Miguel Lora Explained

Miguel Lora
Realname:Miguel Lora Escudero
Birth Date:April 12, 1961
Birth Place:Montería, Colombia
Nationality:Colombian
Nickname:Happy
Weight:
Height:5 ft 6 in
Reach:63 in
Style:Orthodox
Total:40
Wins:37
Ko:17
Losses:3

Miguel Lora Escudero (born April 12, 1961 in Montería, Córdoba), known as Miguel Lora or "Happy" Lora is a Colombian boxer. He reigned as the WBC bantamweight champion of the world from 1985 to 1988.

Beginnings and world title

Lora started training in his native Montería and eventually represented his home department. In 1977 he won a gold medal in a local tournament. From 1980 to 1983 he won several national and regional titles. On August 9, 1985 he got his first chance to fight for the championship against Mexican Daniel Zaragoza. Lora defeated Zaragoza to become the fifth Colombian world champion.

Memorable bouts

After the world title, Lora fought Puerto Rican Wilfredo Vázquez. He defended his belt eight times and fought boxers such as Alberto Davila,[1] Antonio Avelar, Ray Minus,[2] Lucio Omar López, until he lost against Raúl "Jíbaro" Pérez.

During the three years that Miguel "Happy" Lora kept his title, he was known for his defensive, methodical style.

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
40Loss37–3Rafael del ValleUD12 (12)1993-06-19
39Win37–2Cesar PolancoUD10 (10)1993-04-23
38Win36–2Ricky RomeroKO3 (10)1992-09-26
37Win35–2Gabriel BernalPTS10 (10)1992-04-12
36Win34–2Rolando BoholPTS10 (10)1991-08-02
35Loss33–2Gaby CanizalesKO2 (12)1991-03-12
34Win33–1Bernardo MendozaPTS10 (10)1990-12-14
33Win32–1Emilio AponteTKO3 (10)1990-08-18
32Loss31–1Raúl PérezUD12 (12)1988-10-29
31Win31–0Alberto DávilaUD12 (12)1988-08-01
30Win30–0Lucio Omar LopezUD12 (12)1988-04-30
29Win29–0Ray MinusUD12 (12)1987-11-27
28Win28–0Antonio AvelarKO4 (12)1987-07-25
27Win27–0Alberto DávilaUD12 (12)1986-11-15
26Win26–0Enrique SánchezTKO6 (12)1986-08-23
25Win25–0Wilfredo VázquezUD12 (12)1986-02-08
24Win24–0Daniel ZaragozaUD12 (12)1985-08-09
23Win23–0Diego AvilaTKO8 (10)1985-06-07
22Win22–0Ramon Antonio NeryTKO2 (10)1985-05-10
21Win21–0Jose ChaconPTS10 (10)1984-11-24
20Win20–0Juan TorresPTS10 (10)1984-07-03
19Win19–0Edwin RangelPTS10 (10)1984-02-18
18Win18–0Juan DíazTKO5 (10)1983-12-16
17Win17–0Pedro RomeroPTS12 (12)1983-09-18
16Win16–0Jose SalazarKO3 (?)1983-07-30
15Win15–0Rubén Darío PalacioPTS12 (12)1983-05-12
14Win14–0Miguel PerezPTS12 (12)1982-09-17
13Win13–0Charles MaussaKO7 (?)1982-07-30
12Win12–0Edelmiro CassianiKO7 (?)1982-02-27
11Win11–0Luis TapiasTKO3 (?)1981-12-18
10Win10–0Carlos OsorioPTS10 (10)1981-05-28
9Win9–0Arnold SarmientoTKO3 (?)1980-12-03
8Win8–0Juan AlvarezPTS10 (10)1980-10-31
7Win7–0Orlando TejedorKO1 (10)1980-08-14
6Win6–0Julio Soto SolanoPTS12 (12)1980-06-12
5Win5–0Justo JorgeTKO3 (?)1980-03-28
4Win4–0Arnold SarmientoKO3 (?)1979-12-22
3Win3–0Tomas MazaKO1 (?)1979-11-23
2Win2–0Alfredo GomezKO1 (?)1979-10-26
1Win1–0Wilfredo RuizPTS6 (6)1979-07-27

Retirement

After his loss to Raúl "Jíbaro" Pérez, he fought for a world title against Gaby Canizales, who won by knockout and eventually dislodged Lora's fifth cervical vertebrae. Miguel "Happy" Lora decided to retire form boxing in 1993 and since then he has been living in his native Montería, dedicated to personal business, TV shows and soap operas.

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. News: SPORTS PEOPLE; Contradictory Tests. The New York Times. 16 August 1988 . 2024-03-26.
  2. Web site: Miguel 'Happy' Lora retained his World Boxing Council bantamweight.... United Press International. 2024-03-26.