Sergio Martínez (boxer)
































































Sergio Martínez

Sergio Martinez.jpg
Martínez in 2010

Statistics
Real name Sergio Gabriel Martínez
Nickname(s)
Maravilla ("Marvel")
Weight(s)


  • Welterweight

  • Light middleweight

  • Middleweight


Height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Reach 73 in (185 cm)
Nationality Argentine
Born
(1975-02-21) February 21, 1975 (age 44)
Avellaneda, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Stance Southpaw
Boxing record
Total fights 56
Wins 51
Wins by KO 28
Losses 3
Draws 2

Sergio Gabriel Martínez (born February 21, 1975) is an Argentine former professional boxer who competed from 1997 to 2014. He held the WBC super welterweight title from 2009 to 2010, and the unified WBC, WBO, Ring magazine and lineal middleweight titles between 2010 and 2014. With six successful defenses of the Ring and lineal middleweight titles, Martínez's 50-month reign as champion ranks as one of the longest in the history of that weight class.[1]


In 2011, Martínez reached a career high ranking as the world's third best active boxer, pound for pound, behind Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao, as voted by most sporting news and boxing publications, including Sports Illustrated, ESPN, Yahoo! Sports, and The Ring.[2] In 2010 he received Fighter of the Year awards by both The Ring and the Boxing Writers Association of America, as well as The Ring's Knockout of the Year for his rematch victory against Paul Williams. The WBC named him their Boxer of the Year in 2010 and 2012.[3] A southpaw, Martínez was known as a fast and athletic fighter and his style has been described as "crowd-pleasing",[4] partly because of his tendency to fight with his hands down when out of his opponents' range.[5]


Outside the ring, Martínez has been an active spokesperson in the fight against bullying and domestic violence against women. He is the author of a book, Corazón de Rey ("Heart of a King"),[6] and is said to be working on a second book.[7]




Contents






  • 1 Early life


  • 2 Professional career


    • 2.1 Early years in Argentina


    • 2.2 Relocation to Spain


    • 2.3 Light middleweight


      • 2.3.1 Martínez vs. Cintron




    • 2.4 Middleweight


      • 2.4.1 Martínez vs. Williams I


      • 2.4.2 Martínez vs. Pavlik


      • 2.4.3 Martínez vs. Williams II


      • 2.4.4 Martínez vs. Dzinziruk


      • 2.4.5 Martínez vs. Barker


      • 2.4.6 Martínez vs. Macklin


      • 2.4.7 Martínez vs. Chávez Jr.


      • 2.4.8 Martínez vs. Murray


      • 2.4.9 Martínez vs. Cotto






  • 3 Personal life


    • 3.1 Activism




  • 4 Professional boxing record


  • 5 Pay-per-view bouts


  • 6 See also


  • 7 References


  • 8 External links





Early life


Sergio Martínez was born on 21 February 1975 in Avellaneda to parents Hugo Alberto Martínez and Susana Griselda.[8] Shortly afterwards the family relocated to the nearby city of Quilmes, which is also in the Buenos Aires Province. His father worked as a construction worker and metal worker, a trade which Sergio Martínez joined along with his two brothers, Sebastian and Hugo Jr. Martínez was bullied as a child in his "dirt-poor rural village."[9] Before boxing, Martínez was a keen cyclist and football player and it was not until 1995 that he decided he would become a boxer. After being trained by his uncle, Ruben Paniagua, Martínez began boxing as an amateur and compiled a record of 39–2 (39 wins to 2 losses), the losses came by way of majority decision and knockout. His boxing career suffered a major setback in August 1996 when he broke his left hand, forcing him out of the sport for a year.[10] Although he considered competing for Argentina at the 2000 Olympics, he decided that he was too old to wait the two and a half years and chose to turn professional in December 1997.[11]



Professional career



Early years in Argentina


Martínez at the age of 22, had his first professional fight on 27 December 1997 in Ituzaingo, Buenos Aires, Argentina. The opponent for his professional debut, Cristian Marcelo Vivas, was disqualified in the second round, giving Martínez his first win. Martínez fought the first 17 fights of his career in his native Argentina, compiling a record of 16–0–1. The only blemish on his record at this point occurred in his third fight, a draw against Mario Javier Nieva over four rounds. Martínez rematched Nieva four months later and won a six-round unanimous decision.[12]


