Julio César Chávez Jr. vs. Marco Antonio Rubio explained

Fight Name:Welcome to the Future
Fight Date:February 4, 2012
Location:Alamodome, San Antonio, Texas, US
Titles:WBC middleweight title
Fighter1: Julio César Chávez Jr.
Nickname1:"La Leyenda Continua"
Hometown1:Culiacan, Sinaloa, Mexico
Record1:44-0-1 (1) (31 KO)
Height1:6 ft 1 in
Weight1:159+1/2 lb
Style1:Orthodox
Recognition1:WBC
Middleweight Champion
Fighter2: Marco Antonio Rubio
Nickname2:"El Veneno"
Hometown2:Torreon, Coahuila, Mexico
Record2:53-5-1 (46 KO)
Height2:5 ft 10 in
Weight2:159 lb
Style2:Orthodox
Recognition2:WBC
No. 1 Ranked Middleweight
Result:Chávez Jr. wins via 12-round unanimous decision (118-110, 116-112, 115-113)

Julio César Chávez Jr. vs. Marco Antonio Rubio, billed as Welcome to the Future, was a boxing middleweight bout for the WBC world title. The bout was held on February 4, 2012, at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, United States.[1] where 14,000 fans were attending.[2]

Background

Chávez

Chávez held an overall record of 44-0-1, having won twenty straight fights since enduring his career’s lone blemish six years ago. The bout with Rubio was the rising star’s second consecutive clash in Texas, racking up a fifth-round TKO against Peter Manfredo Jr. in Houston last month, and the second time he’s visited the home of The Alamo in his previous five fights.[3]

Chávez claimed a middleweight belt in June via a majority decision against Sebastian Zbik and made his first defense on November 19, a fifth-round TKO of Peter Manfredo Jr.[4]

Rubio

Rubio had gone 10-0 with nine knockouts and has been a far more authoritative, confident-appearing fighter.

Among those 10 victories was an impressive seventh-round stoppage of one of the game’s elite prospects, David Lemieux, on April 8, 2011. Lemieux entered the fight with a 25-0 record and 24 knockouts and was hailed as a potential star.

He has not lost since being stopped in the ninth round by then-middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik in February 2009.

Main card

Preliminary card

Result

Chávez retained the WBC middleweight title, earning a unanimous decision over fellow Mexican Rubio. The judges scored the bout 118-110, 116-112 115-113 for Chávez, which drew a mixed reaction from the 14,120 in attendance at the Alamodome. Neither fighter went down despite taking continuous heavy blows to the head and body throughout the 12-round bout. Chavez Jr. overcame a gutsy performance by Rubio despite having some trouble entering the fight.

Notes

Rubio stated after the fight: "He re-gained a lot of weight. I re-gained my usual weight." and "I feel that he was very well protected. They didn't even do any testing which should have been done". However, Rubio neglected to mention that the local Texas commission also did not test him, along with the co-feature fighters Donaire and Vazquez Jr. According to the commission, they made the mistake of not booking a testing laboratory for the event in advance.[5] Former world champion Julio César Chávez was at ringside, providing Spanish color commentary for Donaire's bout before watching his son's fight as a spectator. Among those in attendance were former world champions "Sugar" Shane Mosley of Golden Boy Promotions and San Antonio native Jesse James Leija.

International Broadcasting

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., Nonito Donaire headline Feb. 4 card in San Antonio.
  2. Web site: Chavez Jr. vs. Margarito: A good fight for casual boxing fans ⋆ Boxing News 24.
  3. Web site: Reference at www.eastsideboxing.com.
  4. Web site: Reference at www.boxingnews24.com.
  5. Web site: Texas, WBC blew testing, not Chavez - Dan Rafael Blog- ESPN.