Jump to content

Oscar De La Hoya vs. John John Molina

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ready or Not
DateFebruary 18, 1995
VenueMGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.
Title(s) on the lineWBO Lightweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Oscar De La Hoya Juan Molina
Nickname The Golden Boy John John
Hometown East Los Angeles, California, U.S. Fajardo, Puerto Rico
Purse $1,250,000 $300,000
Pre-fight record 16–0 (15 KO) 36–3 (26 KO)
Age 22 years 31 years, 11 months
Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm) 5 ft 7 in (170 cm)
Weight 135 lb (61 kg) 134 lb (61 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBO
Lightweight champion
The Ring
No. 4 Ranked Lightweight
IBF
Super Featherweight champion
The Ring
No. 1 Ranked Super Featherweight
2-time Super Featherweight champion
Result
De La Hoya wins via unanimous decision (117–110, 116–111, 116–111)

Oscar De La Hoya vs. John John Molina, billed as Ready or Not was a professional boxing match contested on February 18, 1995, for the WBO lightweight title.[1]

Background

[edit]

For the first defense of his WBO lightweight title, reigning champion Oscar De La Hoya was matched up against 2-time super featherweight world champion, Juan "John John" Molina.

After having faced three consecutive marginal fringe contenders in his previous three title defenses, Molina represented a step up in competition for De La Hoya with Molina offering his opinion that cable network HBO, who exclusively broadcast De La Hoya's fights had "pressured Oscar to get an opponent with a name and a record." However, as Molina, a natural super featherweight who had spent his entire career in that division up to that point, was making his debut in the lightweight division, De La Hoya claimed that his fight with Molina "is going to be one of my easiest fights."[2]

The fights

[edit]

Toney vs. Griffin

[edit]
Ready or Not: James Toney vs. Montell Griffin
Title(s) on the linevacant IBF Inter-Continental Light heavyweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer James Toney Montell Griffin
Nickname Lights Out Ice
Hometown Grand Rapids, Michigan, U.S. Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Pre-fight record 44–1–2 (29 KO) 14–0 (8 KO)
Age 26 years, 5 months 24 years, 8 months
Height 5 ft 9 in (175 cm) 5 ft 7 in (170 cm)
Weight 175 lb (79 kg) 173+12 lb (79 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition IBF
No. 3 Ranked Light Heavyweight[3]
2-division world champion
IBF
No. 10 Ranked Light Heavyweight
Result
Griffin defeats Toney by majority decision (116–112, 115–113, 114–114)

The featured undercard bout featured James Toney, in his first fight since suffering his first professional loss at the hands of Roy Jones Jr., taking on undefeated light heavyweight prospect (and De La Hoya's 1992 Olympic teammate) Montell Griffin.[4]

This was the third and final card in under a year to feature both De La Hoya and Toney as the headliners.

The fight

[edit]

Griffin made use of his left hook and good movement to keep his Toney off balance and prevent him from land any counterpunches. Toney hurt Griffin with a counter right cross in the third round but he survived and kept up sticking close to Toney and tying him up in the corner.

The fight went the full 12 rounds, judge Duane Ford scored it even 114–114 while Bill Graham had it 115–113 and Art Lurie 116–112 both in favour of Griffin.

Unofficial HBO scorer Harold Lederman scored it 114–112 for Toney.

Aftermath

[edit]

Speaking afterwards Griffin said "When he had me hurt, the way I survived is, I’m a low-keyed person, I stayed back until I got my legs back. Toney needs punching room. And I took that punching room away from him."

Toney meanwhile was unhappy with the judges saying "I thought I won the fight, it was a bad decision. I’ll be back. I beat the guy."[5]

Preceded by James Toney's bouts
18 February 1995
Succeeded by
vs. Karl Willis
Preceded by
vs. Ray Lathon
Montell Griffin's bouts
18 February 1995
Succeeded by

Main Event

[edit]

De La Hoya scored a first-round knockdown midway through the round, countering a wild Molina right with a left hook that sent Molina down to a knee, but was unable to finish Molina off thereafter as Molina was able take De La Hoya the full 12-round distance for the first time in his career. De La Hoya nevertheless controlled the majority of the fight and won a comfortable unanimous decision, with two judges scoring the fight 116–111 and the third scoring it 117–110.[6][5] Unofficial HBO scorer Harold Lederman scored it 114–113 for Molina.

Aftermath

[edit]

De La Hoya's victory over Molina would officially set up a shot at his first major world title against IBF lightweight champion Rafael Ruelas.[7][5]

Fight card

[edit]

Confirmed bouts:[8]

Weight Class Weight vs. Method Round Notes
Lightweight 135 lbs. Oscar De La Hoya (c) def. John John Molina UD 12/12 note 1
Light Heavyweight 175 lbs. Montell Griffin def. James Toney MD 12/12 note 2
Super Featherweight 130 lbs. Robert Garcia def. Lorenzo Tiznado RTD 7/10
Super Lightweight 140 lbs. Daniel Alicea def. Roberto Villareal UD 8/8
Light Heavyweight 175 lbs. Chris Johnson def. Asluddin Umarov UD 4/4

^Note 1 For WBO Lightweight title
^Note 2 For IBF Inter-Continental Light Heavyweight title

Broadcasting

[edit]
Country Broadcaster
 United States HBO

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Oscar De La Hoya vs. John John Molina". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 9 December 2024.
  2. ^ Fighters’ Moment of Truth at Hand : Boxing: Oscar De La Hoya and John John Molina put their futures on the line in lightweight title bout., L.A. Times article, 1995-02-18, Retrieved on 2024-12-08
  3. ^ "International Boxing Federation official ratings as of January 1995". Ocala Star-Banner. Portsmouth, VA: International Boxing Federation. Associated Press. 10 January 1995. p. 2C. Retrieved 9 December 2024.
  4. ^ "Montell Griffin vs. James Toney (1st meeting)". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 9 December 2024.
  5. ^ a b c Chris Dufresne (19 February 1995). "Judges Agree: De La Hoya Gets Decision Over Molina : Boxing: Winner gets some useful lessons in grueling 12-round bout, looks ahead to Ruelas. Griffin upsets Toney in battle of light-heavyweights". Los Angeles Times. Las Vegas. Retrieved 9 December 2024.
  6. ^ De La Hoya Wins a Decision, N.Y. Times article, 1995-02-19 Retrieved on 2024-12-05
  7. ^ De La Hoya Set for "Megafight", Chicago Tribune article, 1995-02-20, Retrieved on 2014-03-16
  8. ^ "BoxRec - event".
Preceded by Oscar De La Hoya's bouts
18 February 1995
Succeeded by
Preceded by John John Molina's bouts
18 February 1995
Succeeded by
vs. Mark Reels