Jump to content

Roberto Durán vs. Esteban de Jesús

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Roberto Durán vs. Esteban de Jesús
DateNovember 17, 1972
VenueMadison Square Garden, New York City, New York, U.S.
Tale of the tape
Boxer Roberto Durán Esteban de Jesús
Nickname Manos de Piedra
("Hands of Stone")
Vita
Hometown Panama City, Panama Province, Panama Carolina, Puerto Rico
Pre-fight record 31–0 (26 KO) 32–1 (19 KO)
Age 21 years, 5 months 22 years, 3 months
Height 5 ft 7+12 in (171 cm) 5 ft 4+12 in (164 cm)
Weight 137+12 lb (62 kg) 138 lb (63 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBA and The Ring
Lightweight Champion
WBA
No. 3 Ranked Lightweight
Result
de Jesús wins via UD (6–3, 6–2, 5–4)

Roberto Durán vs. Esteban de Jesús was a professional boxing match contested on November 17, 1972.[1] The fight was the first in the famed Durán–de Jesús trilogy of the 1970s. Though Durán held both the WBA and The Ring lightweight titles, neither was on the line.

Background

[edit]

Five months prior, undefeated Roberto Durán had defeated reigning WBA lightweight champion Ken Buchanan to claim the title for himself.[2] Durán would then take on two unheralded journeymen in Greg Potter and Lupe Ramirez, knocking out both inside of the first round. Original plans called for Durán to face Buchanan in a championship rematch on October 20 in Madison Square Garden, but Durán broke the agreement.[3] Instead, on November 1st, Durán agreed to face top ranked lightweight contender Esteban de Jesús in a non-title bout on November 17th.[4]

Though de Jesús was ranked as the number-three lightweight in the world, Durán's WBA and The Ring lightweight titles were not on the line as Durán claimed that the Military Leader of Panama Omar Torrijos had forbidden him from making his first defense outside of Panama, which was scheduled to take place the following January. Unbothered by being denied a shot at the title, de Jesús stated "When I knock him out, they'll have to give me a title fight. It doesn't make any difference, I'll get him sooner or later."[5] As Durán's lightweight title was not on the line, both fighters fought above the 135-pound lightweight limit at 138 pounds.

The fight

[edit]

In the first round, de Jesús landed a left hook to Durán's chin that dropped Durán to the mat for the first time in his career. From there on, de Jesús thoroughly outboxed Durán, constantly landing punches from long range and frustrating the usually aggressive Durán, who was warned twice in the fifth round for hitting after a break and a low-blow. The fight would go the full 10-round distance with de Jesús being awarded a unanimous decision victory with scores of 6–3 (one round even) 6–2 (two rounds even) and 5–4 (one round even).

Aftermath

[edit]

This was Durán's first professional loss and his only loss while competing as a lightweight.[6]

Fight card

[edit]

Confirmed bouts:[7]

Weight Class Weight vs. Method Round Notes
Catchweight 138 lbs. Esteban de Jesús def. Roberto Durán UD 10/10
Lightwight 135 lbs. Vilomar Fernandez def. Gregorio Benitez UD 6/6
Super Lightweight 140 lbs. Richie Villanueva def. Enrique Piton TKO 3/6
Lightweight 135 lbs. Jerome Artis def. Hector Diaz PTS 4/4
Super Lightweight 140 lbs. Carlos Gonzalez def. Bernard Almonte PTS 4/4

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Roberto Duran vs. Esteban De Jesus (1st meeting)". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
  2. ^ Duran Gains Lightweight Title in 13th, NY Times article, 1972-06-27 Retrieved on 2024-06-08
  3. ^ People in Sports: Duran Barred, NY Times article, 1973-04-05 Retrieved on 2024-06-11
  4. ^ Sports News Briefs, NY Times article, 1973-04-05 Retrieved on 2024-06-11
  5. ^ Nobody Loses in the Translation, NY Times article, 1972-11-01 Retrieved on 2024-06-11
  6. ^ DeJesus Outpoints Duran, Lightweight Titleholder, NY Times article, 1972-11-18 Retrieved on 2024-06-11
  7. ^ "BoxRec - event".
Preceded by
vs. Lupe Ramirez
Roberto Durán's bouts
17 November 1972
Succeeded by
vs. Jimmy Robertson
Preceded by
vs. Doc McClendon
Esteban de Jesús's bouts
17 November 1972
Succeeded by
Awards
Preceded by The Ring Upset of the Year
1972
Succeeded by