Vicente Rondón Explained

Vicente Rondón
Realname:Vicente Paul Rondón
Birth Date:July 29, 1938
Birth Place:San José de Río Chico,
Venezuela
Death Place:Caracas,
Venezuela
Nickname:El Muchachote de Barlovento
("The Windward Boy")
Weight:Light heavyweight
Height:6 ft 1 in
Reach:77 in
Style:Orthodox
Total:59
Wins:40
Ko:23
Losses:16
Draws:1
No Contests:2

Vicente Paúl Rondón (July 29, 1938 – December 28, 1992) was a Venezuelan professional boxer who competed from 1965 to 1974, holding the WBA light heavyweight title from 1971 to 1972.

Personal background

Rondón was born into extreme poverty in San José de Río Chico, Miranda, Venezuela, and decided to escape his poor surroundings by enlisting in the Venezuelan military at an early age.

Professional career

When Rondón turned professional, his year of birth was listed as 1944; in fact it was 1938. Rondón began fighting as a middleweight and made a name for himself with upset victories over former world welterweight champion Luis Rodríguez and middleweight contender Bennie Briscoe. However, Rondon was growing and quickly established himself as a top rated light heavyweight with impressive wins over Roger Rouse, Eddie Talhami, and Allen Thomas. World Light heavyweight Champion Bob Foster did not seem eager to fight the #2 ranked Rondón or the #1 rated Jimmy Dupree. The WBA stripped Foster of his title and matched Rondón and Dupree.

In an exciting slugfest, Rondón climbed off the canvas in the second round to stop the favored Dupree at 2:58 of the 6th round.[1] At the time of the stoppage, referee Zack Clayton had the fight scored even at 47–47. Judge Dimas Hernandez also scored the bout 47–47, and judge Gustavo Vargas favored Rondón, 48–47. Following the fight, a controversy broke out with Dupree claiming he was drugged. The United Press International published a story of the claim. In the UPI article, Charliese Smith, a registered nurse and friend of Dupree said, "I believe Jimmy was drugged. I saw Jimmy after the fight and he was very very weak. His vision was blurry and he couldn't even see the other side of the room." She went on to say, "I know of muscle relaxants that can be administered in food and I'm convinced that Jimmy was given something." Regardless of the charges, the World Boxing Association recognized Rondón as world champion, while The Ring magazine viewed Bob Foster as the legitimate Light heavyweight king.

1971 was an outstanding year for Rondón with a number of title defenses. He became the first and only fighter to stop Gomeo Brennan. Many experts felt that Rondón could and would defeat Bob Foster. Rondon flopped badly against Foster in 1972; being destroyed in two rounds.[2] A venture into the heavyweight ranks proved just as bad, as he was beaten by Earnie Shavers, Ron Lyle and José Urtain. Rondón did better in 1973 as he started to trim down in weight. He looked highly skilled and impressive by scoring a 10-round decision over undefeated prospect Oliver Wright on Miami Beach. Shortly after, he stopped heavyweight Mike "Jim" Boswell in four rounds.

Sadly, Rondón's private life was full of demons. He was developing a drinking problem and spending money like it was going out of style. An attempt to regain the light heavyweight title, saw him drop a decision to number 1 rated Len Hutchins, and then suffer a 9th-round technical knockout to John Conteh. In 1974, Rondón, weighing 188 pounds, went back to the heavyweight division, where he would be largely unsuccessful. He was unable to get off the stool for round three in his fight with Rodney Bobick at Miami Beach, Florida. In his next fight he was knocked out in two rounds by former world heavyweight title contender José Roman.

