boxer
Personal Information
Born Roy Jones Jr. on January 16, 1969, in Pensacola, FL. Son of Roy Sr. and Carol Jones. Father, an ex-fighter, was Roy Jr.'s boxing teacher.
Education: Graduate from Washington High in Pensacola in 1987. Attended Pensacola Junior College.
Career
Widely considered best pound-for-pound boxer in the world. Won National Junior Olympics title before he was 15. Won Golden Gloves in 1986 and 1987. As amateur, record was 121-13. Won Silver Medal at 1988 Olympic Games. Captured IBF middleweight crown in 1993. Won IBF super middleweight title in 1994. Earned WBC light heavyweight title in 1996. Lost (by disqualification), then regained, WBC light heavyweight crown in 1997. Captured WBA light heavyweight crown in 1998; defended it in January 1999. Won IBF belt in June of 1999 to become the first undisputed light heavyweight champion since 1985.
Life's Work
Countless journalists, fans, trainers, managers, and other boxers have termed Roy Jones ``the best pound for pound fighter in the world.'` This middleweight champion from Pensacola, Florida, is known for lightning hand speed, thunderous knockout power, and astonishing agility in the ring. He even improvises with his technique, launching punches from unlikely angles and surprising opponents with unexpected moves and flurries of blows. Quoted on Jones' website, former heavyweight champion George Foreman said Jones ``hits like a heavyweight and moves like a lightweight,'`
In addition, Jones is one boxer who has provided a positive role model for young people. He is totally disciplined in his approach to training, avoids drugs and drink completely, is highly involved in his hometown community, and dedicates much of his time to charitable organizations and projects. Jones has been especially involved in working with teenagers: by speaking in public to many groups, warning young people about taking drugs, and providing a training program and facility for local youths. A man with strong religious convictions--which he expresses without any self-righteousness--Jones never bothers with the trash-talking so many boxers use to ``psyche out'` opponents.
With his supremacy in the middleweight and light heavyweight range, it is surprising that ``Roy Jones'` does not have universal name recognition. Part of the reason probably is his refusal to market himself as a spectacle--merely as a spectacular fighter. In many ways, he has refused to play the game by rules established by the media and starmakers such as Don King.
But the biggest reason is the lack of any fighters in Jones' weight division who can push him to his limits. The 1980s, by contrast, was a middleweight heyday, with a crop of sensational fighters at the top of their form, such as Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler, Roberto Duran, and Thomas Hearns. These boxers incited and pushed each other; many of their fights were epic battles. But Jones has found no credible, champion-grade warriors to take on. In fact, many of his fights have been serious mismatches. While Jones is certainly a great boxer to watch, his matches are usually too one-sided to make for a good fight. This is a shame, because Jones' potential has hardly been tested; it is quite likely that he would have prevailed over all the other great middleweights.
Often compared favorably with the Sugar Rays--both Leonard and Robinson--Jones is believed by many to be the greatest boxer of all time. As Ross Greenburg, executive producer of HBO Sports, was quoted in a Sports Illustrated feature, he and the other HBO commentators ``were there for Leonard and Hagler and Hearns and Duran in their prime. I think Roy Jones gets in a ring and beats them all. I've never seen that kind of punching power and speed in one man.'` In 1996, High Frequency Boxing's John DiMaio wrote ``The early evidence points toward the real possibility that Jones is the greatest talent this sport has ever seen. His skill so dwarfs that of his nearest ranked opposition...that providing competitive opponents is a more challenging dilemma than the fights themselves.'` The expert opinion of Boxing magazine's editor, Bert Sugar, is provided on Jones' website: ``He possesses the fastest hands in boxing with lightning fast moves and explosive power in both hands.'` After lost the World Boxing Council light heavyweight crown to Jones in a 1996 unanimous decision, Mike McCallum called Jones ``the greatest fighter of all time.'`
Jones' mastery extends beyond mere strength and speed, however. He also has the ability to outthink other fighters, to anticipate and counter their moves before they even know what they are. Olympic team coach Alton Merkerson, whom Jones hired in the early 1990's as his trainer, said in Sports Illustrated, ``Roy's not only got the quickest hands in boxing, but the quickest mind.'`
Life With Father Was Trial By Fire
Roy Jones, Jr., was born in Pensacola, Florida, to two very different parents. His mother, Carol, was warm and easy-going, whereas his father, Roy Sr., was much like a Marine drill sergeant with respect to his son. A decorated Vietnam veteran, ex-club fighter, and retired aircraft engineer who had taken up hog farming, Roy Sr. was hard on his son from early on, taunting the child, ``sparring'` with him, enraging Roy Jr., yelling at him, and beating the child, often for 20 minutes at a time. This behavior never really changed; if anything it became more brutal as Roy Jr. grew up. Many people would call the father's treatment out-and-out abuse, but he believed he had a good reason for it: to make Roy Jr. tough enough to be a champion. In this pursuit, he was relentless, and Roy Jr. lived in constant fear of his father's verbal and physical violence against him.
