I don't
I don't
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
Carlos 'Espenosa' Elliott
A hell of a hard-punching Welterweight/Light-Middleweight.
Was a Sargeant in the United States Air Force, and was stationed
at the Mishawa Air Base in Japan.
Turned professional in March 1983 {Age; 20 years, 10 months}
while in Japan.
Ran off '3-Straight' Knockout wins.
In November 1983, travelled to South Korea to take on the former
OBPF Welterweight Champion - Chung-Jae Hwang.
Chung-Jae Hwang had a record of 26-2-0 {23 KO's}, and was the
#6 WBA Welterweight.
Carlos 'blitzed' {KO 2} Chung-Jae.
Last edited by Bill Paxtom; 11-08-2014 at 02:24 AM.
Bean-Head
Carlos Elliott was from Huntsville, Alabama.
He became a Sargeant in the United States Air Force, and was stationed
in Japan at the Mishawa Air Base.
He became a resident of Hachinoe, Japan.
He started his career in March 1983 {Age; 20 years, 10 months}.
Carlos was a {5' 9 1/2"} vicious-punching fighter, with power in both fists.
By mid-1985, Carlos was 9-1-0 {9 KO's} and was the Japanese Light-Middleweight
Champion.
He was supposed to fight 'former' WBA Welterweight Champion - Pipino Cuevas
in September 1985, but Pipino was really on a 'down-spiral' and pulled out of the
bout.
By the end of 1990, he was the #2 WBA-ranked Light-Middleweight, and
had a record of 26-2-0 {22 KO's}.
He was both the Japanese and OPBF Light-Middleweight Champion.
Last edited by Bill Paxtom; 11-08-2014 at 04:38 PM.
I remember reading about him in boxing magazines but I never saw him fight. No youtube in those days.
Carlos Elliott
Was also a 'Martial Arts' expert. I saw a few of his bouts.
He was a pretty good fighter, who resembled Simon Brown in style.
December 1990 ~ WBA Ratings
** ... 'vacant'
#1 ... Carlos Elliott
#2 ... Gilbert Dele
#3 ... Jun-Sok Hwang
#4 ... Julio Cesar Vasquez
#5 ... Carl Daniels
#6 ... Laurent Boudouani
#7 ... Hugo Vilte
#8 ... Jorge Castro
#9 ... Glenn Wolfe
#10 . Gregory Clark
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j...m8q732lvS-8GbQ
Last edited by Bill Paxtom; 11-08-2014 at 09:47 PM.
'vacant' WBA Light Middleweight Championship
The Title became vacant when WBA Champion - Julian Jackson moved up to
Middleweight and won the WBC Championship when he defeated Herol Graham
on November 24, 1990.
Saturday ~ February 23, 1991
Stade de Futbol ~ Pointe-A-Pitre, Guadaloupe
Attendance.......... 27,000
Carlos Elliott
WBA Rank..... #1
Age............... 28 years, 10 months
Height........... 5' 9 1/2"
Reach............ 71"
Weight.......... 152 1/2 lbs.
Record........... 26-2-0 {22 KO's}
Stance........... Orthodox
Style.............. Aggressive Puncher {Forward Moving > w/Hard Left hook}
Gilbert Dele
WBA Rank.... #2
Age.............. 27 years, 2 months
Height.......... 5' 10 1/2"
Reach........... 72"
Weight......... 153 1/4 lbs.
Record.......... 26-0-1 {17 KO's}
Stance.......... Southpaw
Style............. Classis Boxer/Puncher {Upright and Steady > w/Stiff Straight Punching}
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pre-Fight Chatter
Carlos Elliott >
"There are no secrets. I'm coming straight at him, just like I do in every other fight. I'll be
throwing bombs from the 'get-go'. I'll eventually catch him, and he'll go down."
"I've seen him in sparring-sessions, and he's nothing special. He's OK, but that's about it.
He's a southpaw, but that won't present any problems for me. I've fought a lot of lefties,
and I've beaten them all. I'm Superman."
Gilbert Dele >
"He comes in wide-open. He'll be an easy target. I'll be patient, and just wait for him to
open up, then I'll drop in a left-hand on his chin."
"I've seen his sparring-sessions, and he's wild. He looks strong, so I'll have to be wise to
his punches. But eventually I'll tag him. He's been dropped and stopped before, so he's
no Superman like he says."
