Ricardo Rocky Juarez
(born April 15, 1980 in Houston, Texas) is a professional Mexican-American boxer. Juarez has a current professional record of 28 wins, 4 losses, and 1 draw, with 19 wins coming by way of knockout.
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Professional career
Juarez turned pro on
January 25,
2001 with a unanimous decision against
Pascali Adorno. A highly touted prospect, Juarez rose up the ranks with wins against
Hector Velazquez, and
Joe Morales. Juarez's 10th round knockout of
Antonio Diaz was named
Ring Magazine Knockout of the Year for 2003. His first challenge came from 1996 Olympian
Zahir Raheem on
July 17,
2004, in which he won by controversial decision, possibly due the fight taking place at Juarez's hometown in Houston, Texas. Juarez's first career loss came to
Humberto Soto, who was a late sub replacement to
In Jin Chi, Soto outboxed Juarez in the whole fight to win the Interim version of the
WBC featherweight title. Juarez bounced back with back-to-back wins against Reynaldo Hurtado and Backlin Medrano and earned a shot against
Mexican legend,
Marco Antonio Barrera for his WBC Super featherweight title.
Juarez fought Barrera on
May 20,
2006 in the
Staples Center in
Los Angeles, California. Barrera used his jab to win the early rounds, but it was obvious from the start that Juarez wasn't backing down hurting Barrera's nose in the process. During the second half of the fight Juarez took control by rocking Barrera and making him spit out his mouthpiece several times. In a very close fight, the bout was announced originally as a draw, but later it was revealed that two of the judges scorecards had an error, as Barrera was granted the win by split decision. Despite losing Juarez gained notoriety by standing toe to toe with one of the best
pound-for-pound boxers in the world. Although not required by contract, Barrera and Juarez met in a rematch on
September 16, this time Barrera winning comfortably on points through a unanimous decision (117-111, 115-113, 115-113).
As a replacement for
Jorge Rodrigo Barrios, Rocky Juarez stepped in and fought
Juan Manuel Marquez for the WBC Super Featherweight title on November 3, 2007. He lost to Marquez on a unanimous decision. Juarez fought most of the fight with a bad cut above his left eye due to an accidental headbutt in the first round.
[1]
On
September 6, 2008, Rocky Juarez, (27-4, 19 KO's) won by
TKO at 2:55 in the 11th round of the 12-rounder over former WBO Junior Lightweight Champion
Jorge Rodrigo Barrios, (47-3-1, 34 KO's)..
[2] [3]
In his fourth attempt at a title, Juarez fought
Chris John to a controversial draw on February 28, 2009 in his hometown of Houston. Most ringside observers thought John won.
[4] The two were supposed to fight a rematch on June 27 of that year but John withdrew from the fight due to problems with his blood tests.
Amateur career
Juarez had a lustrous amateur career with a 145-17 record, which included a 68 fight winning streak, a
Featherweight Olympic silver medal and a Junior Olympic World and National gold medal. In
1999 he won the world title at the
1999 World Amateur Boxing Championships in his home town. During the 2000 Olympics Gold medal round, Juarez loss controversially against
Bekzat Sattarkhanov who was warned several times for holding and not penalized. Juarez accepted the silver medal.
- 1998 United States Amateur Featherweight champion. Results were:
- *Defeated Daniel Chavez points
- *Defeated Darling Jimenez points
- *Defeated Aaron Torres points
- *Defaated Hong Gu points
- 1999 United States Amateur Featherweight champion. Results were:
- *Defeated Jose Santa Cruz points
- *Defeated Francisco Valentin TKO 3
- *Defeated Ray Martinez points
- *Defeated Aaron Torres points
- *Defeated Steve Luevano points
- 2000 United States Amateur Featherweight champion
- Member of the 2000 U.S. Olympic team as a Featherweight, winning a silver medal. Results were:
- *Defeated Bijan Batmani (Iran) RSC-3
- *Defeated Falk Huste (Germany) points
- *Defeated Somluck Kamsing (Thailand) RSC-4
- *Defeated Kamil Dzamalutdinov (Russia) points
- *Lost to Bekzat Sattarkhanov (Kazakhstan) points