John Ruiz
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John Ruiz | |
Statistics | |
---|---|
Real name | John Ruiz |
Nickname | The Quiet Man (fans call him Huggy Bear because of his style) |
Weight | Heavyweight |
Nationality | Puerto Rico |
Birth date | January 4, 1972 |
Birth place | Isabela, Puerto Rico |
Style | Orthodox |
Boxing record | |
Total fights | 50 |
Wins | 41 |
Wins by KO | 28 |
Losses | 7 |
Draws | 1 |
No contests | 1 |
John “The Quiet Man" Ruiz (born January 4, 1972), a native of Isabela, Puerto Rico who lives in Massachusetts, is a professional boxer. His professional record is 41-7-1-0, with 28 knockouts. Frustrated by years of criticism from the boxing press and fans, he retired upon his second loss of the WBA Title on April 30, 2005 (to James “Lights-Out” Toney). Ruiz un-retired in 10 days, after finding out that James Toney had tested positive for anabolic steroids. The official outcome, a unanimous-decision defeat, was changed to a no-contest; the WBA ordered that Ruiz retain the title. Ruiz then filed a lawsuit against Toney, claiming that he had damaged Ruiz's boxing career (due to Toney's use of illegal steroids before their bout).
On December 17, 2005 he lost his title for the third time — in controversial fashion, as usual — to Nicolay Valuev. Ruiz is currently seeking a rematch with Valuev
Contents |
[edit] First reign as WBA champion
After Lennox Lewis defeated Evander Holyfield for the Undisputed (i.e., WBC + IBF + WBA) World Heavyweight Championship in late 1999, the WBA ordered Lewis to defend the title against Ruiz, its #1-ranked contender, but Lewis refused. Though he had been undefeated since a loss against David Tua in 1996, the level of competition Ruiz had been facing was suspect.
Ruiz and his management sued, claiming that WBA rules entitled him to a title shot. A judge agreed, but rather than face Ruiz in a bout that was seen as commercially unattractive, Lewis instead fought Michael Grant, considered to be a very worthy contender at the time. After learning of this, the judge decreed that upon entering the ring against Grant on April 29, 2000, Lewis would automatically forfeit the WBA Title.
Ruiz fought former champion Holyfield to fill the vacancy on August 12, 2000, losing by unanimous decision (this result made Holyfield the first to win a world heavyweight title on four separate occasions). Many observers and boxing reporters felt that the underdog Ruiz had done enough to win. Due to this controversial decision, the WBA ordered an immediate rematch in early 2001, and Ruiz won the WBA Championship in a slightly less-close unanimous decision. He defended the title twice: a draw in a third match against Holyfield, and a 10th-round victory over Kirk Johnson (disqualified for repeatedly punching below the waist). Ruiz was accused in both the second Holyfield fight and the Johnson fight of faking low blows that actually seemed to be closer to his beltline than his groin. On March 1, 2003 at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada, Ruiz’s first reign as champion ended—against a light-heavyweight whom he outweighed by over 30 lb. He lost a unanimous decision to Roy Jones, Jr. Ruiz blamed the referee for the loss, claiming that he "did not let me fight my fight".
In defeating Ruiz, Jones joined Michael Spinks and Michael Moorer as the only light-heavyweight titlists to later win a world heavyweight title. Jones was also only the second former world middleweight champion to win a heavyweight title (the first being Bob Fitzsimmons, who beat "Gentleman" Jim Corbett on March 17, 1897).
[edit] Second reign as WBA champion
Roy Jones, Jr. was now a world heavyweight champion, Jones failed to meet the WBA-imposed deadline to face Vitali Klitschko, its #1 contender. The WBA meanwhile set up a bout between Klitschko and #2-ranked Hasim Rahman for an interim version of its heavyweight belt. The interim champion would subsequently fight Jones to settle the title's disputed status.
