Julio César Chávez vs. Meldrick Taylor II

Julio César Chávez vs. Meldrick Taylor II, billed as Unfinished Business, was a professional boxing match contested on September 17, 1994, for the WBC super lightweight title.

Unfinished Business
DateSeptember 17, 1994
VenueMGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.
Title(s) on the lineWBC super lightweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Julio César Chávez Meldrick Taylor
Nickname El Gran Campeón Mexicano
("The Great Mexican Champion")
TNT
Hometown Culiacán, Mexico Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Purse $1,000,000 $400,000
Pre-fight record 31–0–2 32–3–1
Age 32 years, 2 months 27 years, 10 months
Height 5 ft 7 in (170 cm) 5 ft 6+12 in (169 cm)
Weight 140 lb (64 kg) 140 lb (64 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBC
Super Lightweight Champion
2-division World Champion
Result
Toney wins by majority decision (117–110, 117–110, 114–114)

Background

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On March 17, 1990, WBC super lightweight champion Julio César Chávez met IBF super lightweight champion Meldrick Taylor in a unification bout. In one of the most memorable and controversial fights of the 1990s, Chávez, trailing on the scorecards, would score a last-second knockout victory after referee Richard Steele stopped the fight despite Taylor having risen from the knockdown and there being only two seconds left in the fight.[1] The IBF ordered a rematch between the two fighters just two weeks later on the basis that Steele failed to direct Chavez to a neutral corner when he began initiating his 10-count with IBF president Bob Lee stating "We are not saying he shouldn’t have stopped the fight. We think he did the right thing to protect the fighter, but if he stopped the count, who knows what might have happened?"[2] To help facilitate the rematch, the IBF would rank Taylor as the number-one super lightweight thus making him Chávez's mandatory challenger and giving Chávez six months to face Taylor or be stripped of their title.[3] In December 1990, promoter Don King announced that Chávez and Taylor would meet in rematch set for February 2, 1991, however Taylor's promoter Dan Duva denounced King's announcement stating "There is no Feb. 2 date. Never has been. Never will be."[4][5] Instead Taylor would move up to the welterweight division to challenge WBA titlist Aaron Davis on January 19, defeating him by unanimous decision to become a 2-division world champion.[6]

After over four years of waiting, King would announce in August 1994 that the long-awaited rematch between Chávez and Taylor would occur the following month on September 17.[7] However, both Chávez and Taylor's reputation's had taken a hit; Chávez had lost his unbeaten streak earlier in the year, losing to Frankie Randall in January and then barely beating him in a rematch in May, while Taylor had been blown out in back-to-back world title matches in 1992 and had only faced marginal competition since, somewhat dulling the luster of the rematch. Though Taylor was only 27 at the time, he was considered a "shot" fighter and was installed as 3 1/2 underdog. Taylor would dismiss notions that he was past-his-prime stating "I've done everything I've had to do to prepare for this man."[8] Chávez would retain top trainer Emanuel Steward, while Taylor would enlist Willie Rush, his trainer as an amateur and Philadelphia-based nutritionist Shiloh Bey, who helped Taylor lose 30 pounds to get down to the 140-pound super lightweight limit by implementing a natural food diet. Taylor claimed to be in "tip-top shape" and stated "I have my hand speed back, my power. I'm punching harder. I predict a knockout and not because I'm cocky or arrogant."[9]

The Chávez–Taylor main event would be supplemented on the undercard with five additional world championship matches; Juan Martín Coggi vs. Frankie Randall for the WBA super lightweight title, Félix Trinidad vs. Yori Boy Campas for the IBF welterweight title, Gabriel Ruelas vs. Jesse James Leija for the WBC super featerhweight title, Vincent Pettway vs. Gianfranco Rosi and Ricardo López vs. Surachai Saengmorakot for the WBC mini flyweight title. The six world title fights set a record for most on a single boxing card.[10]

The fight

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Taylor started the fight well, taking several of the early rounds, but Chávez would take control of the later rounds, with a low-blow costing Taylor one point on the scorecards in the sixth round. Midway through the eighth, Chávez would connect with a left hook that sent Taylor down on the seat of his pants. Dazed and bleeding from his mouth, Taylor answered referee Mills Lane's 10-count at eight and was allowed to continue the fight, but was quickly met with a bevy of punches to head from Chávez. As Taylor was not fighting back, Lane quickly stepped in and ended the fight just seconds later, giving Chávez the victory by technical knockout.[11]

Fight card

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Confirmed bouts:[12]

Weight Class Weight vs. Method Round Notes
Super Lightweight 140 lbs. Julio César Chávez (c) def. Meldrick Taylor TKO 8/12 Note 1
Super Lightweight 140 lbs. Frankie Randall def. Juan Martín Coggi (c) UD 12/12 Note 2
Welterweight 147 lbs. Félix Trinidad (c) def. Yori Boy Campas TKO 4/12 Note 3
Super Featherweight 130 lbs. Gabriel Ruelas def. Jesse James Leija (c) UD 12/12 Note 4
Super Welterweight 154 lbs. Vincent Pettway def. Gianfranco Rosi (c) KO 4/12 Note 5
Mini Flyweight 105 lbs. Ricardo López (c) def. Surachai Saengmorakot TKO 1/12 Note 6
Super Lightweight 140 lbs. Giovanni Parisi def. Freddie Pendleton SD 10/10
Welterweight 147 lbs. Michael Carruth def. Kim Jackson TKO 4/6

^Note 1 For WBC Super Lightweight title
^Note 2 For WBA Super Lightweight title
^Note 3 For IBF Welterweight title
^Note 4 For WBC Super Featherweight title
^Note 5 For IBF Super Welterweight title
^Note 6 For WBC Mini Flyweight title

Broadcasting

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Country Broadcaster
  United States Showtime

References

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  1. ^ Chavez Wins in Final Round, NY Times article, 1990-03-17 Retrieved on 2024-09-16
  2. ^ IBF Orders Chavez-Taylor Rematch, LA Times article, 1990-04-04 Retrieved on 2024-09-16
  3. ^ I.B.F. Says It Will Rank Taylor Above Chavez, NY Times article, 1990-04-04 Retrieved on 2024-09-16
  4. ^ Chavez-Taylor rematch set, UPI article, 1990-12-20 Retrieved on 2024-09-16
  5. ^ How Duva Climbed to Center Stage, NY Times article, 1990-12-26 Retrieved on 2024-09-16
  6. ^ Taylor Bounces Back and Wins a Title, NY Times article, 1990-01-21 Retrieved on 2024-09-16
  7. ^ Chavez–Taylor Rematch Headlines Sept. 17 Card, Baltimore Sun article, 1994-08-03 Retrieved on 2024-09-16
  8. ^ Taylor and Chavez: Old Soldiers Who Keep Fighting, NY Times article, 1994-09-17 Retrieved on 2024-09-16
  9. ^ Taylor: 'It's my time', UPI article, 1994-09-16 Retrieved on 2024-09-16
  10. ^ Chavez Uses Left Hook To Pound Point Across, NY Times article, 1994-09-19 Retrieved on 2024-09-17
  11. ^ Taylor Older But No Wiser As Chavez Wins Again, NY Times article, 1994-09-18 Retrieved on 2024-09-17
  12. ^ "BoxRec - event".