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
59Loss40–16–1 José RomanTKO2 (10)1974-06-06
58Loss40–15–1 Rodney BobickRTD2 (10)1974-02-19
57Loss40–14–1 Bobby LloydUD10 (10)1973-12-08
56Loss40–13–1 Rudiger SchmidtkePTS10 (10)1973-11-17
55Loss40–12–1 John ContehTKO9 (10)1973-09-10
54Win40–11–1 Mike BoswellTKO4 (10)1973-08-24
53Win39–11–1 Boston BlackieTKO7 (10)1973-07-03
52Loss38–11–1 Tom BogsUD10 (10)1973-06-14
51Loss38–10–1 Len HutchinsUD10 (10)1973-05-19
50Win38–9–1 Oliver WrightUD10 (10)1973-04-03
49Win37–9–1 Larry BeilfussPTS10 (10)1973-02-15
48Loss36–9–1 José Manuel UrtainPTS10 (10)1972-12-01
47Loss36–8–1 Earnie ShaversUD10 (10)1972-08-26
46Loss36–7–1 Ron LyleTKO2 (10)1972-07-10
45Loss36–6–1 Bob FosterTKO2 (15)1972-04-07
44Win36–5–1 Doyle BairdTKO8 (15)1971-12-15
43Win35–5–1 Gomeo BrennanTKO13 (15)1971-10-26
42Win34–5–1 Conny VelensekPTS10 (10)1971-10-14
41Win33–5–1 Eddie JonesUD15 (15)1971-08-21
40Win32–5–1 Johnny GriffinPTS10 (10)1971-07-11
39Win31–5–1 Piero Del PapaKO1 (15)1971-06-05
38Win30–5–1 Jimmy DupreeKO6 (15)1971-02-27
37Win29–5–1 Roger RouseUD10 (10)1970-11-07
36Win28–5–1 Willie JohnsonTKO4 (10)1970-10-06
35Win27–5–1 Hydra LacyKO2 (10)1970-08-11
34Win26–5–1 Levan RoundtreePTS10 (10)1970-05-20
33Win25–5–1 Fred WilliamsKO4 (10)1970-04-18
32Win24–5–1 Avenamar PeraltaPTS10 (10)1969-12-06
31Win23–5–1 Randy StevensKO5 (10)1969-11-29
30Win22–5–1 Angel OquendoTKO6 (10)1969-10-26
29style=background:#DDDNC21–5–1 Paul JohnsonNC7 (10)1969-08-09
28Win21–5–1 Eddie TalhamiPTS10 (10)1969-07-05
27Win20–5–1 Jose Luis GarciaPTS12 (12)1969-05-30
26Win19–5–1 Karl ZurheideUD10 (10)1969-05-06
25Win18–5–1 Allen ThomasUD10 (10)1969-04-01
24Loss17–5–1 Bennie BriscoeTKO8 (10)1969-01-25
23Win17–4–1 Charlie JordanUD10 (10)1968-11-26
22Win16–4–1 Charlie JordanUD10 (10)1968-11-12
21Loss15–4–1 Juarez de LimaPTS10 (10)1968-11-03
20Win15–3–1 Bennie BriscoeUD10 (10)1968-09-23
19Win14–3–1 Charley AustinPTS10 (10)1968-09-09
18Loss13–3–1 Luis Manuel RodríguezUD10 (10)1968-07-18
17Win13–2–1 Luis Manuel RodríguezUD10 (10)1968-06-03
16Loss12–2–1 Jose GonzalezTKO8 (10)1968-04-19
15Loss12–1–1 Bobby WarthenSD10 (10)1968-01-12
14Win12–0–1 Phil RobinsonKO5 (10)1967-12-14
13Draw11–0–1 Harold RichardsonPTS10 (10)1967-11-10
12Win11–0 Pedro MirandaTKO10 (10)1967-10-14
11Win10–0 Tony SmithKO3 (10)1967-09-08
10Win9–0 Marco Tulio PolancoKO3 (10)1967-06-12
9Win8–0 Danny MachadoTKO4 (10)1967-03-20
8style=background:#DDDNC7–0 Marco Tulio PolancoNC2 (10)1966-12-04
7Win7–0Marcos PirellaKO2 (10)1966-11-14
6Win6–0Melville BennettKO2 (10)1966-09-16
5Win5–0Marco Tulio PolancoKO3 (10)1966-06-24
4Win4–0Pedro VanegasKO7 (10)1965-12-05
3Win3–0Pedro VanegasTKO4 (10)1965-10-29
2Win2–0Joe Louis TroconisKO1 (?)1965-07-26
1Win1–0Jose CaraballoKO3 (?)1965-06-28

Life after boxing

Shortly thereafter Rondón's career hit the skids and so did he. He was confined to a mental hospital, and later arrested on charges of robbing a store for $150. Rondon served a prison sentence, and there are unconfirmed reports that he boxed some exhibitions or possibly a professional match while incarcerated. Rondón was released from prison a physical wreck. Vicente Paul Rondón, the boxing idol of his country, died forgotten, broke and in poverty in Santa Ana de Carapita, a slum of Caracas. Rondón had been living with his elderly mother at the time. He was 54 when he died.

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: DUPREE IS HALTED BY RONDON IN 6TH. The New York Times. 2024-06-24.
  2. Web site: A HEAVY LOSS TO A LIGHT HEAVY. Sports Illustrated. 2024-06-24.