Check out the smallest but best boxer ever from Willie’Will o’t the Wisp’Pep to Ricardo’Finito’Lopez!
Pep from Rocky Hill, Connecticut has won more victories than most of the smallest boxers. He won the lightweight championship twice. From November 1942 to October 1948. Again, from February 1949 to September 1950.
The final record of PEP was excellent 229-11-1, stagnating 65. He once told middleweight champion Rocky Graziano, “You can’t hit me with a fist filled with stones!”
Pep lost to former lightweight champion Sammy Angott on March 19, 1943 to the former lightweight champion. On June 7, 1946, the lightweight champion.
Pep set a 134-1-1 record when he lost to 86-6-2’s 4th round knockout on October 29, 1948. He defeated Sadler on February 11, 1949, on February 11, 1949.
Pep retired in 1959 and did not return until 1965, and retired again since 1943. On April 26, 1965, he defeated Jackie Lennon, and the writer was still present, although there were no writers yet. He won nine of his final battles to Calvin Woodland.
WBC, WBA, WBO Minimum and Lightweight Champion Ricardo ‘Finito’ Lopez hit 51-0-1, Mexico City, Mexico City, Mexico City, Mexico City 38 stops.
Lopez beat Rosendo Alvarez 47-0 in 7 rounds with a 2-0-0 victory over Rosendo Alvarez. He was knocked down in the second round. Alvarez lost 1 point in the 7th round due to WBC’s unexpected head-to-docking rules. It was August 7, 1998. On November 13, Lopez won the split decision to add the vacant WBA title to its WBC title.
In the next battle, Lopez won the IBF World Lightweight Championship Will Grigsby, Will Grigsby, 14-1-1 by Split Discape on October 2, 1999. He then won his last two battles with Anucha Phothong 38-5-1 and Zolani Petelo 17-2-2.
World Flight Champion Jimmy’s “Mighty Atom” (Jimmy’Mighty Atom’Wilde), 121-1-1, won the championship with a 4-0 stop in London in the second round. He comes from Tylorstown, Wales, England.
Wilde lost the last two battles with a record of 132-4-1 and suspended 98 times.
Pascual Perez is the 1948 Olympic gold medalist in London. 4:11 from Ciudad Mendoza in Argentina is nicknamed “El Leon Mendocino”.
On November 26, 1954, Perez won the world lightweight championship in Tokyo, Japan 23-0-1. In the rematch, he scored in 5 rounds.
Perez was 51-0-1 when he lost to Sadao Yaoita, 27-6, in Tokyo, Japan in January 1959. He won the match with the tenth round of knockout in November. He ended with a record of 84-7-1 with 57 shutdowns.
