Gilberto Román

Gilberto Román (29 November 1961 27 June 1990) was a Mexican professional boxer and a member of the 1980 Mexican Olympic team.[1] Román was a two-time WBC and Lineal Super Flyweight Champion and is considered by many fans to be one of the great champions in this division.[2] Gilberto was trained by Boxing Hall of Famer Ignacio Beristáin.[3]

Gilberto Román
Statistics
Real nameGilberto Román Saldaña
Nickname(s)Cachanilla
Weight(s)Super flyweight
Bantamweight
Super bantamweight
Height1.60 m (5 ft 3 in)
Reach168 cm (66 in)
NationalityMexican
Born(1961-11-29)November 29, 1961
Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico
DiedJune 27, 1990(1990-06-27) (aged 28)
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights61
Wins54
Wins by KO35
Losses6
Draws1
No contests0

Amateur career

As an amateur boxer he won some Mexican National Championships and was a member of the 1980 Mexican Olympic team. He fought with Ezequiel Cano Molina, from Cd. Valles, S.L.P. in Naranjos, Veracruz, México, and with many other important amateur boxers.[4]

1980 Olympic record

Below are the results of Gilberto Roman, a Mexican flyweight boxer who competed in the 1980 Moscow Olympics:

  • Round of 32: bye
  • Round of 16: defeated Alberto Mercado (Puerto Rico) referee stopped contest in first round
  • Quarterfinal: lost to Petar Lesov (Bulgaria) by decision, 1-4

Professional career

Román made his professional debut on August 29, 1981 with a knockout victory over Gilberto Morales. He was known as a knockout puncher in the earlier portion of his career, but after suffering two consecutive losses in 1985, he began refining his boxing technique. After accumulating a record of 40-3-0, including a rematch victory over former champion Antonio Avelar, he received his first opportunity for a world title.

WBC Super Flyweight Championship

In 1986, Román dethroned long reigning WBC and Lineal Super Flyweight Champion Jiro Watanabe, ending the Japanese champion's streak of 12 consecutive title victories.[5][6]

Román was a busy traveling champion. In his first title defense, he defeated Edgar Monserrat in France. He then traveled to Argentina where he defeated Ruben Osvaldo Condori and was held to a draw against Argentinian former WBA Flyweight Champion Santos Laciar on 30 August 1986. He then defeated Kongtoranee Payakaroon in Thailand and returned to France where he defeated Antoine Montero. In his first fight in Mexico since becoming champion, he decisioned former champion Frank Cedeno. Román met Laciar in a rematch on 16 May 1987 in France, with Laciar taking the title by technical decision in a fight stopped on cuts in the eleventh-round despite Román leading on all three scorecards by one point.

Regaining title

Sugar Baby Rojas took the title from Laciar and Román earned another title shot against the new champion. On 8 April 1988, Román regained the title with a twelve-round decision.[7]

He then traveled to Japan where he defeated Yoshiyuki Uchida and future champion Kiyoshi Hatanaka. Next he faced Rojas in a rematch and decisioned him once again. Roman began 1989 with a victory over Puerto Rican challenger Juan Carazo in a fight in which each boxer was dropped to the floor in the fourth round. In his next fight he avenged his loss to Laciar via unanimous decision[8] Following his victory over Laciar, Román lost the title to Ghana's Nana Konadu on 7 November 1989. Konadu lost the title to Sung-Kil Moon, whom Román challenged on 9 June 1990, losing by a TKO in the ninth round. That was Román's last fight, as he was killed in an automobile accident less than three weeks later.[9]

Román had a record of 54 wins, 6 losses and 1 draw, with 35 wins by knockout.[10] His total of 11 successful title defenses ranks second highest in the history of the super flyweight division.[11]

See also

References

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