Carlos Santos (boxer) explained

Carlos Santos
Birth Date:October 1, 1955
Birth Place:Ceiba, Puerto Rico
Weight:Light middleweight
Height:5 ft 9+1/2 in
Reach:73+1/2 in
Style:Southpaw
Total:43
Wins:40
Ko:27
Losses:3

Carlos Santos (born October 1, 1955 in Ceiba, Puerto Rico) is a former boxer from Puerto Rico, who represented his native country as an amateur at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. There he was eliminated in the quarterfinals. Santos was involved both in the first and the fourth world title bouts involving two Puerto Rican boxers in history. It has been suggested that Santos was not born in Ceiba but in the San Juan area named "Santurce", but it is widely believed that Santos is a Ceiba native.

Boxing career

Carlos Santos debuted as a professional boxer on November 11, 1976, outpointing José Collantes over four rounds in San Juan. He obtained his first knockout victory in his third fight, when he beat Juan Polanco in the third round on May 21, 1977.

Santos' first fight abroad came on November 4 of that year, when he beat Mario Valoy by a third-round knockout in Panama City, Panama. On April 8, 1978, he knocked Collantes out in the fifth round of their rematch.

After three more wins in Puerto Rico, Santos had a fight in the Dominican Republic, where he beat Mario Ramos by a knockout in the eighth round, on April 2, 1979. On his very next fight, Santos outpointed Felix Pagan Pintor, future trainer of Wilfredo Gómez, over ten rounds.

After beating Kid Flash by a third-round knockout on December 1 of that year in St. Thomas, United States Virgin Islands, Santos moved temporarily to Italy, seeking for attention from boxing executives as well as more celebrity than he had in Puerto Rico. On April 4, 1980, Santos made his European debut by knocking out Charles Petersen in the second round at Milan. Santos won seven fights in Italy, all of them by knockout. One curious fight happened on December 20 of 1980 in Turin: Santos was credited with beating Alfonso Hayman, a fringe contender of the era, in the first round. Hayman was under a medical suspension in Italy at the time, however, having been knocked out only eight days before Santos' fight, so his opponent that night is listed on his record as an "unknown opponent".

Carlos Santos made his United States debut on May 23, 1981, day in which Wilfred Benítez became the first Hispanic to be a three division world champion in history, when he knocked Raul Aguirre out in the fifth round as part of the Benitez-Hope fight's undercard.

Santos was 22-0 with 16 knockouts when he received his first world title shot. On November 14 of '81, he and Benitez made history by staging the first world championship bout between two Puerto Ricans, when they boxed in Las Vegas, Nevada. Benitez defeated Santos by a fifteen-round unanimous decision, retaining the WBC world Jr. Middleweight title in an HBO Boxing-televised bout.

Having lost his condition as an undefeated boxer, Santos returned to Italy, where he won four more bouts, three of them by knockout. After winning four additional fights, Santos had a second chance at becoming world champion. When he faced Mark Medal, a New York native who is also Puerto Rican, Santos became the first Puerto Rican boxer to face two Puerto Ricans in world championship fights. On November 2, 1984, at New York's Madison Square Garden and with Gómez among his fans, Santos dropped Medal in the first round, recuperated himself from a fourteenth round knockdown and became the IBF world Jr. Middleweight champion by beating Medal with a fifteen-round unanimous decision.

Santos retained the title on his first defense, outpointing Louis Acaries over 15 rounds on June 1, 1985 in Paris, France.[1] A proposed second defense against Davey Moore was within days of taking place; Moore got injured and the fight never took place. Santos had to await little more than one year for his next fight.

On June 4, 1986, Santos defended his title for the second time, against Buster Drayton in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Santos lost the title by a fifteen-round majority decision.[2]

On September 6, Santos was scheduled to meet another Jr. Middleweight. For an unknown reason, his rival did not show up,. The boxing undercard was being televised live across Puerto Rico, and a Heavyweight boxer, Melvin Epps, was brought in as a substitute. Santos, giving Epps more than 40 pounds and a considerable difference in height advantage, won the fight by a first-round knockout. On his next fight, Santos faced former world Welterweight champion Donald Curry for the USBA's regional Jr. Middleweight title at the Caesars Palace on the Las Vegas Strip. Santos was disqualified in the fifth round of his last major fight.

