Boxer Johnny Tapia Has Died
He was not on the list.
Tapia was a professional boxer who competed from 1988 to 2011. He held multiple world championships in three weight classes, including the unified IBF and WBO super flyweight titles between 1994 and 1998, the unified WBA and WBO bantamweight titles between 1998 and 2000, and the IBF featherweight title in 2002. His 1999 loss by decision to Paulie Ayala was named the Fight of the Year by The Ring magazine.
Tapia was posthumously inducted into the International
Boxing Hall of Fame in 2017.
Tapia was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico to Mexican
American parents. His father had reportedly been murdered while his mother was
pregnant with him. When he was eight years old, his mother, Virginia, was
kidnapped, raped, repeatedly stabbed, and left dead by her assailant. Raised
thereafter by his grandmother, Tapia turned to boxing at the age of nine.
Tapia had an outstanding amateur career, winning the 1983
New Mexico State Golden Gloves, the 1983 and 1985 National Golden Gloves
tournaments at light flyweight and flyweight, respectively.
Tapia's professional boxing career began on March 25, 1988,
when he fought Effren Chavez in Irvine, California. After four rounds of boxing
the fight was called a draw. He won eight fights that year, five by knockout,
of which four were in the first round. In 1989, he won seven more fights,
including a first-round knockout of Abner Barajas and an eight-round decision
against John Michael Johnson.
In 1990, he won seven bouts, including an eight-round
decision over Jesus Chong, an eleventh-round technical knockout of Roland Gomez
in Reno that gave him the USBA super flyweight title, and a twelve-round
decision over Luigi Camputaro, to retain that title. Tapia was, by the end of
the year, a known boxer, his name often appearing in magazine articles.
However, his career came to a halt for the next three and a half years after
being suspended from boxing for testing positive for cocaine.
When he finally returned to the ring on March 27, 1994, he
beat Jaime Olvera by a knockout in four rounds in Tulsa, Oklahoma. He won three
more fights by knockout, and then he faced Oscar Aguilar on the Michael
Carbajal–Josué Camacho undercard in Phoenix for the NABF super flyweight title,
winning in three rounds. Five days later the Albuquerque Police claimed they
found cocaine after the fight in a bag carried by Tapia. Tapia claimed what the
police found was only a soap bar, and the charges were eventually dropped.
On October 12, 1994 at The Pit, Albuquerque, New Mexico,
Tapia defeated Henry Martínez in eleven rounds to win the vacant WBO super
flyweight title. He then knocked out former champion Rolando Bohol in the
second round. In his first title defense, Tapia defeated Jose Rafael Sosa by
decision.
He retained the title with a nine-round technical draw with
Ricardo Vargas and a decision in twelve against his onetime nemesis in the
amateur ranks, Arthur Johnson. After two more wins, he gave Willy Salazar a
title shot, knocking him out in nine rounds. In 1996, he fought six more times,
keeping his undefeated record and defending the title five additional times
during that period, which included wins against Giovanni Andrade, Ivan Alvarez,
future champion Hugo Rafael Soto, Sammy Stewart and Adonis Cruz. By then, a
heated rivalry was cooking up between him and IBF champion Danny Romero. Their
rivalry had begun many years earlier when Romero's father trained both boxers.
Tapia's split with the Romero family had not been on good terms.
1997 saw Tapia fend off a challenge from Jorge Barrera in
three rounds. After that, the fight with Romero was set for Las Vegas. The
fight took place on July 18. Tapia won by a unanimous twelve-round decision,
adding the IBF title to his WBO belt. In his next fight, he defeated Puerto
Rico's Andy Agosto via decision. Tapia began 1998 by successfully defending his
championships for the 11th time against former world champion Rodolfo Blanco of
Colombia via decision, and then he vacated his world titles in order to move up
in weight.
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