Tadashi Mihara

Tadashi Mihara (三原 正, Mihara Tadashi, born 30 March 1955 in Gunma, Japan) is a former professional boxer who competed as a light middleweight throughout his career.

Tadashi Mihara
Statistics
Real nameTadashi Mihara
Nickname(s)Oriental Express[1]
Weight(s)Light middleweight
Height5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
NationalityJapanese
Born (1955-03-30) March 30, 1955[2][3]
Takasaki, Gunma, Japan
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights25
Wins24
Wins by KO15
Losses1

Mihara began his boxing career when he was a third grader of the high school.[1] He won the title of the All-Japan Amateur Boxing Championships in the light middleweight division in 1977.[3] He also got the group title of the university league as a captain of the Nihon University boxing club. He experienced 38 matches during his amateur career; winning 28 (15 by knockout) and losing 10.[2]

After that, as a professional, Mihara fought 25 times between 1978 and 1985; winning 24 (15 by knockout) and losing 1. He won his first title in his fifth contest as a professional, beating Jae-Keum Lim for the OPBF title, a belt that he defended six times until he returned it. In June 1981, he won via a fifth-round knockout, in the undercard of Ayub Kalule vs. Sugar Ray Leonard, at the Reliant Astrodome, Houston.[1] Since Leonard vacated the title after this, Mihara fought against Rocky Fratto for the vacant WBA world junior middleweight title in Rochester, New York on November 7, 1981. Mihara knocked him down by his right cross in the fourth round, and won the title via a majority decision.[4] Judge Harold Lederman scored the fight a draw.[5] Afterwards he said of Mihara, "There's no doubt that he's got a good jaw. He really got tagged a couple of times. I thought Fratto was going to knock him out."[6] He lost his title after suffering a knockout during his first defence, against Davey Moore at the Tokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium on February 2, 1982.[7] His lumbago became chronic from these days.[1] Following this loss, Mihara won the Japanese junior middleweight title and defended it six times until June 1984, then returned it.[1] He fought for a final time in March 1985, beating Tricky Kawaguchi by a unanimous decision.[8]