Vitali Klitschko refused contractual negotiations for the Rahman match, opposed to fighting for an illegitimate championship. The WBA then turned to David Tua, its #3 contender. While Tua initially agreed to fight Rahman, he later pulled out of the bout, too. Ruiz, whom Tua had beaten in 1996 — but as the #5 contender, was the highest-ranked fighter still interested — agreed to fight Rahman, a former WBC / IBF world heavyweight champion who had won and lost those belts to Lennox Lewis (by KO) in 2001.
On December 13, 2003, Ruiz defeated Rahman by unanimous decision, earning him the first-ever WBA Interim world Heavyweight Title. On February 20, 2004, Roy Jones, Jr. advised the WBA that he would return to the light-heavyweight division, vacating its heavyweight championship. The WBA then removed the "interim" tag from Ruiz’s championship status, declaring his victory over Rahman good enough to warrant being the official WBA world Heavyweight Champion.
On April 17, 2004, Ruiz fought the first defense of his second world title. He retained it with an eleventh-round technical knockout of Fres Oquendo at Madison Square Garden. This fight was historic in that it was the first time two Hispanics/Latinos faced each other for a world heavyweight title.
On November 13 of that same year, Ruiz retained the belt with a close unanimous-decision over Polish-American Andrzej Gołota (a.k.a., "Andrew" Golota), although he suffered two knockdowns and a one-point deduction by referee Randy Neumann. But Ruiz managed to win the complete 2nd half of the fight which was enough get the decision.
On April 30, 2005, Ruiz lost the title to James "Lights Out" Toney in Madison Square Garden. However, after Toney failed the post-match drug test (for stanozolol, an anabolic steroid), the New York Athletic Commission suspended him from boxing in the USA for 90 days, and fined him $10,000 (U.S.). The WBA barred the aging (then 36 years-old) Toney from fighting for its heavyweight title for the next two years. This resulted in Toney's win being changed to a "no contest" — basically, a nullification. Ruiz came out of retirement before it was found out that Toney would be suspended and he would be reinstated as champion.
[edit] Controversial Loss To Valuev
On December 17, 2005, Ruiz lost the WBA Championship in Berlin to 7 ft. tall, 324-lb. Russian Nicolay Valuev. The official outcome was a majority decision (scored 114-116, 113-116, and 114-114), but it was also a controversial one. Ruiz was convinced that his jab / combination-punch technique had given him a clear victory. He demanded that his promoter, Don King, set up an immediate re-match with the now-first-ever Russian world heavyweight champion. Ruiz's long-time manager, Norman Stone, declared that they would also formally petition the WBA: after all, the 10,000 German spectators booed when the decision was announced. Ruiz's camp claimed that the Germans booed because they too felt that the outcome was unjust. Wilfried Sauerland, the manager who rescued Valuev's career from obscurity 2 years earlier, angrily countered that the fans had booed because Stone's in-ring behavior had aggitated them [1].
In September 2006 Ruiz announced that he would be managed by Wilfried Sauerland, the very same man who manages Valuev. His former manager Norman Stone retired on December 22nd, 2005, stating that the decision in the loss to Valuev was the last straw, and he would continue to support Ruiz from retirement.[2]
[edit] The Road Back
After the loss Don King announced his intention to still promote Ruiz. King had become aware of Ruiz after his KO win over the former WBA world champion Tony Tucker in 1998.[3] Ruiz followed up the loss to Valuev with a fight against up-and-coming contender Ruslan Chagaev. In a close fight, Chagaev prevailed, taking a decision with scores of 117-111 and 116-112 for Chagaev, and 115-114 for Ruiz. Chagaev now becomes the mandatory for a shot at Valuev.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
Preceded by Evander Holyfield |
WBA Heavyweight Champion 2001–03 |
Succeeded by Roy Jones Jr. |
Preceded by Roy Jones Jr. |
WBA Heavyweight Champion 2004-05 |
Succeeded by Nikolai Valuev |