Bobby Chacon

Boxer

Birthday November 28, 1951

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Pacoima, California, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2016-9-7, Lake Elsinore, California, U.S. (64 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 5 ft 5+1/2 in

Weight Featherweight Super featherweight

#63704 Most Popular

1951

Bobby Chacon (November 28, 1951 – September 7, 2016) was an American professional boxer who competed from 1972 to 1988.

1972

Born in Pacoima, in the San Fernando Valley, Chacon, who was of Mexican descent, graduated from San Fernando High School and turned professional in 1972 while a student at California State University, Northridge, leading to the nickname "Schoolboy".

He trained under Joe Ponce and won his first 19 fights, including a win against former champion Jesus Castillo.

Fourteen months into his professional career, Chacon faced world champion Rubén Olivares but lost the bout when Olivares scored a ninth-round knock out.

After suffering his first defeat against Olivares, Chacon won his next four bouts, then faced off against cross-town rival and future champion Danny Lopez.

Chacon outboxed Lopez and stopped him in the ninth round in an exciting fight.

1974

He held titles in two weight classes, including the WBC featherweight title from September 1974 to June 1975 and the WBC super featherweight title from December 1982 to June 1983.

On September 7, 1974, Chacon won the vacant WBC Featherweight title by defeating former WBA Junior Lightweight champion Alfredo Marcano in nine rounds at the Grand Olympic Auditorium in Los Angeles.

During his first period as a world champion, Chacon got to enjoy the good life, but he loved partying and became an alcoholic.

Chacon lost his title in his second defense against arch-rival Rubén Olivares.

Almost immediately after the loss, he fought the first of his four fight rivalry with another world champion, Rafael "Bazooka" Limón, beginning what some boxing experts and historians called one of the fiercest and most spectacular boxing rivalries in history.

Limón beat Chacon in their first bout by a decision.

Chacon then scored nine straight wins, leading him to a third match with Olivares.

This time, Chacon defeated Olivares in their 10-round bout by a decision.

In Chacon's next fight, he lost an upset decision to Arturo Leon.

Chacon rebounded by scoring victories over Ignacio Campos, Augie Pantellas, Gerald Hayes and Shig Fukuyama.

He then fought to a technical draw in a rematch against Rafael Limón.

1979

In November 1979, Chacon received a shot at the WBC title, versus world champion Alexis Argüello.

Arguello defeated him by a devastating knock out after Chacon sustained a bad cut in the seventh round.

1980

In 1980, Chacon had only one fight, but it was a significant one.

He beat Limón in their third bout, and the WBC once again made him their number one challenger.

1981

In 1981, Arguello had left the title vacant and gone up in weight to pursue the world's Lightweight title.

Limón then beat Idelfonso Bethelmy by a knockout in 15 in Los Angeles to win the WBC world Jr. Lightweight championship.

In his first title defense, he lost it by a decision to Uganda's Cornelius Boza-Edwards, who, in turn, defended his title against Chacon on his first defense.

In a televised bout, Edwards retained the world title by a knockout in the thirteenth round.

1982

Chacon won five fights in a row in 1982, including a rematch victory over Arturo Leon, which kept him as the number one challenger, but then a dramatic development outside the ring changed his life forever: Chacon's wife, Valorie Chacon, flew to Hawaii on February of that year, hoping to convince him to leave boxing and move there if she found them good jobs.

She was able to find a job, but unable to convince him to join her in Hawaii, so she flew back.

She pleaded for him to leave the sport but was unsuccessful, and the night before he boxed Salvador Ugalde, she shot and killed herself with a rifle.

Chacon went through with the fight and KO'ed Ugalde in the third round.

He dedicated his win to his deceased wife.

Two more victories followed before his fourth and final bout with Limón.

Limón had regained the world's Jr. Lightweight title by beating Rolando Navarrete by a knockout in 12 rounds.

Navarrete, for his part, had won the title by beating Edwards by a knockout in five rounds.

Chacon-Limón IV became one of the fights of the year and the decade, according to such magazines as The Ring, KO Magazine, and Ring En Español, and after 15 rounds Chacon secured a close decision and his second world title in Sacramento.

About one and a half years after his wife's suicide, Chacon remarried and bought a large farm with a mansion and, according to what he said at an interview, about 40 horses.

He also acquired a collection of Rolls-Royce cars and some other vehicles.

1983

In between, he and Boza Edwards met for a second time, with his world title on the line, in what The Ring called 1983's fight of the year.

Chacon rose from a knockdown in round three and recovered from a dangerous cut.

The announcers, including Ferdie Pacheco, were explicit in saying the fight should be stopped because of the pounding Chacon endured.

But Chacon came back to drop Boza Edwards in round twelve and avenge his earlier defeat to the Ugandan former champion.