Santos won his last six fights, one of them in Casablanca, Morocco. On October 30, 1991, he beat Brinatty Maquilon by a ten-round decision in San Juan, announcing his retirement after that bout.

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
43Win40–3Brinatty MaquilonPTS10 (10)1991-10-30
42Win39–3Clinton MackKO4 (10)1990-12-15
41Win38–3Tony BurkePTS8 (8)1989-06-08
40Win37–3Hugo Raul MarinangeliPTS10 (10)1988-03-03
39Win36–3William ClaytonKO1 (10)1987-07-14
38Win35–3Charlie AllenKO4 (?)1987-05-28
37Loss34–3Donald CurryDQ5 (12)1987-04-04
36Win34–2Melvin EppsKO2 (?)1986-09-06
35Loss33–2Buster DraytonMD15 (15)1986-06-04
34Win33–1Arthur WrightKO2 (?)1986-05-03
33Win32–1Louis AcariesUD15 (15)1985-06-01
32Win31–1Dwight WalkerMD10 (10)1985-03-27
31Win30–1Mark MedalUD15 (15)1984-11-02
30Win29–1Ray IzaquirreKO1 (?)1984-07-21
29Win28–1Reyes EscaleraTKO1 (?)1984-03-31
28Win27–1Inocencio De la RosaKO5 (?)1983-12-14
27Win26–1Mosimo MaelekeTKO6 (?)1983-05-20
26Win25–1Lomami Wa LomamiRTD5 (?)1983-04-07
25Win24–1Mbayo Wa MbayoPTS8 (8)1982-11-26
24Win23–1Horace McKenzieTKO6 (10)1982-05-07
23Loss22–1Wilfred BenítezUD15 (15)1981-11-14
22Win22–0Raul AguirreTKO5 (10)1981-05-23
21Win21–0Peter NealPTS8 (8)1981-04-06
20Win20–0Alfonso HaymanKO1 (?)1980-12-20
19Win19–0Steve MichaleryaTKO8 (?)1980-09-10
18Win18–0Robert TaylorTKO2 (?)1980-08-10
17Win17–0Esperno PostlTKO4 (8)1980-07-05
16Win16–0Celestine KanyndaKO3 (8)1980-05-30
15Win15–0Charlie PetersonKO2 (?)1980-04-04
14Win14–0Kid FlashKO3 (?)1979-12-01
13Win13–0Gilberto AlmonteKO3 (?)1979-08-11
12Win12–0Felix PintorPTS10 (10)1979-06-16
11Win11–0Mario RamosKO8 (?)1979-04-02
10Win10–0Mustapha AliKO8 (8)1979-01-27
9Win9–0Tyrone PhelpsKO4 (?)1978-10-28
8Win8–0Ricky WeigelPTS8 (8)1978-09-09
7Win7–0Feliciano CintronKO3 (?)1978-06-03
6Win6–0Jose CollanteKO5 (?)1978-04-08
5Win5–0Mario ValoyesKO4 (10)1977-09-03
4Win4–0Alex PorattaPTS6 (6)1977-07-11
3Win3–0Juan PolancoKO3 (?)1977-05-21
2Win2–0Alex PorattaPTS4 (4)1977-02-12
1Win1–0Jose CollantePTS4 (4)1976-10-11

Personal life

During the 1980s, Santos moved to Italy for some time at the behest of manager Yamil Chade. During a ten-year stay, he also had a parallel career in modeling. Upon his return to Puerto Rico, Santos began working for Pan American Grain. He retired after 25 years in the company, to receive treatment for prostate cancer. Santos was cleared of the condition in August 2019.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Puerto Rican Carlos Santos Saturday defended his International Boxing.... United Press International. 2024-05-17.
  2. Web site: A ROUNDUP OF THE WEEK JUNE 2-8. Sports Illustrated. 2024-05-17.
  3. Web site: Carlos Santos: airoso en su batalla contra el cáncer. 17 August 2019 . es. El Nuevo Día. 2019-08-17.