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Alexis Argüello
 |
| Statistics |
| Nickname(s) |
El Flaco Explosivo
("The Explosive Thin Man")
El Caballero del Ring
("The Ring's Gentleman") |
| Rated at |
Featherweight
Super Featherweight
Lightweight |
| Height |
5'10" (178 cm) |
| Reach |
72" |
| Nationality |
Nicaraguan |
| Birth date |
April 19, 1952(1952-04-19) |
| Birth place |
Managua, Nicaragua |
| Death date |
July 1, 2009 (aged 57) |
| Death place |
Managua, Nicaragua |
| Stance |
Orthodox |
| Boxing
record |
| Total fights |
90 |
| Wins |
82 |
| Wins by KO |
65 |
| Losses |
8 |
Alexis Argüello (April 19, 1952 – July 1,
2009), also known by the stage name El Flaco Explosivo (lit.
"The Explosive Thin Man"), was a Nicaraguan professional boxer and politician.
As a boxer he was a three-time world champion. His trainer
was Lupe Sanchez. After his retirement from boxing, Argüello became
active in Nicaraguan politics and in
November 2008 he was elected mayor of Managua, the nation's capital city. He
allegedly committed suicide on July 1, 2009.
Arguello is ranked 20th on Ring Magazine's list of 100 greatest
punchers of all time.
Boxing
career
"The Explosive Thin Man" suffered an unavenged first round TKO
loss in his 1968 professional debut, but then won 36 of his next 38
bouts, which then led him to a world Featherweight championship
bout against experienced WBA champion Ernesto Marcel of Panama in Panama. The
young challenger lost a 15-round unanimous decision in Marcel's
retirement bout.
Undaunted, Argüello began another streak of wins, and found
himself in the ring with a world champion again, this time
challenging Marcel's successor to the throne, Mexican world champion Rubén
Olivares in Los
Angeles. After Olivares built a small lead on the judges'
scorecards, Argüello and Olivares landed simultaneous left hooks in
round thirteen. Olivares's left hand caused a visible pain
expression on Argüello's face, but Argüello's left hand caused
Olivares to crash hard against the canvas. A few seconds later,
Argüello was the new Featherweight champion of the world.
Argüello defended this title a few times, then moved up in
weight to challenge world Junior Lightweight champion Alfredo
Escalera in Bayamón, Puerto Rico, in what has been nicknamed
The Bloody Battle of
Bayamon by many. Escalera had been a busy champion with
ten defenses, and he had dethroned Kuniaki Shibata in 2 rounds in Tokyo. In what some experts
(including Ring Magazine writers) consider one of
the most brutal fights in history, Escalera had his eye, mouth and
nose busted early, but was rallying back in the scorecards when
Argüello finished him, once again in the thirteenth round.
His reign at Junior Lightweight saw him fend off the challenges
of Escalera in a rematch held at Rimini, Italy, as well as former and future world
champion Bobby
Chacon, former and world champion Rafael "Bazooka"
Limon, Ruben Castillo, future champion
Rolando
Navarrete, and Diego Alcala, beaten in only one round.
Argüello suffered many cuts around his face during his second
victory against Escalera. The on-site doctor wanted him
hospitalized, but Argüello had a flight to catch from Rome the next day to
return to Nicaragua, and he boarded a train from Rimini. The doctor decided to travel
with Argüello, and performed plastic surgery on Argüello's cuts with
Argüello awake.
Argüello then moved up in weight again, and this time he had to
go to London, England, to challenge world
Lightweight champion Jim
Watt. Watt lasted fifteen rounds, but the judges gave Argüello
a unanimous 15-round decision, thus making him only the sixth boxer
to win world titles in 3 divisions, and the second Latin American
(after Wilfred Benitez had become the first by
beating Maurice
Hope one month before) to do it. He had to face some less known
challengers in this division, one exception being the famous
prospect Ray Mancini
(known as "Boom Boom" Mancini) who would later be the subject of a
made for television movie. Mancini and Argüello engaged in a fight
that was later showcased in a boxing video of the best fights of
the 1980s, with Argüello prevailing by stoppage when he decked
Mancini in round 14.
Battles
with Aaron Pryor
After defeating James 'Bubba' Busceme by sixth round stoppage,
Argüello decided to move up in weight class time again, and on
November 12, 1982, he tried to become the first world champion in 4
different categories, meeting the heavier and future Hall-of-Famer
Aaron Pryor, in what
was billed as The Battle of the Champions
in Miami, Florida. Argüello was stopped in the 14th
round. The fight sparked controversy however, because Pryor's
trainer, Panama
Lewis, introduced a second water bottle which he described as
"the bottle I mixed" after round 13, leading to speculation that
the bottle was tainted. The Florida State Boxing Commission failed
to administer a post-fight urinalysis, adding to speculation that the
bottle contained an unsanctioned substance, specifically "a mixture
of orange juice, honey, and cocaine." [1][2] It was
later revealed in an interview with former Lewis-trained boxer Luis
Resto that Lewis would break apart antihistamine pills
used to treat asthma and pour the medicine into the water, giving
Lewis's fighter greater lung capacity in the later rounds of a
fight.[3][4][5] A
rematch was ordered. This time, in Las Vegas, Arguello was KO-ed in
the tenth, and stated after the fight "I'm not going to fight
anymore. I quit." But he later returned to the ring for financial
reasons.
Comeback and
post-retirement
During the 1980s Argüello briefly fought with the Contras in his native Nicaragua, but after a few months in the
jungle he retired from the war.[6] He then
attempted several comebacks into boxing during the late 1980s and
early 1990s and had some success, most notably a fourth round
stoppage of former World Junior Welterweight Champion Billy
Costello in a 1986 televised bout that put him in a position for
another shot at the Junior Welterweight title. He retired for good
in 1995 with a record of 82 wins, 8 losses, and 65 KO's, along with
the recognition of being one of the sports most universally
respected fighters among fans, experts, and boxers.
Argüello was elected to the International Boxing Hall Of Fame in 1992.
In 2008 he was honored by being selected as Nicaragua's flag-bearer
at the Opening Ceremony of the Beijing Olympics.[7]
Argüello was an avid breeder of cats, and had several articles
published in Cat Fancy magazine throughout
the 1990s.
He remained very friendly with his old rival Aaron Pryor, and
the pair saw each other several times a year until Argüello's
death.
Political
career
Argüello was actively involved in Nicaraguan politics with the Sandinista National
Liberation Front (FSLN)--the same party against whom he took up
arms in the 1980s—and in 2004 was elected vice-mayor of Managua.
Amid accusations of vote-rigging Argüello narrowly won the mayoral
election in Managua on November 9, 2008[8]
elections against the candidate of the Constitutionalist Liberal Party, Eduardo
Montealegre, who had come second to Daniel Ortega in the 2006 presidential
election. Argüello's margin of victory was narrow as he
attained just 51.30% of the vote.[9]
Death
Argüello died around 1 a.m. local time on July 1, 2009, after
allegedly shooting himself through the heart in Managua, according to a report from Channel 8
national television. Reports now say there could be some foul play
involved.
The national police have confirmed the death, but are still
awaiting the results of the autopsy. [10][11]
Those close to Argüello are saying that he was becoming
progressively disenchanted with the Ortegistas and the
Sandinista government, and was planning an imminent departure from
the Sandinista political party.
http://lisa-olson.fanhouse.com/2009/08/31/son-in-fight-of-alexis-arguellos-life/
See also
References
External
links
Obituaries