After facing a relatively low level of opposition for his first 17 fights in Argentina, Martínez fought abroad for the first time, travelling to the United States to face Antonio Margarito on the undercard to the first Érik Morales vs Marco Antonio Barrera bout. The fight took place on 19 February 2000 at the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas. The contest started badly for Martínez as Margarito scored a knockdown in the first round. Although Martínez recovered and had some success in the early rounds, he was hurt by a number of punches in round seven leading to a stoppage by the referee, thus handing Martínez his first loss. Following the Margarito fight, Martínez returned to Argentina and fought eight times, all victories, from April 2000 – February 2002. During this run of fights he won the Argentina welterweight title after outpointing Javier Alejandro Blanco. He successfully defended the title once, knocking out Sergio Ernesto Acuna in the seventh round, before being stripped of the title.[12]



Relocation to Spain


After his final fight in Argentina, a February 2002 win over Francisco Mora, Martínez decided to relocate to Spain. It was there that he began his partnership with his current trainer Gabriel Sarmiento, who worked out of a gym in Azuqueca de Henares. During his time in Spain, Martínez also worked jobs such as; nightclub bouncer, dishwasher, construction worker and did modelling jobs for Adidas and Nike. From April 2002 – May 2003 he fought four times in Spain, all eight-round fights that he won against weak opposition, two of his opponents had lost their last six fights. This was to change in his next fight however, as he took on Richard Williams in England for the lightly regarded IBO light middleweight title. Martínez, who entered the ring as an underdog, having had only eight days preparation,[11][13] won a unanimous decision. Although Williams scored knockdowns in the second and eleventh rounds, he was close to being stopped in the final round and the scorecards were heavily in Martínez's favour.[14] He defended the IBO title twice in the United Kingdom; a twelfth round knock-out victory of Adrian Stone in Bristol was followed by a rematch against Williams in Belfast, on this occasion Williams was stopped in the ninth round. Over the next two and a half years, Martínez won seven fights in a row back in Spain, six of which were against boxers who had losing records.[12] Soon thereafter, Martínez began to gain recognition and pursue fights in the United States, under the guidance of adviser Sampson Lewkowicz.



Light middleweight



Martínez vs. Cintron


Martínez claimed the Interim WBC light middleweight championship on 4 October 2008, beating Alex Bunema via an eighth round retirement.[12] On 14 February 2009 Martínez fought to a majority draw against Puerto Rican Kermit Cintron. The fight was controversial for a number of reasons; during the seventh round Martínez knocked Cintron down with a clean left hand shot and the referee reached the count of ten and waved the fight off. However, this was disputed by Cintron, who claimed that the knockdown was a result of a headbutt but actually the headbutt which Cintron claimed to have happened was actually an extremely powerful and accurate cross from Sergio Martínez. Cintron's protestations led to the referee overturning his decision and the fight continued. The fight went the twelve round distance and the scorecards revealed a draw, many ringside observers felt that the decision was a robbery and that Martínez easily outboxed Cintron and should have gained the victory.[15]


On 21 May 2009, WBC light middleweight champion Vernon Forrest was stripped of his title due to a rib injury that would leave him out of action indefinitely. Because of the injury and his inability to fight Sergio Martínez, Martínez's interim title was upgraded to full WBC title status. Although the organization also mandated that Martínez face Forrest, that bout would never happen. Less than a month later, Forrest was tragically murdered in Atlanta, GA.[16]



Middleweight



Martínez vs. Williams I


On 5 December 2009 Martínez fought Paul Williams in a non-title middleweight bout at Atlantic City's Boardwalk Hall in a fight that was later described as a fight of the year candidate. In the first round Williams and Martínez would both knock each other down once. Martínez would then seem to control the next two rounds with effective power punching. Then Williams seemed to narrowly take control of the fight when he seemingly won rounds 4, 5, 6 and 7 by landing hard left hands to the side of Martínez's head. Rounds 8–10 then signified that the fight would be close on the score-cards when Martínez won those rounds by repeating what he did in rounds 2 and 3. Then in the final 2 rounds (11–12), both fighters began to fade although the exchanges remained very closely contested, although Williams was far more active and therefore would seemingly win those final 2 rounds based on the fact that he was far more active in the last 2 rounds of the fight. That would turn out to be the case as Williams would escape with a majority decision victory with scores of 114–114, 119–110 (for Williams) and 115–113 (for Williams).