Jones described his childhood in Sports Illustrated: ``After a while I didn't care about gettin' hurt or dyin' anymore. I was in pain all day, every day, I was so scared of my father. He'd pull up in his truck and start lookin' for something I'd done wrong. There was no escape, no excuse, no way out of nothin'. ... Getting' hurt or dyin' might've been better than the life I was livin'. ... Used to think about killin' myself anyway.'` There's no way to know whether or not Jones would have become a world champion fighter without this extremely punitive upbringing, but there's little question it toughened the young man.
Roy Sr. ran his own boxing gym, to which he devoted all his available time and financial resources. He offered direction and useful discipline to numerous youths, and steered many of them away from trouble. Roy Sr. did everything possible to expand the program and help more kids. But towards his own son he was merciless, driving Roy Jr. to the brink of exhaustion, screaming at him in front of all the other fighters, assaulting him. Roy Sr.'s father had been a hard-working laborer, and had been tough on him the way he was on Roy Jr. But Jones, the world champion boxer, will not continue this line of treatment. He is very attuned to others' anguish; on his web site, he says, ``What gets [me] down?'` is ``...watching other people be hurt and mistreated.'` It is a feeling he has known very well.
Using his fighting birds as an image for his own predicament, Jones said in the same Sports Illustrated piece: ``I spent all my life in my dad's cage. I could never be 100 percent of who I am until I left it. But because of him, nothing bothers me. I'll never face anything stronger and harder than what I already have.'` Jones' father, with his overbearing and overwhelming personality, had created a powerful craving in the boxer--the need to become his own man.
Robbed of Gold in Olympics Scandal
Going into the 1988 Olympic games in Seoul, Korea, Jones had amassed an extraordinary record of 106-4. (His final tally as an amateur would be 121-13.) In the final, championship bout for his division, Jones thoroughly dominated his opponent, South Korean Park Si-Hun, with 86 punches to Park's 32--and a standing eight count to boot. But the judges decided against him, 3-2. The boxing world was stunned by this outrageous decision. As Kevin Monaghan, NBC's boxing correspondent at the games, said in USA Today, ``It was an absolute joke. It was obvious Roy had won the fight. He was so fast, the guy couldn't lay a glove on Roy.'` The same article includes a quote from U.S. Olympic Committee director of media services Bob Condron: ``It was not, in any sense of the word, close.'` The decision was such a blatant injustice that 50 Korean Buddhist monks went to Jones to express their shame.
An investigation ensued, and evidence surfaced indicating corruption--i.e., bribes. Ultimately, two of the three judges who ruled against Jones were permanently barred from boxing. At the time of the games, Jones reacted with dignity, accepting the silver medal despite the gross affront that had occurred. Since then, he has waged a campaign to get the medal he deserved. But the International Olympic Committee has refused to overturn the scandalous decision. The Committee presented Jones with the Olympic Order in September 1997, but this belated consolation prize was no substitute for the medal that was stolen.
Despite Jones' preeminent stature, the Olympic incident still vexes him deeply. Millions of people believe Jones obviously won the Gold Medal. But for him, vindication can come only when the decision is officially overturned. And he still keeps a flame burning: ``I will die with a little hope in me,'` Jones said in a USA Today piece.
