Wilfredo Vazquez (Sr) - Hall of Fame Worthy?
Posted: 10 Jan 2014, 18:44
Vazquez sr was on the IBHOF ballot this year, although he did not get voted in.
he never was #1 at his weight, never got fighter of the year, nor was he a 'pound for pound' entrant at any point.
best he got - I think - was fighter of the month after come from behind KO of rojas, at ring mag, who said back in '96 that he's definitely not HOF material & that his fights are often slow and boring.
nonetheless:
Vazquez won many title fights, mostly in his opponent's backyard (france, Italy, japan, korea, USA). compare to Rosario, cotto, Trinidad, who were often the main attraction, with matchmaking on their side. or gomez, who had a weight class, 122, invented pretty much for him. a different case for Vazquez, a true "road warrior" who seldom had things his way.
he overcame adversity many times - a gruelling & close defeat to Miguel lora; close defeat to kaokor galaxy in a tricky one; brutal defeat to Antonio avelar - to become a 3 weight champ (14 defences, combined). bantam champ at his 2nd attempt; super bantam champ vs raul perez, a revenge win, followed by 9 successful defences, incl. canizales; after losing the title he rebounded with come-from-behind KO of rojas, his one-punch power traveling up successfully from 118 and 122-pounds.
one of his "boring" wins was a close-but-clear win over a hall of famer, orlando canizales, unbeaten in about 9 years with 16 consecutive world title wins. Vazquez boxed carefully, timing canizales with rights, messing up his rhythm & making him look very uncomfortable in their texas matchup.
lost his biggest fight, in 1998, vs naseem hamed. but Vazquez was nowhere near the fierce, free swinging warrior who traded knockdowns with lora (for me, one of Vazquez's best and most exciting performances).
very long career at world level for a guy known mainly as a one-punch hitter (though obviously he was more than this). would've loved to have seen him in with Daniel Zaragoza (with whom he has common opponents: lora, Thierry Jacob & chan yong park), the similarly gritty Mexican (also a road warrior) who made it to the hall of fame.
he never was #1 at his weight, never got fighter of the year, nor was he a 'pound for pound' entrant at any point.
best he got - I think - was fighter of the month after come from behind KO of rojas, at ring mag, who said back in '96 that he's definitely not HOF material & that his fights are often slow and boring.
nonetheless:
Vazquez won many title fights, mostly in his opponent's backyard (france, Italy, japan, korea, USA). compare to Rosario, cotto, Trinidad, who were often the main attraction, with matchmaking on their side. or gomez, who had a weight class, 122, invented pretty much for him. a different case for Vazquez, a true "road warrior" who seldom had things his way.
he overcame adversity many times - a gruelling & close defeat to Miguel lora; close defeat to kaokor galaxy in a tricky one; brutal defeat to Antonio avelar - to become a 3 weight champ (14 defences, combined). bantam champ at his 2nd attempt; super bantam champ vs raul perez, a revenge win, followed by 9 successful defences, incl. canizales; after losing the title he rebounded with come-from-behind KO of rojas, his one-punch power traveling up successfully from 118 and 122-pounds.
one of his "boring" wins was a close-but-clear win over a hall of famer, orlando canizales, unbeaten in about 9 years with 16 consecutive world title wins. Vazquez boxed carefully, timing canizales with rights, messing up his rhythm & making him look very uncomfortable in their texas matchup.
lost his biggest fight, in 1998, vs naseem hamed. but Vazquez was nowhere near the fierce, free swinging warrior who traded knockdowns with lora (for me, one of Vazquez's best and most exciting performances).
very long career at world level for a guy known mainly as a one-punch hitter (though obviously he was more than this). would've loved to have seen him in with Daniel Zaragoza (with whom he has common opponents: lora, Thierry Jacob & chan yong park), the similarly gritty Mexican (also a road warrior) who made it to the hall of fame.