Martínez vs. Pavlik


After an impressive performance against Paul Williams, Sergio Martínez stayed at middleweight and challenged WBC, WBO, The Ring and lineal middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik. The fight took place in Atlantic City's Boardwalk Hall on 17 April 2010. Martínez defeated Pavlik via unanimous decision in a bout which saw Martínez overcome a knock-down in the seventh rounds to go on subsequently dominate a majority of the remainder of the rounds in the fight. Pavlik had cuts above both eyes for several rounds, which did not stop bleeding; he said they affected his vision and performance.[17] Although there was a rematch clause in the contract, Pavlik chose not to enforce it, stating his desire to move up in weight.[18] The victory over Pavlik earned Martínez the WBC, WBO, Ring and lineal middleweight championships.


With Martínez winning the middleweight championship, he was required to make some decisions regarding his conflicting WBC light middleweight title. The sanctioning organizations for boxing recognize that boxers may choose to move up or down in the weight categories, yet they also wish to make all championship belts available to challenge. As such, their rules prohibit a fighter from simultaneously holding belts in multiple divisions. This prohibition includes holding a title with one sanctioning organization while also holding a title in a different weight class with a different organization. Eight weeks after the Pavlik fight, when Martínez failed to announce a preference to be a light middleweight or a middleweight champion (the WBO rules allow ten days to decide), the WBO stripped him of their middleweight title.[19] A week later, Martínez did inform the WBC that he was willing to vacate their Light Middleweight title and maintain his WBC Middleweight belt.[20]



Martínez vs. Williams II



On 20 November 2010, Sergio got a chance to avenge his loss to Williams. Both fighters were ranked among the top six pound-for-pound fighters, and Williams came into the fight as the Ring No. 2 ranked Middleweight. Many speculated that this would be a fight of the year candidate. Approximately one minute into the second round, Martínez knocked Williams out with an over-the-top left hand to retain his title. The knockout was called by many as the knockout of the year.
Williams stated to Max Kellerman after the fight, "He caught me with a punch I did not see."



Martínez vs. Dzinziruk



Sergio Martínez's next fight was against undefeated Sergiy Dzindziruk on 12 March 2011 at the Foxwoods Resort Casino, Mashantucket, winning by TKO in 8 rounds. Dzindziruk, the WBO light middlweight champion, was knocked down five times in the fight.[21]
Martinez was also awarded the WBC Diamond belt.



Martínez vs. Barker



Martínez then fought undefeated EBU middleweight champion Darren Barker on 1 October at the Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City. He knocked Barker out with an extremely powerful right hook and put Barker to his knees in the 11th round.


Many boxing analysts and experts said that Darren Barker has the skills and ring generalship to one day become a champion, but that his skills were not perfected enough to do anything against Martínez. The first few rounds showed that Barker was actually able to make Martínez uncomfortable in the ring and give him more trouble than expected. Throughout the fight, Barker consistently gave Martínez problems, while never hurting him or really ever winning any of the rounds, he gave Martínez a challenge by coming in but not giving much offence to let Martínez counter or land anything clean. He also managed to get Martínez's nose to bleed early in the rounds by an upper-cut. Martínez, however, fought through the difficulty and eventually found openings which led to a knock-out of Barker, in the 11th with a right hook.



Martínez vs. Macklin



Sergio successfully defended his The Ring title against the No. 3 Ring Middleweight Matthew Macklin of Ireland on 17 March 2012 at the Madison Square Garden in New York City. Macklin was coming off a very impressive performance against middleweight champion Felix Sturm prior his fight with Martínez, a fight that many felt Macklin won, but he lost a controversial decision to Sturm in Germany. Macklin unexpectedly threw vigorous hooks and jabs that left Martínez behind on the scorecards and left Martínez in a sense of urgency. The Madison Square Garden crowd was largely pro-Macklin. The fight was featured on BBC's boxing schedule for 2011:
"18: Madison Square Garden, New York City, Sergio Martinez beat Matthew Macklin by 11th-round KO (The Ring middleweight). ".


