Ortiz And Laguna, Two Of The Greatest Lightweights Of All Time
Usually when people talk about the greatest lightweights of all time the great Roberto Durans name comes up and Benny Leonards, and rightfully so. Both were top lightweights of all time without question, you could make a case for either man being #1. The lightweight division has had so much talent throughout the years, more than any other division imo. The bulk of this talent, was in the 60s ans early 70s. Both of the fighters fought during the golden era of the lightweights and took on some of the greatest fighters the division has ever seen, usually coming out victorious or losing a close battle to another all time great. Neither man was afraid to travel to another fighters backyard to prove he was the best, often times this would result in them losing a controversial fight. In the the three bouts that Ortiz and Laguna faced each other, the fights were staged in Panama, Puerto Rico, and New York.
Two-time Lightweight World Champion Carlos Ortiz- Born in Ponce, Puerto Rico, Carlos would move with his family to New York. In his early years he was getting into street fights so like other kids in the neighborhood he began to learn to fight in the boxing gym. He began boxing at age 10 and after around 40 amateur fights he went pro at 18. He went on to win fights against fellow greats: Ismael Laguna, Nicolino Locche, Sugar Ramos, Flash Eldore, and Duilio Loi. He also defeated the likes of Lou Filippo, Johnny Bizzarro, Kenny Lane and Joe Brown. One of the most clever fighters and one of the best jabs of all time. Throughout his career the only fighter he decisively lost to was a young future champion in Ken Buchanan in his final fight. Ortiz was one of the three greatest Lightweights of all time along side Roberto Duran and Benny Leonard imo. I wouldnt argue the order of any of them.
Two-time Lightweight World Champion Ismael Laguna- Ismael was born into the poverty of Colon, Panama. At 10 years old he was working in a butcher shop to make money to help his family. He had dreams of being a champion like local legend Alfonso "Panama Al" Brown. He turned pro at 17 and chased his dream of becoming champion. He too had one of the best jabs the division has ever seen and was a smart pure boxer. Throughout his career Laguna faced the best of the best. He fought Vicente Saldivar, Nicolino Locche, Carlos Ortiz (went 1-2), Carlos Hernandez, Guts Ishimatsu, Mando Ramos, Ken Buchanan, Flash Eldore, Angel Robinson Garcia, and among others. Ironically, both him and Ortiz would end their careers on a loss to Buchanan. Another Panamanian future great, Roberto Duran, was on his way up when Laguna, his idol, was on his way down, but It was Luguna who was the peoples champion throughout his reign.
Last edited by BoomBoom; 03-09-2009 at 10:51 PM.
Psalm 144: Blessed be the LORD my Rock, who trains my hands for war, and my fingers for battle
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