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Oscar De La Hoya (/ ˌ d eɪ l ə ˈ h ɔɪ ə / DAY lə HOY-ə, Spanish: [ˈoskaɾ ðe la ˈoʝa]; born February 4, 1973) is an American boxing promoter and former professional boxer who competed from 1992 to 2008.
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.
De La Hoya dominated Bredahl from the start, earning a knockdown in each of the first two rounds, first sending Bredahl to the canvas midway through the first round after landing a big right hand and then again with a minute left in the second after staggering Bredahl with a left and then sending him to his knees after a combination, though he ...
De La Hoya dominated Charpentier through three rounds, easily winning rounds one and two before dropping his overmatched opponent three times in the third round en route to a technical knockout. De La Hoya's first knockdown came 53 seconds into the round with a left-right combination, though Charpentier would answer the referee's 10-count, De ...
Height: 5 ft 11 in (180 cm) 5 ft 11 in (180 cm) Weight: ... Steward revealed that the reason for his dismissal was a "family situation" as De La Hoya's father Joel ...
A fight between 2-division world champion Oscar De La Hoya and former WBA super featherweight champion had been in the works for nearly three years. Hernández had first been offered $500,000 by De La Hoya promoter Bob Arum in October 1992 to face the yet-to-debut De La Hoya for Hernández's super featherweight title some point in 1993 provided Hernández first get past his challenger Raúl ...
After having defeated former 2-time featherweight champion Jorge Páez in July 1994 to win the vacant WBO lightweight title and thus become a 2-division world champion at only 21-years old, Oscar De La Hoya was scheduled to return to his hometown Los Angeles on October 8, to make the first defense of his newly won title at the Grand Olympic Auditorium where he had won his first world title ...
After Quartey took the standing 8-count, De La Hoya pinned him against the ropes and threw punches wildly in hopes of scoring the knockout victory, however Quartey was able to withstand De La Hoya's onslaught and escaped the round as De La Hoya tired. In the final round, De La Hoya would throw 69 punches landing 41 of them. [8] The two fighters ...