Martínez struggled in the first half of the fight, with Macklin able to time Martínez very well, which neutralized much of Sergio's offensive attack (and would even score a knock-down on Martínez in the seventh round). Martínez was able to turn the tide in the later rounds, finding his range with his left hand. After scoring two knockdowns in the 11th, Macklin's corner stopped the fight shortly before the 12th round.



Martínez vs. Chávez Jr.


This fight was notable in that the WBC did not initially want Chavez Jr. to fight Martinez. Chavez Jr.'s godfather was the head of WBC and refused to allow the fight, even after a unanimous vote to allow the unbeaten champion to fight the current title holder.




Martínez shaking hands with Mauricio Macri, when he was awarded the Olimpia de Oro for 2012.


Martínez fought Julio César Chávez Jr. on 15 September 2012, at the Thomas & Mack Center in Paradise, Nevada for Chávez Jr's WBC Middleweight title. Martínez won by unanimous decision after surviving a 12th round knock down following a dominant performance over the first 11 rounds. ESPN, and The Los Angeles Times all gave round-by-round reports on the fight.


Martínez out worked and out landed Chávez throughout the first 11 rounds of the fight, in dominating fashion. Though Chávez had his moments trapping Martínez in the corner on the ropes, Martínez fought Chávez and used his fast lateral movement to avoid and neutralize Chávez' offensive attack. Chávez hurt Martinez in the 12th round, sending him to the canvas halfway through the round. Martínez got up with a little over one minute left in the fight, and rather than clinch or hold on to Chávez, Martínez continued to throw and trade blows with the Mexican. Despite being fatigued and clearly hurt, Sergio Martínez managed to survive the thrilling 12th round without holding. Martínez won the fight by unanimous decision, by the scores of 117–110, 118–109, and 118–109. After the fight, it was revealed that Martínez had broken his left hand (as early as the 4th round) and torn his right meniscus, the latter of which would require surgery.[22][23]


After the fight, Chavez tested positive for cannabis.[24] As a result, he received a fine of $20,000 and was indefinitely suspended by the World Boxing Council.[25]



Martínez vs. Murray


After his surgery, Martínez confirmed his next title defense would take place in his native Argentina,[26] in what would be his first fight in his home country since leaving for Spain in 2002. News agency Reuters reported that Martínez could make his first title defense against British fighter Martin Murray on 27 April 2013 in Argentina.[27] Martínez defeated Ring Top 10 Middleweight Martin Murray by a controversial unanimous decision. Many observers stated that there had been a clear deterioration in Martínez since the Chavez Jr bout.



Martínez vs. Cotto


After a series of setbacks including further surgeries on his knees, Martínez fought again over a year after the Murray fight, losing his WBC, The Ring and lineal middleweight titles to three-division former world champion Miguel Cotto on June 7, 2014, at Madison Square Garden in New York City. It was evident straight away that Martinez's legs were not there, even with knee braces on and clearly visible, Cotto knocked Martínez down three times in the first round. After the first round however, he begun to make the fight competitive with Cotto. He continued to fight back until round nine when Martínez went down once again. Following the ninth round, trainer Pablo Sarmiento decided to call off the fight prior to the tenth round while still in the corner, against the urging of Martínez. According to reports, Sarmiento told Martínez "Champion, your knees are not responding. Sergio, look at me ... I'm gonna stop this one. Sergio, you are the best for me. You'll always be the best champion, Sergio."[28]


Following the bout, Martínez stated that he wanted to continue his boxing career, and expressed his desire to fight against Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr. However, on June 13, 2015, Martínez announced his retirement from boxing at the age of 40, stating that both aging and knee injuries were the causes for his decision.[29]



Personal life


Martinez still resides in Madrid, Spain. He is divorced and once dated sports commentator Silvana Carsetti.[30]



Activism


Martinez has been presented with an award for helping bullied children. He has also championed the cause of domestic violence against women. He attended a news conference to support legislation involving the Violence Against Women Act. Martinez was quoted as saying: "With domestic violence, no one wanted to touch the subject with a 10-foot pole. I was interested in the issue that a boxer, who dishes out violence, could also be thoughtful and do something and people would listen to someone like me. I thought I could have the most impact by speaking out on the issue."[9]



Professional boxing record
































Professional record summary


56 fights

51 wins

3 losses

By knockout
28
2

By decision
22
1

By disqualification
1
0

Draws
2






















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































No.
Result
Record
Opponent
Type
Round, time
Date
Location
Notes
56
Loss
51–3–2

Puerto Rico Miguel Cotto
RTD
9 (12), 3:00
7 Jun 2014

United States Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York, U.S.

