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| Date | January 14, 1984 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Venue | Lawlor Events Center, Reno, Nevada, U.S. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Title(s) on the line | WBA Lightweight title | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Tale of the tape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Result | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Mancini wins via 3rd-round technical knockout | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ray Mancini vs. Bobby Chacon , billed as The Reno Rumble, was a professional boxing match contested on January 14, 1984, for the WBA lightweight title. [1]
A fight between WBA lightweight champion Ray Mancini and two-time super featherweight champion Bobby Chacon had been discussed throughout 1983 with the two fighters had come to a tentative agreement just prior to Mancini's title defense against Orlando Romero on September 15, 1983. [2] In order for his fight with Chacon to move forward, Mancini would still need to get past Romero, who, while undefeated, had never fought outside his native Peru and was a massive underdog. Mancini, coming off a seven-month layoff due to a broken collarbone, labored through eight rounds and only had a narrow lead when he landed a big left hook which knocked out Romero in the ninth and gave Mancini the victory, preserving his fight with Chacon. Chacon, who was in attendence, would comment that he was "real nervous" that Mancini would lose which would of scrapped their planned fight. [3]
Just days after defeating Romero, Mancini officially signed on to face Chacon with the date scheduled later in the year in either November or December. [4] However, promoter Robert Andreoli announced the following month that the fight would be pushed back to February due to problems finding a venue for the fight and so as to avoid competition from the Marvin Hagler–Roberto Durán fight and Larry Holmes–Marvis Frazier fights that were both scheduled to take place in November. [5] The postponement angered Mancini's manager David Wolf, who claimed Andreoli had broken a contract explicitly stating that the Mancini–Chacon fight would take place anywhere between November 18 and December 12. While Wolf would not rule out Mancini still facing Chacon on February, he also mentioned that he and Mancini would be looking to stage a non-title bout before the year was up. [6] One week prior to the Holmes–Frazier fight set to take place on November 25, 1983, it was announced that Mancini would face Johnny Torres in what would be the featured undercard bout. [7] Mancini would score an easy victory over Torres, knocking him out with two seconds remaining in the first round. [8]
Chacon, who had won world titles in both the featherweight and super featherweight divisions, was making his lightweight debut and attempting to win his third world title in a third weight class. Coming into 1983, Chacon was the WBC super featherweight champion, having defeated Rafael Limón to capture the title in December 1982. However, he had fought only once in 1983, winning a non-title bout against Cornelius Boza-Edwards. He had been engaged in a legal battle with promoter Don King who claimed that Chacon had signed an agreement with him to face Héctor Camacho in Puerto Rico before pulling out of the bout due to financial disagreements and instead choosing to face Boza-Edwards. The WBC refused to sanction the Chacon–Boza-Edwards fight and stripped Chacon of their title one month after the Boza-Edwards fight. [9] Chacon, who was still challenging King in court at the time of his fight with Mancini, was quoted as saying "I'm not only fighting Ray, I'm fighting Don King and (WBC President) José Sulaimán, too." [10]
After a conservative first minute of the fight, Mancini took control and dominated Chacon for the remainder of the bout. After that first minute, Mancini would get Chacon up against the ropes and hammer Chacon with power shots to the head and body, opening up cuts around Chacon's left eye and on the bridge of his nose. After a sluggish first round, Chacon came out more aggressive in the second, but was stunned by Mancini right and was again backed up into the ropes as Mancini landed several unanswered power punches though Chacon was able to regain composure and landed several shots of his own as Mancini tired and the round ended with both fighters trading punches in the center of the ring. Much like the previous two rounds, Mancini again backed Chacon up against the ropes in the third round, landing several more punches to the head and body of Chacon before catching him flush and hurting him with a left hook. Though the dazed Chacon attempted to fight back, Mancini was able to catch him with four big right hooks. Though Chacon had not been knocked down in the fight, the cuts on his face had began to bleed profusely and referee Richard Steele decided that Chacon had had enough and stopped the fight at 1:17 of the third round, giving Mancini the knockout victory.