Professional boxing record

25 fights 24 wins 1 loss
By knockout 15 1
By decision 9 0
By disqualification 0 0
No. Result Record Opponent Type Round Date Location Notes
25 Win 24–1 Tricky Kawaguchi UD 10 Mar 28, 1985 Korakuen Pingpong Center, Tokyo, Japan
24 Win 23–1 Takanobu Suzuki KO 4 (10) Jun 28, 1984 Korakuen Pingpong Center, Tokyo, Japan Retained Japanese light-middleweight title
23 Win 22–1 Kei Tsukada PTS 10 Feb 23, 1984 Korakuen Pingpong Center, Tokyo, Japan Retained Japanese light-middleweight title
22 Win 21–1 Katsuhiro Sawada KO 5 (12) Nov 24, 1983 Korakuen Pingpong Center, Tokyo, Japan Retained Japanese light-middleweight title
21 Win 20–1 Katsuyoshi Kitsumoto PTS 10 Sep 22, 1983 Korakuen Pingpong Center, Tokyo, Japan Retained Japanese light-middleweight title
20 Win 19–1 Yohi Arai PTS 10 May 26, 1983 Japan Retained Japanese light-middleweight title
19 Win 18–1 Yohi Arai TKO 9 (10) Feb 14, 1983 Kochi, Japan Retained Japanese light-middleweight title
18 Win 17–1 Katsuhiro Sawada KO 5 (10) Nov 2, 1982 Japan Won Japanese light-middleweight title
17 Win 16–1 Mimoun Mohatar UD 10 May 27, 1982 Central Gymnasium, Takasaki, Japan
16 Loss 15–1 Davey Moore KO 6 (15) Feb 2, 1982 Metropolitan Gym, Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan Lost WBA light-middleweight title
15 Win 15–0 Rocky Fratto MD 15 Nov 7, 1981 War Memorial Auditorium, Rochester, New York, U.S. Won vacant WBA light-middleweight title
14 Win 14–0 Ramon Dionisio KO 5 (12) Jun 25, 1981 Astrodome, Houston, Texas, U.S.
13 Win 13–0 Chung-Yul Lee UD 12 Jan 23, 1981 Korakuen Pingpong Center, Tokyo, Japan Retained OPBF light-middleweight title
12 Win 12–0 Kyung Shik Kim KO 9 (12) Oct 31, 1980 Japan Retained OPBF light-middleweight title
11 Win 11–0 Michihiro Horihata UD 12 May 30, 1980 Korakuen Pingpong Center, Tokyo, Japan Retained OPBF light-middleweight title
10 Win 10–0 Ramon Dionisio KO 7 (12) Feb 23, 1980 Prefectural Gymnasium, Tokushima City, Japan Retained OPBF light-middleweight title
9 Win 9–0 Alberto Cruz UD 10 Jan 24, 1980 Korakuen Pingpong Center, Tokyo, Japan
8 Win 8–0 Ho Joo KO 3 (12) Oct 25, 1979 Japan Retained OPBF light-middleweight title
7 Win 7–0 Nessie Horiguchi TKO 4 (10) Sep 9, 1979 City Gymnasium, Takasaki, Japan
6 Win 6–0 Armando Boniquit KO 5 (12) Jul 15, 1979 Korakuen Pingpong Center, Tokyo, Japan Retained OPBF light-middleweight title
5 Win 5–0 Jae Keun Lim KO 5 (12) Apr 26, 1979 Japan Won OPBF light-middleweight title
4 Win 4–0 Phil Robinson KO 1 (10) Feb 22, 1979 Japan
3 Win 3–0 Tsutomu Hagusa KO 6 (10) Nov 23, 1978 Korakuen Hall, Bunkyo, Tokyo, Japan
2 Win 2–0 Minoru Ono TKO 7 (10) Sep 28, 1978 Korakuen Hall, Bunkyo, Tokyo, Japan
1 Win 1–0 Eiji Tanaka KO 3 (6) Jun 22, 1978 Korakuen Hall, Bunkyo, Tokyo, Japan

See also

References

  1. Naoki Fukuda (January 15, 2000). "三原正〜本場・米国で名を刻んだエリート〜". In Boxing Magazine editorial department (ed.). The Glorious Moments 究極の栄光・世界チャンピオン名鑑 – 日本ボクシング史に輝く41人の男たち. B.B.mook; 117, sports series; No.72 (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: Baseball Magazine Sha Co., Ltd. pp. 56–57. ISBN 978-4-583-61076-4.
  2. Japan Pro Boxing Association, ed. (June 1, 2008). "三原正". 世界王者アーカイヴス (World Champion Archives) (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: Japan Pro Boxing Association. Retrieved August 14, 2010.
  3. Boxing Magazine editorial department, ed. (March 1, 2004). "三原正". 日本プロボクシングチャンピオン大鑑 (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: Baseball Magazine Sha Co., Ltd. p. 57. ISBN 978-4-583-03784-4.
  4. The Canadian Press (November 9, 1981). "Spinks gives Johnson a lesson". The Leader-Post. p. B7. Retrieved January 7, 2011.
  5. "Tadashi Mihara vs. Rocky Fratto - BoxRec". boxrec.com. Retrieved 2017-04-22.
  6. Associated Press (November 9, 1981). "Mihara's win makes Fratto, experts take notice". Ithaca Journal.
  7. Boxing Magazine editorial department, ed. (May 31, 2002). 日本プロボクシング史 世界タイトルマッチで見る50年 (Japan Pro Boxing History – 50 Years of World Title Bouts) (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: Baseball Magazine Sha Co., Ltd. p. 279. ISBN 978-4-583-03695-3.
  8. "boxer: Tadashi Mihara". Boxrec. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
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