Lost WBC, The Ring, and lineal middleweight titles
55
Win
51–2–2

United Kingdom Martin Murray
UD
12
27 Apr 2013

Argentina José Amalfitani Stadium, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Retained WBC, The Ring, and lineal middleweight titles
54
Win
50–2–2

Mexico Julio César Chávez Jr.
UD
12
15 Sep 2012

United States Thomas & Mack Center, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.

Retained The Ring and lineal middleweight titles;
Won WBC middleweight title

53
Win
49–2–2

United Kingdom Matthew Macklin
RTD
11 (12), 3:00

17 Mar 2012

United States The Theater at Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York, U.S.

Retained The Ring and lineal middleweight titles
52
Win
48–2–2

United Kingdom Darren Barker
KO
11 (12), 1:29

1 Oct 2011

United States Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S.

Retained The Ring and lineal middleweight titles
51
Win
47–2–2

Ukraine Serhiy Dzyndzyruk
TKO
8 (12), 1:43

12 Mar 2011

United States Foxwoods Resort Casino, Ledyard, Connecticut, U.S.

Retained The Ring and lineal middleweight titles
50
Win
46–2–2

United States Paul Williams
KO
2 (12), 1:10

20 Nov 2010

United States Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S.

Retained WBC, The Ring, and lineal middleweight titles
49
Win
45–2–2

United States Kelly Pavlik
UD
12
17 Apr 2010

United States Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S.

Won WBC, WBO, The Ring, and lineal middleweight titles
48
Loss
44–2–2

United States Paul Williams

MD
12
5 Dec 2009

United States Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S.

47
Draw
44–1–2

Puerto Rico Kermit Cintrón

MD
12
14 Feb 2009

United States BankAtlantic Center, Sunrise, Florida, U.S.

Retained WBC interim super welterweight title
46
Win
44–1–1

Democratic Republic of the Congo Alex Bunema
RTD
8 (12), 3:00
4 Oct 2008

United States Pechanga Resort & Casino, Temecula, California, U.S.

Won vacant WBC interim super welterweight title
45
Win
43–1–1

Armenia Archak TerMeliksetian
TKO
7 (10), 2:14
7 Jun 2008

United States Mohegan Sun Arena, Montville, Connecticut, U.S.

44
Win
42–1–1

Dominican Republic David Toribio
UD
4
16 Feb 2008

United States MGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.

43
Win
41–1–1

Panama Russell Jordan
TKO
4 (10), 0:59
6 Dec 2007

United States Paradise Theater, New York City, New York, U.S.

42
Win
40–1–1

Romania Pavel Florin Madalin
RTD
4 (6), 3:00
6 Oct 2007

Spain Polideportivo Sage 2000, Madrid, Spain

41
Win
39–1–1

Mexico Saúl Román
KO
4 (12), 2:25
27 Apr 2007

United States Grand Plaza Hotel, Houston, Texas, U.S.

