Steven Luevano Explained

Steven Luevano
Birth Date:March 3, 1981
Birth Place:Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Weight:
Height:5 ft 7 in
Reach:69 in
Style:Southpaw
Total:40
Wins:37
Ko:15
Losses:2
Draws:1

Steven "Steve" Luevano (born March 3, 1981) is an American former professional boxer who held the WBO featherweight title. He was trained by the former IBF Super Featherweight Champion Robert Garcia.

Amateur career

Steven fought on the Mexican National amateur team. He is the 1997 National Jr. Olympic amateur champion at 119 pounds and had almost 300 amateur bouts before entering the pro ranks.

Pro career

Luevano turned pro in 2000 and defeated many talented veterans including a win over future IBF Featherweight Champion Cristobal Cruz.

WBO Featherweight Championship

On July 14, 2007, Luevano won the Vacant WBO Featherweight Championship by upsetting an undefeated and the future Super Featherweight WBO champion Nicky Cook by K.O.[1]

On October 6, 2007, Steven Luevano (34-1, 15 KOs) defended his WBO Featherweight title, unanimously defeating 35-year-old Antonio "T-Rex" Davis (24-4) on the undercard of Manny Pacquiao and Marco Antonio Barrera. On March 15 Luevano defended his title magnificently against Thailands Terdsak Jandaeng (29-2-0) winning unanimously. In this pay-per-view fight he landed a featherweight boxing record for most jabs landed.

Even though Steven was born in the United States, he came to the ring with the Mexican flag instead, thus leading the boxing world to believe the fact that Luevano was a Mexican boxer.

Steven Luevano was tested in his 3rd defense against Mario Santiago on the David Diaz-Manny Pacquiao undercard at Mandalay Bay Events Center on June 28, 2008. Luevano retained his 126-pound belt via split draw against Santiago. Judge Harry Davis scored it 117-111 for Luevano, Duane Ford had it 115-113 for Santiago and Dave Moretti had it 114-114. ESPN.com also had it 114-114. Luevano landed 215 of 641 punches (34%) while Santiago connected on 214 of 835 (26%).[2]

On October 18, 2008, Luevano defeated Billy Dib of Australia (21-0-0) for his 4th defense by unanimous decision.

On August 15, 2009, Luevano successfully defended his title for a 5th time via disqualification against Bernabe Concepcion (29-1-2). Luevano was ahead on the scorecards when Concepcion landed late blows after the bell at the end of the seventh round, resulting in Concepcion being disqualified.

Luevano ultimately lost his title on January 23, 2010, as he was stopped in the 7th round by former WBO junior bantamweight champion Juan Manuel Lopez. This was his only knockout loss.

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
40Loss37–2–1Juan Manuel LópezTKO7 (12)2010-01-23
39Win37–1–1Bernabe ConcepcionDQ7 (12)2009-08-15
38Win36–1–1Billy DibUD12 (12)2008-10-18
37Draw35–1–1Mario SantiagoSD12 (12)2008-06-28
36Win35–1Terdsak JandaengUD12 (12)2008-03-15
35Win34–1Antonio DavisUD12 (12)2007-10-06
34Win33–1Nicky CookKO11 (12)2007-07-14
33Win32–1Baudel CardenasUD12 (12)2006-10-13
32Win31–1Cristóbal CruzUD12 (12)2006-07-21
31Win30–1Jorge MartinezUD10 (10)2006-03-31
30Loss29–1Martin HonorioUD10 (10)2005-11-25
29Win29–0Ruben EstanislaoUD12 (12)2005-09-09
28Win28–0Genaro TrazancosTKO5 (12)2005-06-17
27Win27–0Julian RodriguezTKO5 (10)2005-03-05
26Win26–0Aldo ValtierraUD10 (10)2004-11-05
25Win25–0Cristian FavelaUD10 (10)2004-10-08
24Win24–0Fred NealRTD9 (10)2004-07-02
23Win23–0Rodrigo CerdaKO1 (8)2004-05-21
22Win22–0Armando CordobaUD8 (8)2004-02-13
21Win21–0Jose Luis TulaTKO2 (8)2003-12-05
20Win20–0Miguel Angel EscamillaUD6 (6)2003-08-15
19Win19–0Aristeo PerezTKO2 (6)2003-06-14
18Win18–0John NolascoUD8 (8)2003-05-02
17Win17–0Phillip PayneUD6 (6)2003-03-28
16Win16–0Marcos BadilloKO1 (6)2003-02-22
15Win15–0Aristeo PerezUD6 (6)2002-11-01
14Win14–0Ivan AlvarezTKO1 (8)2002-10-04
13Win13–0Juan Carlos GarciaUD6 (6)2002-08-09
12Win12–0Justo SanchezRTD4 (6)2002-06-21
11Win11–0Freddy CastroTD4 (6)2001-07-15
10Win10–0Juan Carlos MartinezUD6 (6)2001-06-03
9Win9–0Martin LlamasUD4 (4)2001-04-08
8Win8–0Francisco RodriguezUD4 (4)2001-03-04
7Win7–0Jacob GodinezUD4 (4)2001-02-04
6Win6–0Miguel MedinaTKO1 (4)2000-11-26
5Win5–0Luis Enrique ValenzuelaKO2 (4)2000-11-05
4Win4–0Martin LlamasSD4 (4)2000-09-17
3Win3–0Ignacio GonzalezTKO3 (4)2000-09-03
2Win2–0Joseph SalazarTKO3 (4)2000-08-20
1Win1–0Hugo Elacio RosalesKO2 (4)2000-06-17

Retirement

While only 29 years old and still in his prime, Steven decided to retire from boxing, following his loss to Juan Manuel Lopez. During his professional career, Steven Luevano won the WBO NABO Super Bantamweight, WBC Continental Americas Featherweight, WBO NABO Featherweight, and made six defences of his WBO Featherweight Championship.[3]

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Brave Cook lacks world class as Luevano body punches to title. The Guardian. 2024-06-13.
  2. Web site: Luevano retains crown with split draw; DQ costs Soto. ESPN. 2024-06-13.
  3. Web site: Steven Luevano retires from boxing. Bad Left Hook. 2024-06-13.