacatlKO2 (10), Nov 8, 1996
17Win16–1 Javier JáureguiUD12Aug 9, 1996
16Win15–1 Felipe CastilloUD10May 17, 1996
15Win14–1 Cedric MingoUD12Mar 31, 1996
14Win13–1 Eldon SneedTKO2 (8), Feb 22, 1996
13Win12–1 Roberto Ávila10Dec 6, 1995
12Win11–1 Gilbert SalinasUD8Nov 2, 1995
11Win10–1 Lupe RodríguezKO6 (10), Sep 21, 1995
10Win9–1 Héctor VicencioTKO6 (10)Aug 25, 1995
9Win8–1 Arturo Rangel2Jul 29, 1995
8Win7–1 Manuel Mendez2 (6), Jul 13, 1995
7Win6–1 Emanuel AugustusTKO7Jun 20, 1995
6Win5–1 Tony DuranTKO3May 3, 1995
5Loss4–1 Carlos Gerena8Jan 7, 1995
4Win4–0 César Armando MartínezTKO4 (8)Oct 15, 1994
3Win3–0 Jamie Cooper4Oct 13, 1994
2Win2–0 Rudy HernandezUD4Aug 19, 1994
1Win1–0 Lewis Wood4Aug 5, 1994

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: The Inspiration of Jesus Chavez. The Austin Chronicle. Belinda Acosta. February 9, 2011. August 13, 2017.
  2. http://www.ringsideboxingshow.com/PUGILISTICPARADISEJesusChavezErikMorales.html
  3. News: No matter the precautions, boxing's risks remain. Wayne 'Pocket Rocket' McCullough. ESPN. September 20, 2005. August 13, 2017.
  4. News: Johnson suffers brain hemorrhage in battle with Chavez for the IBF Lightweight Championship. Christine Maynard. September 18, 2005. August 13, 2017.
  5. Web site: Leavander Johnson vs. Jesus Chavez. BoxRec. August 13, 2017.
  6. Web site: Diaz takes IBO lightweight belt via split decision. abs-cbnnews.com.
  7. Standing Eight: The Inspiring Story of Jesus “El Matador” Chavez, Who Became Lightweight Champion of the World. Publishers Weekly, [s. l.], v. 253, n. 11, p. 54, 2006. Disponível em: https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=bth&AN=20204741&site=eds-live&scope=site . Acesso em: 31 maio. 2023.
  8. Web site: Split Decision . 2008-05-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080510050319/http://frif.com/new2000/split2.html . 2008-05-10 . dead .
  9. News: Standing Eight: The Inspiring Story of Jesus 'El Matador' Chavez, Who Became Lightweight Champion of the World. Juris Jurjevics. July 27, 2006. San Diego Reader. August 13, 2017.
  10. Web site: Jesus Chavez To Wed Soldier On Eve Of Iraqi Deployment. Fiona Manning. May 7, 2004. August 13, 2017.