Broke With Dad; Demolished Toney
The early days of Jones' professional career were very controversial. His father's style of management was one of absolute control, and many of Jones Sr.'s decisions at the time were considered perverse--especially his choices of opponents for his son. He refused to set up matches against any serious contenders, and stuck instead with second- or third-raters. Roy Sr. claimed he was just trying to carefully cultivate his son's career and his character. As he asserted in a USA Today article: ``I don't care what nobody thinks. You don't give a kid $2 million and the prestige of a world title. Otherwise, you wind up with a Mike Tyson.'' But the boxing establishment saw this as merely padding Jones' record with easy wins. The phenomenal Olympic boxer was rapidly falling into obscurity.
Jones' loyalty to his father was intense, and so he passed up numerous offers from managers and handlers to guide him to greatness. But in denying his son any decision-making capacity, Roy Sr. was stoking the fighter's frustration. Finally, he went too far; he crossed the line. The incident involved a dog, which had bitten Jones' younger sister in fear. Roy Sr. went onto his son's land and shot the dog numerous times while it was tied to a tree.
``The final act of disrespect,'` was what Jones called it in a New York Times piece. ``There's certain things you don't do to a man. ... My father didn't raise me to be a pushover, not even to him.'` Shortly after, he hired Alton Merkerson. Jones also took on Stanley Levin, a trusted friend and mentor, to handle the business side of things. Roy Sr. has never forgiven his son: He refuses to talk with Roy Jr. As he said in Sports Illustrated, ``Once you break the plate at my table, you can never eat there again.'`
Jones' career finally started to soar. He took on the most challenging fighters out there, and trounced most of them in a few rounds. Finally, in November 1994, Jones got his chance for a truly sensational match, against James ``Lights Out'` Toney. Toney, an admitted former crack dealer who talked enough trash to fill a city dump, had gone undefeated in 46 bouts and was rated the best in the world. The Jones/Toney fight was ultra-hyped, and Jones for the first time in his career was the underdog. The world was eager to see whether he really had what it takes.
Over the course of the 12-round unanimous decision, Jones demonstrated his greatness. He danced circles around Toney, knocked him down hard in the third round, and blasted the big man repeatedly. Ring magazine called Jones' performance the most dominant of any big fight in 20 years.
Since then, Jones has faced few true challenges. His only ``loss'` was the result of a foul. In a March 1997 fight against Montell Griffin, Jones had to work hard to gain an edge. Griffin was proving himself a tough adversary, and it had gotten to Jones. Around the seventh round, though, Jones started to prevail. By the ninth, he was bashing Griffin hard, and forced the challenger down to one knee. Since the ref did not tell him to halt his attack, Jones hit Griffin with two more punches, the second one hard enough to knock him out. Jones was disqualified for the infraction.
In the August 1997 rematch, Jones KO'd Griffin in the first round, and with that regained the World Boxing Council title he had forfeited in the earlier fight. That was the end of that controversy.
In June of 1999 Jones became the first undisputed ight heavyweight champ since 1985 (when Michael Spinks relinquished that distinction to fight at the heavyweight level). to unify the belts, Jones easily overwhelmed International Boxing Federation (IBF) belt-holder Reggie Johnson in a unanimous decision, with Johnson bleeding heavily down several times, and in trouble the entire fight. At one point Jones looked over at Michael Jordan in the front rows and yelled, "Watched this!" He tattooed Johnson with a series of blows too rapid to see clearly even on slow-motion replay.
Cultivated Other Interests
Jones leads an extraordinarily active life. Boxing is his profession, but he has loads of other passions. These include cock-fighting, which Jones has pursued avidly his whole life. He even raises birds himself, though he does not necessarily fight them. Jones credits the gutsy roosters for helping teach him about being a valiant and shrewd fighter.
