Oscar De La Hoya vs. Yori Boy Campas

Oscar De La Hoya vs. Yori Boy Campas, billed as Night of Champions, was a professional boxing match contested on May 3, 2003, for the WBA, WBC, IBA and The Ring super welterweight titles.[1]

Night of Champions
DateMay 3, 2003
VenueMandalay Bay Events Center, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.
Title(s) on the lineWBA, WBC, IBA and The Ring super welterweight titles
Tale of the tape
Boxer Oscar De La Hoya Luis Ramón Campas
Nickname The Golden Boy Yori Boy
Hometown East Los Angeles, California, U.S. Navojoa, Sonora, Mexico
Purse $11,000,000 $100,000
Pre-fight record 35–2 (27 KO) 80–5 (68 KO)
Age 30 years, 2 months 31 years, 8 months
Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm) 5 ft 7+12 in (171 cm)
Weight 154 lb (70 kg) 153+12 lb (70 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBA, WBC, IBA and The Ring
Super Welterweight Champion
The Ring No. 5 ranked pound-for-pound fighter
3-division world champion
WBC
No. 15 Ranked Super Welterweight
Former IBF Light middleweight champion
Result
De La Hoya wins via 7th-round technical knockout

Background

edit

After defeating rival Fernando Vargas in September 2002 to become the unified WBA and WBC super welterweight champion, Oscar De La Hoya began negotiations to face Shane Mosley, who had issued De La Hoya his second defeat in a disputed split decision in 2000, in a rematch tentatively scheduled to take place in September 2003.[2] Before facing Mosley, De La Hoya opted to take a tune-up bout against Yori Boy Campas during the weekend of Cinco de Mayo, agreeing to the fight in early January 2003.[3]

Campas, who had held the IBF's version of the super welterweight title just over four years prior, was installed as a massive 25–1 underdog and given virtually no chance of defeating De La Hoya, with many who bet on the fight predicting he would not last more than six rounds.[4] To drum up interest in the fight, Campas and promoter Bob Arum would concoct a bizarre story in which Campas claimed to have been given a potion supposedly used by Mexican forces prior to defeating the Second French Empire during the Battle of Puebla, which purportedly gave them, and subsequently Campas, enhanced strength and courage.[5]

The fights

edit

Morales vs. Velárdez

edit

In the co featured bout, WBC featherweight champion Erik Morales defended his title against No. 15 ranked Fernando Velárdez.[6][7]

Morales knocked down Velardez in the 1st, 4th and 5th rounds when the fight was stopped without a count.[8]

This was the Morales' final bout at featherweight. He would vacate the title in October, moving up to super featherweight.[9]

Main Event

edit

De La Hoya dominated Campas, landing 264 of 498 thrown punches for a success rate of 53% while Campas only landed 75 of his 348 thrown punches for a paltry 23% rate. While Campas was never knocked down, De La Hoya constantly punished Campas to the point that his face was red and swollen, causing his trainer to jump on ring apron late in the seventh round and ask referee Vic Drakulich to stop the fight. Drakulich obliged and stopped the fight at 2:54 of the round, giving De La Hoya the victory by technical knockout.[10]

Fight card

edit

Confirmed bouts:[11]

Weight Class Weight vs. Method Round Notes
Super Welterweight 154 lbs. Oscar De La Hoya (c) def. Yori Boy Campas TKO 7/12 note 1
Featherweight 126 lbs. Erik Morales (c) def. Fernando Velárdez TKO 5/12 note 2
Light Flyweight 108 lbs. Jorge Arce (c) def. Melchor Cob Castro TD 6/12 note 3
Mini Flyweight 105 lbs. Iván Calderón def. Eduardo Ray Márquez (c) TD 9/12 note 4
Super Lightweight 140 lbs. Cristian Bejarano def. Leroy Newton TKO 1/6
Middleweight 160 lbs. Patrick Thompson def. Jason Naugler MD 4/4

^Note 1 For WBA, WBC, IBA and The Ring Super Welterweight titles
^Note 2 For WBC Featherweight title
^Note 3 For WBC Light Flyweight title
^Note 4 For WBO Mini Flyweight title

Broadcasting

edit
Country Broadcaster
  United States HBO

References

edit
  1. ^ "Oscar De La Hoya vs. Luis Ramon Campas". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
  2. ^ De La Hoya and Mosley Talk, N.Y. Times article, 2003-02–21, Retrieved on 2024-11-17
  3. ^ Oscar to Fight Campas in May, L.A. Times article, 2003-01–10, Retrieved on 2024-11-17
  4. ^ Campas at His Outer Limits, L.A. Times article, 2003-05–04, Retrieved on 2024-11-17
  5. ^ Yory Boy Campas Drinking Secret Potion, Associated Press article, 2003-04–22, Retrieved on 2024-11-17
  6. ^ "Erik Morales vs. Fernando Velardez". boxrec.com. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
  7. ^ Steve Springer (2 May 2003). "Morales and Velardez Not the Best of Friends". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
  8. ^ Tim Dahlberg (2 May 2003). "Morales Defends WBC Featherweight Title". Midland Daily News. Associated Press. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
  9. ^ Guttierrez, Paul (5 October 2003). "No Doubt for Morales This Time". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 8 August 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  10. ^ De La Hoya Pounds Campas to Set Up Another Showdown With Mosley, N.Y. Times article, 2003-05-04 Retrieved on 2024-11-18
  11. ^ "BoxRec - event".
Preceded by Oscar De La Hoya's bouts
3 May 2003
Succeeded by
Preceded by
vs. George Klinesmith
Yori Boy Campas's bouts
3 May 2003
Succeeded by
vs. Roni Martinez