Though the ringside physician Dr. Donald Romeo claimed the stoppage was premature as he hadn't been consulted by Steele, Chacon and his Jon Ponce agreed with the stoppage with Ponce stating he would've stopped the fight himself after the third round [11]
This turned out to be Mancini's last boxing victory. Next, he lost the WBA world Lightweight title to Livingstone Bramble by a fourteenth-round technical knockout on June 1 of 1984 at Buffalo, New York, [12] before returning to the Lawlor Events Center in Reno for a return match with Bramble in another HBO World Championship Boxing telecast, a match which Mancini lost by a close but unanimous 15 rounds decision. [13] Mancini then retired but he returned for a fight versus Hector Camacho for the WBO's vacant world Jr. Welterweight championship in what was the WBO's inaugural world title fight at that division, on Monday, March 6, 1989, once again, at the Lawlor Events Center in Reno, with the Puerto Rican winning a somewhat controversial split decision over Mancini. [14] Mancini retired one more time, but he returned again in 1992, for a pay per view fight against multiple time world champion Greg Haugen, for the vacant NABF Jr. Welterweight championship on April 3, [14] with the winner offered a world championship fight versus WBC world Jr. welterweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez Gonzalez. Mancini lost that bout by a seventh-round knockout to finish his career with a four fight losing streak and a record of 29 wins and 5 losses with 23 wins and 3 losses by knockout. Mancini became an actor and film producer who appeared in a number of films. [15] [16] and television boxing match commentator.
Chacon did not fare much better. Boxing career-wise, he did win his final seven contests after the Mancini match, including victories against Freddie Roach, Art Frias and Rafi Solis, [17] but he was arrested soon after the Mancini match later in 1984, accused of beating his then wife Melissa, [18] (they later divorced, Chacon married twice more) and suffered the tragic loss of his son Bobby Chacon Jr., who was murdered in 1991 at age 17, [19] while losing all the money he earned as a boxer and living at different places, including his mother's house and a desolate motel. He collected cans for resale in order to make some money. [20] He suffered from pugilistic dementia towards the end of his life, a condition which had been detected by as early as 1999. [21] Chacon died on September 7, 2016, after suffering a fall at a hospice where he was residing in Hemet, California. [18] Chacon's final professional boxing record was of 59 wins, 7 defeats and 1 tie (draw) in 67 officially recorded matches, with 47 of those wins and 5 of the losses coming by knockout.
The fight between Mancini and Chacon was commemorated on a song by singer Warren Zevon, 1987's "Boom Boom Mancini", which was inspired by the match. [18] Part of that song's lyrics read "Hurry home early hurry on home Boom Boom Mancini's fighting Bobby Chacon". [22]
Both Mancini and Chacon are members of the International Boxing Hall of Fame, with Chacon inducted in 2005, [23] and Mancini's induction taking place exactly ten years later, during 2015. [24]
Confirmed bouts: [25]
| Weight Class | Weight | vs. | Method | Round | Notes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lightweight | 135 lbs. | Ray Mancini (c) | def. | Bobby Chacon | TKO | 3/15 | note 1 |
| Flyweight | 112 lbs. | Joey Olivo | def. | Jose Manuel Diaz | TKO | 5/10 | |
| Lightweight | 135 lbs. | Adriano Arreola | def. | Joe Perez | TKO | 7/10 | |
| Welterweight | 147 lbs. | Frankie Davis | def. | Joe Hernandez | D | 8 | |
| Lightweight | 135 lbs. | Louie Espinoza | def. | Arnold White | KO | 1/8 | |
| Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Mark Lee | def. | Inoke Katoa | KO | 1/8 | |
| Middleweight | 160 lbs. | Carl Jones | def. | Dwayne Jameson | PTS | 8 |
| Country | Broadcaster |
|---|---|
| Telemundo | |
| HBO |