Jones also loves the game of basketball, and he even played professionally with the United States Basketball League's Jacksonville Barracudas during the summer of 1996. In fact, to keep things interesting for himself, Jones became the first man to play a game of pro basketball and defend a boxing title in the same day--June 15, 1996. His opponent that day, Canada's Eric Lucas, was widely considered easy pickings for Jones, so a fatiguing basketball game was one way to even the field a little. Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service quoted Jones as saying, a little defensively perhaps, ``At least this gives the guy a chance.'` Clearly, basketball is far more than a casual hobby to Jones. But no one suggests that the 5'11" Jones should switch sports.
In addition, Jones has done a lot of motivational speaking, primarily to younger people. He has raised money for a number of charitable causes, including his injured friend Gerald McClellan. Jones visits hospitals to offer hope and inspiration to severely ill and injured patients. He also runs a youth program in Pensacola. And the list goes on; Jones is as involved in community-building and humanitarian work as any fighter ever.
A boxer with Jones' skills and genius easily could rack up a string of victories every year, and expand his visibility to the public. Many people in the boxing industry would love to see him do exactly that. But Jones does not fight just for the sake of fighting. In fact, he usually keeps it to three or four matches per year. Jones aims to select matches that carry big purses, and he has expressed frustration that his weight class is paid is so much less than the heavyweights are. But part of the reason Jones fights infrequently is because there are no fighters with comparable talent. He has even considered bulking up to take on the heavyweights or trimming down to fight the welterweight champions.
Jones has made clear many times that he has conflicted feelings about boxing, mostly because of the sport's inherent danger--for both combatants. Even a great fighter gets hit sometimes, and the human brain was not designed to endure much battering within the skull. Jones has seen up close the effects of one severe knockout punch on a friend of his: Gerald McClellan, whose eyesight, hearing, and speech were badly damaged. As he said to USA Today, ``I care about my well-being after boxing. This game is dangerous. It doesn't take an accumulation of punches to mess you up. Gerald didn't have any hard fights before Benn. And look what happened.'` A year later, he was quoted in the same paper: ``This game is not a good game for anyone--me or anyone else. Look at the history of the guys who were great. Look at their condition 10 years after they're done. This game doesn't usually deal you a good hand, not in the long run.'`
It is very rare for a fighter to discuss the long-term effects of the sport, but Jones is honest about the risks entailed. In addition to being a great athlete, Jones is intelligent and sensitive--and he does not want those qualities diminished.
The other side of the issue is that Jones does not want to maim anyone. He has a well-developed conscience, and would hate to inflict a terrible injury. Sometimes when Jones fights opponents who are far below his caliber, he has to look out for the other man's well-being. For instance, when pressure from promoters and the challenger pushed Jones into taking on Vinny Pacienza in June 1995, he was not happy about it. He knew Pacienza was past his prime but also had the kind of grit that would keep him going even if the going got dangerously self-destructive. In that fight, Jones' intent to avoid hurting Pacienza prompted the referee to issue a warning. Then, as he steadily bloodied and rocked Pacienza at will, Jones all but pleaded with the ref to halt the fight. After six rounds, a TKO finally was called.
``I cried after the Pazienza fight,'` said Jones in the New York Times. ``It tore me up inside. It really made me wonder about what I do automatically.'`
For Jones, fighting is a means to an end, but it is not how he chooses to approach life outside the ring--or indefinitely in it either. Not many boxers are tough enough to admit, as Jones did in USA Today, that his real desire is ``to be loved and feel wanted.'` On another occasion, in Sports Illustrated Jones discussed the idea of ``living large,'' in the ring and out: ``Sure, I'll do some show-boating in the ring--I'm the only true performer in the ring today. But not outside of it. People assume every boxer wants to live the fast life. That's an escape, not a life. I want a person-to-person life.'`
Awards
Selected Awards: Ring Sports Magazine--1993 Fighter of the Year; 1995 Man of the Year; 1996 Sportsman of the Year. Ring, Boxing Illustrated, and Boxing Scene magazines--1994 Fighter of the Year. International Boxing Federation--1995 Fighter of the Year and 1995 Fighter of Unlimited Potential. ESPN ESPY Award--1995 Boxer of the Year. Boxing Illustrated's Budweiser ratings, June 1995 onward--Best Pound-for-Pound Fighter in the World. March of Dimes--1995 Honorary Chairman. KO--1996 Best Pound-for-Pound Fighter in the World and 1996 Best Fighter in the World (in poll of boxing experts). Congress of Racial Equality--1996 Outstanding Achievement Award. American Association for the Improvement of Boxing (the Marciano Foundation)--1996 Humanitarian of the Year. Boxing 1996--Best Pound-for Pound Fighter in the World. Harlem Globetrotters--Honorary Ambassador of Goodwill (1997). Escambia-Pensacola Human Relations Commission--1997 Olive Branch Award, for humanitarianism.
