Oscar De La Hoya's Defining Moments
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Oscar De La Hoya's Defining Moments
Aug. 8, 1992
In the 132-pound Olympic final, De La Hoya, 19, punched out a 7-2 victory over Rudolph of Germany, the man who'd beaten him the year before in the world championships. De La Hoya claimed the U.S.'s only boxing gold medal at the Barcelona Games and fulfilled the promise he'd made two years earlier to his mother, Cecilia, just before she died of breast cancer at age 38.<br><br>Visit SI.com for a live round-by-round of De La Hoya-Mayweather on Saturday.
Nov. 23, 1992
"I feel like I waited for this moment all my life," said De La Hoya shortly after making his pro debut at the Great Western Forum in Los Angeles. "I tried to make it last." If so, he failed, dispatching the hapless Williams with a left hook to the liver, just 1:42 into the first round.<br><br>Visit SI.com for a live round-by-round of De La Hoya-Mayweather on Saturday.
May 6, 1995
Already the WBO lightweight champion, De La Hoya was gunning for the IBF version in only his 18th pro bout. The Mexican-born Ruelas, touted as a gritty challenger to the glitzy Golden Boy, promised an unrelenting attack. (Trainer Joe Goossen had said his fighter would be on De La Hoya like a "soup sandwich.") De La Hoya dropped Ruelas twice in the second round, then battered him against the ropes until referee Richard Steele stopped the bout.<br><br>Visit SI.com for a live round-by-round of De La Hoya-Mayweather on Saturday.
June 7, 1996
Just 23 and with a record of 22-0, De La Hoya was defending his WBC super lightweight title against his boyhood hero Chavez, who at 33 was a Mexican legend, a multiple world champ and veteran of 99 fights. Unfazed by the pro-Chavez crowd at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, the kid sliced the old lion to ribbons in four cruel, bloody rounds.<br><br>Visit SI.com for a live round-by-round of De La Hoya-Mayweather on Saturday.
April 12, 1997
"His style is the most difficult in boxing," said De La Hoya, in reference to the southpaw wizardry of Whitaker, 33, the WBC welterweight champ and, pound for pound, the best boxer in the world. In a cat-and-mouse fight that was probably closer than the judges' scorecards had it, De La Hoya -- in his first outing at 147 pounds -- emerged with a 12-round decision and a serious dose of experience.<br><br>Visit SI.com for a live round-by-round of De La Hoya-Mayweather on Saturday.
Sept. 13, 1997
Camacho entered the ring in a black-leather getup complete with visored helmet. He probably should have kept the headgear on, as the self-styled Macho Man was, at 35, past his prime and no match for De La Hoya. Though Camacho was decked in the ninth round, Oscar had to settle for a lopsided decision. <br><br>Visit SI.com for a live round-by-round of De La Hoya-Mayweather on Saturday.
Feb. 13, 1999
A five-time world champ who had earned more than $75 million in the ring, De La Hoya had yet to be truly tested as a pro. The tough Quartey remedied that -- dropping De La Hoya in the sixth and spearing him with jabs throughout. With the fight on the line in the final round, the Golden Boy proved his mettle, knocking Quartey down and battering him until the closing bell to win a split decision.<br><br>Visit SI.com for a live round-by-round of De La Hoya-Mayweather on Saturday.
Sept. 18, 1999
Forget the Odd Couple jokes. Oscar and Felix was a match fight fans had been dreaming about. This showdown between two undefeated welterweight champions featured the straight-ahead power of Puerto Rican national hero Trinidad (whose record of 35-0-0 included 30 KOs) against the mobility and boxing skill of De La Hoya. For most of the bout, Oscar put on a dazzling display, circling, jabbing and completely neutralizing Trinidad's attack. But in the closing rounds, believing he "had it won," De La Hoya went on the defensive and coasted to the final bell. It cost him, as the judges gave Trinidad a majority decision.<br><br>Visit SI.com for a live round-by-round of De La Hoya-Mayweather on Saturday.
Sept. 14, 2002
Since losing to Trinidad, De La Hoya had fought only four times, winning a couple more belts but also dropping another close decision, to Sugar Shane Mosley in 2000. Yet facing Vargas -- another product of Southern California's Mexican-American culture, who had called out the Golden Boy, questioning his machismo and street cred -- seemed to energize De La Hoya. Far from playing it safe this time, he beat the rugged Vargas at his own game, rocking him and bloodying him throughout and finally stopping him in the 11th.<br><br>Visit SI.com for a live round-by-round of De La Hoya-Mayweather on Saturday.
Sept. 18, 2004
Call Hopkins the anti-Oscar -- launched not by Olympic success but by a youthful stretch in Pennsylvania's Graterford Prison, driven not by crossover celebrity hype but by a stubborn insistence on doing it his way. Hopkins, at nearly 40, was making the 19th defense of his middleweight title (an earlier one had resulted in a 12th-round TKO of Felix Trinidad). In the end he was simply too big and too strong for De La Hoya, finishing him in the ninth round with a vicious left hook to the body. "You want to get up," said a distraught De La Hoya afterward. "You just can't."<br><br>Visit SI.com for a live round-by-round of De La Hoya-Mayweather on Saturday.
May 6, 2006
Twenty months after the only knockout loss of his career, De La Hoya made amends with a sixth-round TKO of Ricardo Mayorga in Las Vegas. The victory gave Oscar his 10th world title (in six weight classes).<br><br>Visit SI.com for a live round-by-round of De La Hoya-Mayweather on Saturday.