U.S
U.S
USA (probably at #1)
Mexico
Puerto Rico
UK
Jamaica (if you count boxers such as Lloyd Honeyghan as well)
Wow, I forgot about Jamaica. On a per capita basis, it ranks very high, indeed.
A series of five monster upsets all by tough Jamaican fighters astounded me.
Trevor Berbick’s 1980 ambush KO of Big John Tate in Montreal set the stage for four more shockers. The welterweight champion Lloyd Honeyghan, nicknamed “Ragamuffin” due to his Jamaican roots, defeated heavily favored Donald Curry in 1986. In an equally stunning upset, welterweight Kirkland Laing (43-12-1) beat Roberto Duran in 1982.
And there was the notable amateur fighter, Michael Bentt, former WBO
Heavyweight Champ, who knocked out heavily favored Tommy Morrison in
1993 in an incredible first-round upset. The thing about Bentt was that he was very good amateur fighter, and Morrison’s camp had done a terrible
job researching his amateur record. Had he not suffered a career-ending and life-threatening injury in his fight with Herbie Hide, there is no telling how far he could have gone.
And who could forget the great Simon “Mantequilla” Brown, WBC and IBF
Welterweight Titleholder who KO’d Terry Norris in 1993 for the WBC Light
Middleweight Title in Ring magazine’s Upset of the Year? What made these fights memorable? They were all major upsets, and they were all pulled off by Jamaican fighters.
“If you want loyalty, buy a dog.” Ricky Hatton
10-4, mate
“If you want loyalty, buy a dog.” Ricky Hatton
I would say in order (personal choice)
USA
Mexico
Puerto Rico
UK
Thailand
In terms of per capita world champions (and in descending order):
1. Puerto Rico
2. Panama
3. U.S.
4. Dominican Republic
5. Venezuela
6. Mexico
7. Cuba
8. England
I am tying to come up with a formula based on per capita champions; that is to say, what country produced the most champions based on its population. A lot of flaws in this, but my assumption is that PR might be the one--or maybe Jamaica.
“If you want loyalty, buy a dog.” Ricky Hatton
3-Time SADDO PREDICTION COMP CHAMPION.
No, Honeyghan was born in Jamaica, and grew up in Britain. A Brit of Jamaican descent would be someone like Chris Eubank who was 2nd generation. You will also find that guys from the Caribbean who grew up here will class themselves as Jamaican/Trinidadian/St. Lucian rather than British, particularly man like Honeyghan who grew up in South-East London in the 70's. My uncles & most the people where I live are the same, even some 2nd gen or 3rd gen guys my age don't see themselves as British now.
Oh right.
I too have lots of friends that class themselves as British (Born here) but acknowledge their Caribbean roots.
That's different from someone born here but claims they're Jamaican/Trinidadian/St. Lucian rather than British, right?
What does Honeyghan class himself as then?
3-Time SADDO PREDICTION COMP CHAMPION.
I saw an interview with Spencer Fearon & Honeyghan seemed to class himself as Jamaican rather than British, as he seemed to talk about himself in the context of Jamaican fighters such as Mike McCallum rather than any British guys.
Yeah that is different, because whilst a lot of people will go 'my family come from...", I know some of bredrins will just go 'nah I ain't British, I'm from Jamaica' or something like that. I think with a lot of older guys (like the generations above mine, I'm 22) they experienced a more open racism than we have, as the NF & BNP used to be a lot more prominent around here, so they feel less of an attachment to being British. At the end of the day it's all down to personal choice & your interactions with people around you.
“If you want loyalty, buy a dog.” Ricky Hatton
hell we're (Puerto Rico) smaller than Jamaica and we have more big name fighters/meaningful champions from 60 to now lol
Carlos Ortiz (ok it was 59 but hell lol)
Jose "Chegui" Torres
Alfredo "Salsero" Escalera (lost his world title to Arguello)
Samuel Serrano
Wilfred Benitez (youngest world champ ever)
Esteban DeJesus (first to beat Duran, and even dropped him in the fights he
lost to Duran)
Wilfredo "Bazooka" Gomez (one of, if not the highest KO percentages in championship fights ever)
Carlos "Sugar" De Leon
Ossie Ocasio
Juan Laporte
Edwin "Chapo" Rosario
Hector "Macho" Camacho
Wilfredo "Wil" Vazquez
John John Molina
Felix "Tito" Trinidad
Alex "El Nene" Sanchez
Eric Morel
Daniel Santos
Nelson Dieppa
Ivan Calderon
Miguel Cotto
and now Juan Manuel Lopez
and that's not counting all the champions just the ones that have had great success in the longterm or in getting positive attention
The key is Self-discipline.
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