Further Reading
Periodicals
— Mark Baven
| Roy Jones, Jr. | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Statistics | |||||||
| Real name | Roy Levesta Jones Jr. | ||||||
| Nickname(s) | Junior Superman RJ Captain Hook |
||||||
| Rated at | Middleweight Super Middleweight Light Heavyweight Heavyweight Cruiserweight |
||||||
| Height | 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) | ||||||
| Reach | 74 in (188 cm) | ||||||
| Nationality | American | ||||||
| Born | January 16, 1969 Pensacola, Florida, USA |
||||||
| Stance | Orthodox | ||||||
| Boxing record | |||||||
| Total fights | 63 | ||||||
| Wins | 55 | ||||||
| Wins by KO | 40 | ||||||
| Losses | 8 | ||||||
| Draws | 0 | ||||||
| No contests | 0 | ||||||
|
Medal record
|
|||||||
Roy Jones, Jr. (born January 16, 1969) is an American professional boxer. As a professional, he has captured numerous world titles in the middleweight, super middleweight, light heavyweight and heavyweight divisions. He is the only boxer in history to start his career as a light middleweight (154 lbs) and go on to win a heavyweight title.
Jones left his mark in boxing history when he won the WBA Heavyweight title, becoming the first former middleweight champion to win a heavyweight title in 106 years. Jones was named "Fighter of the Decade" for the 1990s by the Boxing Writers Association of America.[1]
|
Contents
|
Jones won the 1984 United States National Junior Olympics in the 119 lb (54 kg) weight division, the 1986 United States National Golden Gloves in the 139 lb (63 kg) division and the 1987 United States National Golden Gloves in the 156 lb (71 kg) division. As an amateur, he ended his career with a 121–13 record.
Jones represented the United States at the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games, where he won the silver medal.[2] He dominated his opponents, never losing a single round en route to the final. His participation in the final was met with controversy when he lost a 3–2 decision to South Korean fighter Park Si-Hun despite pummeling Park for three rounds, landing 86 punches to Park's 32.[2] Allegedly, Park himself apologized to Jones afterward and the referee told Jones that he was dumbstruck by the judge's decision.[3] One judge shortly thereafter admitted the decision was a mistake and all three judges voting against Jones were eventually suspended. An official IOC investigation concluding in 1997 found that three of the judges were wined and dined by South Korean officials. This led to calls for Jones to be awarded a gold medal, but the IOC still officially stands by the decision, despite the allegations. Jones was awarded the Val Barker trophy, as the best stylistic boxer of the 1988 games, which was only the third and to this day the last time in the competition's history when the award did not go to one of the gold medal winners. The incident led Olympic organizers to establish a new scoring system for Olympic boxing.
On turning professional, he had already sparred with many professional boxers, including NABF Champion Ronnie Essett, IBF Champion Lindell Holmes and Sugar Ray Leonard. Jones began as a professional on May 6, 1989, knocking out Ricky Randall in 2 rounds in Pensacola at the Bayfront Auditorium. For his next fight, he faced the more experienced Stephan Johnson in Atlantic City, beating him by a knockout in round eight.
Jones built a record of 15–0 with 15 knockouts before stepping up in class to meet former World Welterweight Champion Jorge Vaca in a Pay Per View fight on January 10, 1992. He knocked Vaca out in round one to reach 16 knockout wins in a row. After one more KO, Jones went the distance for the first time against future world champion Jorge Castro, winning a 10-round decision in front of a USA Network national audience.