Last edited by Bill Paxtom; 11-09-2014 at 06:35 PM.
Carlos Elliott
Born ; April 29, 1962
Was from Huntsville, Alabama. Was in the United States Air Force, and was
stationed at the Mishawa Air base in Hachinoe, Japan. Carlos was a Sargeant.
Made his residence in Japan.
Turned professional on March 4, 1983 {Age; 20 years, 10 months}.
Started off campaigning as a Welterweight {5' 9 1/2"}. Style was that off an
aggressive forward-moving puncher, who carried a big left-hook.
Won his first '3' straight, and all by Knockout in Japan.
On November 11, 1983 > travelled to South Korea to face Chung-Jae Hwang
who was the #6 WBA Welterweight, and who had a record of 26-2-0 {23 KO's}.
Carlos scored a stunning {KO 2}.
Improved to 6-0-0 {6 KO's}, and on July 30, 1984 challenged hard-punching
Junya Kushikino for the Japanese Welterweight Championship in Osaka, Japan.
In a brutal fight, Carlos was 'stopped' {L TKO 6}.
Carlos moved up to Light-Middleweight, and won his next 2-bouts by Knockout.
With a record of 8-1-0 {8 KO's}, challenged for the Japanese Light-Middleweight
Championship on July 20, 1985. Scored an 'upset' {KO 2} over Mugen Kawasaka.
Carlos made '3' successful Title Defenses, and improved to 14-1-0 {14 KO's}.
On April 2, 1987 > Fought for the 'vacant' OPBF Light-Middleweight Championship
and took on World-rated South Korean - Je-Hyung Yuh 29-4-0 {24 KO's} in
Tokyo, Japan.
Scored an impressive {KO 9} win.
Defended that Title on November 28, 1987 in Tokyo, Japan against replacement
Challenger - South Korean - Sang-Do Jung 28-3-0 {12 KO's}.
Was forced to go the distance the first time, and was given a surprisingly tough
time in winning a hard-fought 12-Round Split-Decision.
Record now > 18-1-0 {17 KO's}.
WBA Ratings as of January 1988
**** Julian Jackson
#1 ... Buster Drayton
#2 ... Donald Curry
#3 ... Darrin Van Horn
#4 ... Duane Thomas
#5 ... Lupe Aquino
#6 ... Carlos Elliott
#7 ... Milton McCrory
#8 ... Carlos Santos
#9 ... Reyes Cruz
#10 . Robert Hines
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
On Saturday ~ July 2, 1988 > travelled to Palembang, Indonesia to defend his OPBF Title
against local Hero and 'highly-touted' 23 year-old Francisco Lisboa ~ 22-1-0 {11 KO's}.
In a 'highly controversial' bout, Francisco Lisboa was awarded which many said,
was a 'Home Country' 12-Round Decision.
Carlos Elliott >
I went to Palembang, Indonesia to take on Francisco Lisboa. He was a pretty good fighter,
who competed in the 1984 Olympics. The bout took place in the Outdoor Stadium, and there
were about 35,000 people there. It was so loud, we couldn't hear inside the Ring.
In the 2nd Round, I had him out on his feet. But the Time-Keeper rang the Bell about
1-minute early, and I lost my chance for an early Knockout.
Then in the 3rd Round, I chased him all over the Ring and slammed left-hooks into his head,
but I broke my left-hand, and I couldn't use it at all from that point on.
After 5-Rounds, I was pitching a shut-out, but I could only use one-hand. We fought
evenly from the 6th Round and on. I thought that I had the fight in 'the bag'.
Then they read the Decision.
* 119-109
* 115-113
* 119-109
And they gave him the 12-Round Decision, and the place erupted. I was screaming that
I got robbed, but the Ring quickly over-flowed with Indonesian's and they shoved me
and my handlers out of the Ring, and told us to get out.
It was one of the worst Decisions ever in OPBF history.
Not only did I lose the OPBF Light-Middleweight Championship, I also lost my #5 WBA-ranking.
We protested to the OPBF 'Grievance Committee', and they issued a rematch order, that
Francisco Lisboa had to defend his Title against me within 5-months.
Last edited by Bill Paxtom; 11-10-2014 at 11:56 PM.
Welcome to the forum, SubMan.![]()
I actually miss Bill Paxton. His use ‘of’ quotation marks will never be equaled.
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