40
Win
38–1–1

Cameroon Oliver Tchinda
KO
5 (8)
7 Oct 2006

Spain Pabellón La Solidaridad, Fuenlabrada, Spain

39
Win
37–1–1

Romania Vasile Surcica
UD
12
26 May 2006

Spain Poliesportiu Insular Blanca Dona, Ibiza

Retained WBC Latino super welterweight title
38
Win
36–1–1

Venezuela Presente Brito
TKO
1 (8)
1 Apr 2006

Spain Estadio Rayo Vallecano, Madrid, Spain

37
Win
35–1–1

Georgia (country) Tamaz Tskrialashvili
RTD
6 (8)
4 Nov 2005

Spain La Cubierta, Leganés, Spain

36
Win
34–1–1

Colombia Alvaro Moreno Gamboa
KO
2 (12)
5 Oct 2005

Spain La Línea de la Concepción, Spain

Retained WBC Latino super welterweight title
35
Win
33–1–1

Georgia (country) Albert Airapetian
KO
11 (12)
4 Mar 2005

Spain León, Spain

Won WBC Latino super welterweight title
34
Win
32–1–1

Portugal Jorge Teixeira Pina
TKO
5 (8), 0:23
7 Jan 2005

Spain Pabellón Municipal, Lugo, Spain

33
Win
31–1–1

United Kingdom Richard Williams
RTD
9 (12)
17 Apr 2004

United Kingdom King's Hall, Belfast, Northern Ireland

Retained IBO super welterweight title
32
Win
30–1–1

United Kingdom Adrian Stone
KO
12 (12), 1:50
9 Oct 2003

United Kingdom Whitchurch Leisure Centre, Bristol, England

Retained IBO super welterweight title
31
Win
29–1–1

United Kingdom Richard Williams
UD
12
21 Jun 2003

United Kingdom MEN Arena, Manchester, England

Won IBO super welterweight title
30
Win
28–1–1

Ghana Frank Oppong
UD
8
9 May 2003

Spain La Cubierta Palazo de Toros, Leganés, Spain

29
Win
27–1–1

Nicaragua Miguel Angel Perez
KO
1 (8)
7 Feb 2003

Spain Cubierta de Leganes, Madrid, Spain

28
Win
26–1–1

Romania Vasile Surcica
UD
8
12 Jul 2002

Spain Campo de Futbol Las Americas, Parla, Spain

27
Win
25–1–1

Colombia Alvaro Moreno Gamboa
UD
8
26 Apr 2002

Spain Barcelona, Spain

26
Win
24–1–1

Argentina Francisco Antonio Mora
UD
10
2 Feb 2002

Argentina Estadio FAB, Buenos Aires, Argentina

25
Win
23–1–1

Argentina Sergio Ernesto Acuna
TKO
7 (12), 1:47
27 Oct 2001

Argentina Estadio FAB, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Retained ABF welterweight title
24
Win
22–1–1

Argentina Javier Alejandro Blanco
UD
10
8 Sep 2001

Argentina Estadio FAB, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Won vacant ABF welterweight title
23
Win
21–1–1

Argentina Enrique Areco
RTD
8 (8), 0:01
14 Jul 2001

Argentina Ce.De.M. N° 2, Caseros, Argentina

22
Win
20–1–1

Argentina Elbio Felipe Gonzlaez
TKO
6 (10)
19 May 2001

Argentina Nueve de Julio, Argentina

21
Win
19–1–1

Argentina Adrian Walter Daneff

KO
4 (12)
16 Jun 2000

Argentina Club Argentino de Quilmes, Quilmes, Argentina

Won vacant WBO Latino welterweight title
20
Win
18–1–1

Argentina Javier Alejandro Blanco
UD
8
5 May 2000

Argentina Santa Rosa, Argentina

19
Win
17–1–1

Argentina Raul Eduardo Bejarano
UD
6
15 Apr 2000

Argentina Club Argentino de Quilmes, Quilmes, Argentina

18
Loss
16–1–1

Mexico Antonio Margarito
TKO
7 (10), 2:57

19 Feb 2000

United States Mandalay Bay Events Center, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.