Jones made his first attempt at a world title on May 22, 1993. He beat future Undisputed Middleweight Champion Bernard Hopkins by unanimous decision in Washington, D.C. to capture the IBF Middleweight Championship. Jones claimed he had entered the bout with a broken right hand, but still managed to outpoint Hopkins and secure a unanimous decision win. Jones reminded the world of this claim on his hit single "Ya'll Must've Forgot" later in his career. While working for HBO as an analyst for Bernard Hopkins' title defense against Simon Brown, Jones would admit on air that he was 16 pounds heavier than Hopkins on fight night, weighing 180 to Hopkins 163.
For his next fight, he fought another future world champion, Thulane "Sugar Boy" Malinga, in a non-title affair. Jones beat Malinga by knockout in six rounds. Jones finished the year with another win, beating Fermin Chirino by decision. In 1994, Jones beat Danny "Popeye" Garcia by knockout in six, then retained his IBF title against Thomas Tate in two rounds at Las Vegas on May 27.
On November 18, 1994, he was set to face undefeated IBF Super Middleweight Champion James Toney, who was ranked highly in the "pound for pound" rankings. Toney had remained undefeated in 46 bouts and was rated the best in the world at 168 lbs. Billed as "The Uncivil War," Toney vs Jones was heavily hyped. Jones, for the first time in his career, was the underdog.
Over the course of the 12-round unanimous decision, Jones demonstrated his greatness. He danced circles around Toney, landing quick combinations at will, scoring a flash knockdown in the third round. Ring magazine called Jones' performance the most dominant of any big fight in 20 years. Claims that Toney was badly unprepared and dehydrated would surface in the days following the fight. Toney himself would claim in an interview with The Ring magazine that he had taken laxatives and diuretics the day of the weigh-in to make weight.
In 1995, Jones defended his super middleweight title successfully multiple times. He began the year by knocking out Antoine Byrd in round one. He faced former IBF Lightweight Champion Vinny Pazienza and defeated him in round six. He then beat Tony Thornton in round two by KO.
In 1996, Jones maintained his winning ways, defeating Merqui Sosa by knockout in two and future world champion Eric Lucas in round 11. When he boxed Lucas, he became the first athlete to participate in two paid sports events on the same day. He had played a basketball game in the morning and defended his boxing title in Jacksonville, Florida that evening. He also held a press conference in the ring just before the fight, taking questions from a chair in the middle of the ring and defending his choice of Bryant Brannon as his opponenet instead of Frankie Liles, his nemesis from the amateurs. He then defeated Bryant Brannon in a round two TKO.
In November 1996 at Ice Palace, Tampa, Florida, Jones defeated 40 year old former three-weight world champion Mike McCallum via a shutout decision to win the vacant Interim WBC Light Heavyweight title. Jones was soon upgraded to full champion by the WBC.
In 1997 Jones had his first professional loss, a disqualification against Montell Griffin. Griffin was trained by the legendary Eddie Futch, who had taught him how to take advantage of Jones technical mistakes and lack of basic boxing fundamentals. Griffin jumped out to an early lead on Jones but by round 9 Jones was ahead on the scorecards by a point and had Griffin on the canvas early in round nine. But as Griffin took a knee on the canvas to avoid further punishment, Jones hit him twice. Subsequently, Jones was disqualified and lost his title. Jones sought an immediate rematch and regained the World Light Heavyweight title easily, knocking Griffin down within the first 2 minutes 31 seconds of the fight, then ending the fight by knocking Griffin out just over two minutes in with a leaping left hand shot.
In 1998, Jones began by knocking out former Light Heavyweight and future Cruiserweight Champion Virgil Hill (who had already lost his belts to Lineal & WBO Champion Dariusz Michalczewski) in four rounds at Biloxi, Mississippi with a huge right to the body that broke one of Hill's ribs. He followed that with a win against the WBA Light Heavyweight title holder, Puerto Rico's Lou Del Valle, by a decision in 12 on July 18, to unify the WBC and WBA belts. Jones had to climb off the canvas for the first time in his career, as he was dropped in round eight, but continued to outbox Del Valle throughout the rest of the fight and gained a unanimous decision. Jones then followed with a defense against Otis Grant. He retained the crown by knocking Grant out in ten rounds.
