Oscar De La Hoya vs. Wilfredo Rivera explained

Fight Name:Title Wave
Fight Date:December 6, 1997
Location:Caesars Atlantic City, Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S.
Titles:WBC welterweight title
Fighter1:Oscar De La Hoya
Nickname1:The Golden Boy
Hometown1:East Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Purse1:$6,000,000
Record1:26–0 (21 KO)
Height1:5 ft 11 in
Weight1:147 lb
Style1:Orthodox
Recognition1:WBC
Welterweight Champion
Fighter2:Wilfredo Rivera
Hometown2:San Juan, Puerto Rico
Purse2:$350,000
Record2:27–2–1 (18 KO)
Height2:5 ft 11 in
Weight2:147 lb
Style2:Orthodox
Recognition2:WBC
No. 4 Ranked Welterweight
Result:De La Hoya wins via 8th-round technical knockout

Oscar De La Hoya vs. Wilfredo Rivera, billed as Title Wave was a professional boxing match contested on December 6, 1997, for the WBC welterweight title.[1]

Background

Just two days after his victory over Héctor Camacho in September 1997, it was announced that WBC welterweight champion Oscar De La Hoya's next title defense would come just under three months later on December 6 against Wilfredo Rivera, the WBC's number-four ranked welterweight contender.[2]

Just weeks before the fight, renowned trainer Emanuel Steward, who had trained De La Hoya for his two previous fights against Camacho and David Kamau was dismissed by De La Hoya's camp after it was deemed that Steward, who was simultaneously training WBC heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis, was not spending as much time training De La Hoya for his fight against Rivera. Instead, legendary 75-year old trainer Gil Clancy was brought out of a 20-year retirement and hired as Steward's replacement by De La Hoya.[3] Steward revealed that the reason for his dismissal was a "family situation" as De La Hoya's father Joel, felt that Steward should have had De La Hoya sparring no less than 125 rounds during training, a tactic Steward felt was "crazy" as De La Hoya had already fought four times during the course of the year.[4]

The featured undercard bout featured reigning WBC super welterweight champion Terry Norris defending his title against Keith Mullings, a journeyman fighter who sported a 1–4–1 record in his last six fights. Norris, a heavy 7–1 favorite, was reportedly set to drop down in weight to face De La Hoya the following year for a reported $4.5 million payday after his expected victory over Mullings and assuming De La Hoya would next defeat his mandatory challenger Patrick Charpentier.[5] However, Norris, after controlling the early portion of his fight against Mullings, was knocked down late in the eighth round and then had the fight stopped in the ninth following a brutal assault from Mullings, costing him the De La Hoya fight.[6]

The Fight

Though Rivera was a game opponent, De La Hoya controlled nearly the entire fight from the opening round. De La Hoya, having staggered Rivera with a left hook in the second round, followed up with another that opened up a gash over Rivera's right eye, which would hinder him throughout the remainder of the bout. Then in the fourth round, De La Hoya sent Rivera down with a sharp right hand. Rivera was able to answer the referee's 10-count at five, but the gash above his right eye, which his corner had managed to close, was reopened and another cut was opened on his right cheek. Rivera would survive until the eighth round, when the fight was stopped after the ringside doctor concluded that Rivera could not continue due the cuts he had suffered.[7]

Fight card

Confirmed bouts:[8]

Weight ClassWeightvs.MethodRoundNotes
Welterweight147 lbs.Oscar De La Hoya (c)def.TKO8/12
Super Welterweight154 lbs.Keith Mullings def.Terry Norris (c)TKO9/12
Super Welterweight154 lbs.Yori Boy Campas def.Raúl Márquez (c)TKO8/12
Cruiserweight190 lbs.Vassiliy Jirov def.Art JimmersonTKO2/10
Super Welterweight154 lbs.Daniel Santos def.Jerry BookerTKO3/8
Super Featherweight130 lbs.Zahir Raheem def.Terry SmithTKO4/6
Heavyweight200+ lbs.Eric Esch def.Doug PhillipsUD4/4


Broadcasting

align=center Countryalign=center Broadcaster
HBO

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Oscar De La Hoya vs. Wilfredo Rivera . boxrec.com . BoxRec . 31 October 2024.
  2. https://www.nytimes.com/1997/09/17/sports/plus-in-the-news-boxing-de-la-hoya-to-fight-in-atlantic-city.html De La Hoya to Fight In Atlantic City
  3. https://www.nytimes.com/1997/11/21/sports/plus-in-the-news-boxing-de-la-hoya-adds-clancy-as-trainer.html De La Hoya Adds Clancy as Trainer
  4. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-nov-14-sp-53729-story.html De La Hoya Replaces Steward as Trainer
  5. https://www.nytimes.com/1997/12/03/sports/boxing-de-la-hoya-meets-a-legend-as-he-plans-his-own.html De La Hoya Meets a Legend as He Plans His Own
  6. https://www.nytimes.com/1997/12/07/sports/boxing-de-la-hoya-remains-unbeaten-after-stopping-rivera-in-the-eighth-round.html De La Hoya Remains Unbeaten After Stopping Rivera in the Eighth Round
  7. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-dec-07-sp-61689-story.html De La Hoya Definitely a Cut Above
  8. Web site: BoxRec - event.