17
Win
16–0–1

Argentina Paulo Alejandro Sanchez
UD
10
22 Oct 1999

Argentina Club Argentino de Quilmes, Quilmes, Argentina

16
Win
15–0–1

Argentina Silvio Walter Rojas
UD
10
9 Oct 1999

Argentina Círculo General Belgrano, Ciudad Evita, Argentina

15
Win
14–0–1

Argentina Walter Fabian Saporiti
TKO
2 (8)
11 Sep 1999

Argentina Club Argentino de Quilmes, Quilmes, Argentina

14
Win
13–0–1

Argentina Ariel Gabriel Chaves
UD
10
28 Aug 1999

Argentina Club Argentino de Quilmes, Quilmes, Argentina

13
Win
12–0–1

Argentina Paulo Alejandro Sanchez
UD
10
17 Jul 1999

Argentina Villa Dominico, Argentina

12
Win
11–0–1

Argentina Silvio Walter Rojas
UD
10
26 Jun 1999

Argentina Club Argentino de Quilmes, Quilmes, Argentina

11
Win
10–0–1

Bolivia Elio Vaca Anglarill
UD
8
15 May 1999

Argentina Club Argentino de Quilmes, Quilmes, Argentina

10
Win
9–0–1

Argentina Jose Antonio Perez
UD
8
17 Apr 1999

Argentina Club Argentino de Quilmes, Quilmes, Argentina

9
Win
8–0–1

Argentina Ignacio Ramon Caceres
RTD
4 (6)
19 Mar 1999

Argentina Club Argentino de Quilmes, Quilmes, Argentina

8
Win
7–0–1

Argentina Arnaldo Gabriel Molina
RTD
5 (6)
5 Mar 1999

Argentina Mar del Plata, Argentina

7
Win
6–0–1

Argentina Gabriel Leonidas Leiva
TKO
3 (8)
4 Dec 1998

Argentina Estudios Canal 9, Buenos Aires, Argentina

6
Win
5–0–1

Argentina Luis Alberto Baldomir

RTD
5 (6)
4 Sep 1998

Argentina Estadio FAB, Buenos Aires, Argentina

5
Win
4–0–1

Argentina Juan Mauricio Marino
UD
6
22 Aug 1998

Argentina Estadio FAB, Buenos Aires, Argentina

4
Win
3–0–1

Argentina Mario Javier Nieva

UD
6
25 Jul 1998

Argentina Estadio FAB, Buenos Aires, Argentina

3
Draw
2–0–1
Argentina Mario Javier Nieva

PTS
4
14 Mar 1998

Argentina Estudios América TV, Buenos Aires, Argentina

2
Win
2–0

Argentina Julio Cesar Villalva

TKO
1 (6)
20 Feb 1998

Argentina Cipolletti, Argentina

1
Win
1–0

Argentina Cristian Marcelo Vivas

DQ
2 (6)
27 Dec 1997

Argentina Ituzaingó, Argentina



Pay-per-view bouts
























Date Fight Billing Buys Network

September 15, 2012

Chavez Jr. vs. Martinez
Chavez Jr-Martinez
475,000

HBO

June 7, 2014

Cotto vs. Martinez
Cotto-Martinez
350,000[31]

HBO


See also



  • List of light-middleweight boxing champions

  • List of middleweight boxing champions

  • List of WBC world champions

  • List of WBO world champions

  • List of The Ring world champions

  • List of lineal boxing world champions



References





  1. ^ "The Lineal Middleweight Champions". The Cyber Boxing Zone Encyclopedia..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ Iole, Kevin. "Rankings: Heavyweight isn't deadweight – Boxing – Yahoo! Sports". Sports.yahoo.com. Retrieved 14 November 2011.


  3. ^ "Sergio Martinez Is WBC Boxer of the Year". thesweetscience.com. Retrieved 6 April 2014.


  4. ^ "Sergio Martinez v Sergiy Dzinziruk preview". Crunch Sports. Retrieved 25 September 2011.


  5. ^ "Final Thoughts on Pavlik-Martinez". Bad Left Hook. Retrieved 25 September 2011.


  6. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 25 June 2014. Retrieved 4 July 2014.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)


  7. ^ "Sampson Aims For Sergio Martinez Meeting on Future".


  8. ^ Sergio "Maravilla" Martinez. dbe1.com


  9. ^ ab Bob Velin (15 March 2012). "Martinez champions fight against bullying outside the ring". USA TODAY. Retrieved 6 March 2013.


  10. ^ "Sergio Martinez Part One: A King Goes in Search of his Crown". Dog House Boxing. Retrieved 25 September 2011.


  11. ^ ab "Sergio Martinez: Better late than never". The Ring. Retrieved 25 September 2011.


  12. ^ abcd Boxrec. "Sergio Gabriel Martinez". Boxrec Fighter Page. Retrieved 26 January 2008.


  13. ^ "Sergio Martinez Part Two: The General Crowns his King". The Ring. Retrieved 25 September 2011.


  14. ^ "Boxing: Brodie defies eye damage to overpower Argentinian opponent". The Independent. Retrieved 28 September 2011.


  15. ^ "Martinez robbed of win against Cintron". ESPN. Retrieved 19 May 2010.


  16. ^ "Martinez now jr. middleweight champ". ESPN. Retrieved 19 May 2010.


  17. ^ "Martinez proves his worth against Pavlik". ESPN. Retrieved 19 May 2010.


  18. ^ "Pavlik to move up in weight". ESPN. Retrieved 19 May 2010.


  19. ^ "WBO strips Martinez of title". ESPN. Retrieved 1 June 2010.


  20. ^ "Martinez stays at middleweight". ESPN. Retrieved 16 June 2010.


  21. ^ "Boxing – Martinez KOs Dzinziruk". Fightnews.com. 12 March 2011. Retrieved 14 November 2011.


  22. ^ Rafael, Dan (19 September 2012). Multiple injuries idle Sergio Martinez, ESPN.com. Retrieved 17 November 2012.


  23. ^ Rafael, Dan (17 October 2012). Sergio Martinez to Have Knee Surgery, ESPN.com. Retrieved 17 November 2012.


  24. ^ ESPN staff (20 September 2012). Chavez fails drug test after Martinez defeat, ESPN.co.uk. Retrieved 17 November 2012.


  25. ^ Bob Velin (5 October 2012). "Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. fined $20K, suspended by WBC". TheNewsStar. 2012 www.thenewsstar.com. Archived from the original on 13 November 2013. Retrieved 6 October 2012.


  26. ^ Rafael, Dan (14 November 2012). Surgery for Martinez 'perfect', ESPN.com. Retrieved 17 November 2012.


  27. ^ Gowar, Rex (11 November 2012). Martinez to defend title against Briton Murray – reports, Reuters. Retrieved 17 November 2012.


  28. ^ Bartholomew, Rafe (9 June 2014). "Miguel Cotto–Sergio Martinez: The End of Maravilla".


  29. ^ "Sergio Martinez Announces Retirement From Boxing".


  30. ^ "No sé si iría a la revancha de Maravilla – Tiempo de San Juan". tiempodesanjuan.com. Retrieved 6 April 2014.


  31. ^ "Cotto-Martinez PPV 'underperformed'". Espn.go.com.




External links



  • Professional boxing record for Sergio Martínez from BoxRec







































































Sporting positions
Regional boxing titles

Vacant
Title last held by

Fabio Angel Vidal

WBO Latino
welterweight champion

16 June 2000 – March 2001
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Jose Joaquin Rosa Gomez

Vacant
Title last held by

Sergio Ernesto Acuna

ABF welterweight champion
8 September 2001 – July 2002
Stripped

Vacant
Title next held by

Raul Eduardo Bejarano

Vacant
Title last held by

Anderson Clayton

WBC Latino
super welterweight champion

4 March 2005 – October 2006
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Rafael Sosa Pintos
Minor world boxing titles
Preceded by
Richard Williams

IBO super welterweight champion
21 June 2003 – January 2005
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Mihály Kótai
Major world boxing titles

Vacant
Title last held by

Javier Castillejo

WBC super welterweight champion
Interim title

4 October 2008 – 21 May 2009
Promoted to world champion

Vacant
Preceded by
Vernon Forrest
stripped


WBC super welterweight champion
21 May 2009 – 16 June 2010
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Manny Pacquiao
Preceded by
Kelly Pavlik

WBC middleweight champion
17 April 2010 – 18 January 2011
Status changed
Succeeded by
Sebastian Zbik
promoted from interim status


WBO middleweight champion
17 April 2010 – 1 June 2010
Stripped

Vacant
Title next held by

Dmitry Pirog

The Ring middleweight champion
17 April 2010 – 7 June 2014
Succeeded by
Miguel Cotto

Lineal middleweight champion
17 April 2010 – 7 June 2014
Preceded by
Julio César Chávez Jr.

WBC middleweight champion
15 September 2012 – 7 June 2014
Awards
Previous:
Manny Pacquiao

The Ring Fighter of the Year
2010
Next:
Andre Ward

BWAA Fighter of the Year
2010
Previous:
Manny Pacquiao
KO2 Ricky Hatton


The Ring Knockout of the Year
KO2 Paul Williams

2010
Next:
Nonito Donaire
KO2 Fernando Montiel

Previous:
Lionel Messi

Olimpia Award
2012
Next:
Marcos Maidana









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