Jones began 1999 by knocking out the WBC number one ranked contender at the time, Rick Frazier. After this, many boxing critics started to criticize Jones for fighting overmatched mandatories who few had ever heard of as well as his steadfast refusal to meet Dariusz Michalczewski in a unification bout. Jones answered these calls on June 5 of that year, when he beat the IBF title holder, Reggie Johnson, by a lop-sided 12-round decision to add that belt to the WBC and WBA belts he already owned in the division. Jones dropped Johnson hard in the second round, but backed off and allowed Reggie to finish the fight.
2000 began with Jones easily beating the hard-punching David Telesco via a 12 round decision on January 15, at Radio City Music Hall to retain his titles. Jones reportedly fractured his wrist a few weeks before this fight and fought almost exclusively one-handed. He entered the ring surrounded by the famous group of dancers, The Rockettes. His next fight was also a first-time boxing event for a venue, as he traveled to Indianapolis and retained his title with an 11-round technical knockout over Richard Hall at the Conseco Fieldhouse. A post-fight drug test showed that both Jones and Hall tested positive for androstenedione which was available legally over-the-counter at that time but banned by the IBF. The results of Jones' next two drug tests, which were negative, were sent to the Indiana Boxing Commission. The IBF chose not to take any action against Jones or Hall.[4][5] Jones ended the year with a 10-round stoppage of undefeated Eric Harding in New Orleans.
In 2001, Jones released Round One: The Album, a rap CD. That year he retained the title against Derrick Harmon by a knockout in ten and against future world champion Julio César González of Mexico by a 12-round unanimous decision.
In 2002, Jones retained his title by knocking out Glen Kelly in seven rounds. After this bout, Jones was controversially awarded The Ring Championship belt, despite Dariusz Michalczewski still being regarded as the Lineal champion in the same weight class.[6]
Jones then defeated future world champion Clinton Woods by technical knockout. He performed a song from his CD during his ring entrance.
On March 1, 2003, in Las Vegas,[7] Roy Jones defeated John Ruiz, the man who defeated an aging Evander Holyfield, for the WBA Heavyweight title. Jones officially weighed in at 193 lb (88 kg)[8] and Ruiz at 226 lb (103 kg). Jones became the first former Middleweight title holder to win a Heavyweight title in 106 years, though many historians refuse to recognize the accomplishment because Lennox Lewis was the true and Lineal Champion at the time of the bout.[9] Jones also became the first fighter to start his career as a light middleweight and win a heavyweight title.[10]
Jones chose to return to the light heavyweight division and on November 8, 2003 he defeated Antonio Tarver to retain The Ring Light Heavyweight Championship and win Tarver's WBC title, as well as the vacant WBA (Super) title.[11] Jones appeared a lot weaker after coming back down to the light heavyweight division, losing the muscle he gained for the heavyweight fight seemed to have taken a toll on his aging body and his cat-like reflexes appeared diminished. Jones won by majority decision, the judges giving him 117–111,116–112 and 114–114.[11]
On May 15, 2004, Jones faced Tarver in a rematch. Jones was heavily favored to win, but Tarver knocked him down at 1:41 of the second round. Jones had won the first round (Tarver only landed two punches in the first round), but in the second, as Jones tried a combination, he was caught by a big counter left hook from Tarver. Jones got on his feet by the count, but for the first time in his career was ruled unable to continue by referee Jay Nady.
On September 25, 2004, Jones attempted to win the IBF Light Heavyweight title from Glen Johnson in a match in Memphis, Tennessee.[12] Johnson knocked out Jones 49 seconds into the ninth round. Jones lay on the canvas for three minutes after being counted out.[13] Johnson was ahead on all three judges’ scorecards at the time of the knockout (77–75, 77–75, 78–74) and had landed 118 punches to Jones's 75. Jones used the ring's canvas that night as a billboard for his upcoming rap CD, which came out on November 1st.
After almost a year away from the ring, focusing on training and working as an analyst for HBO Boxing, Jones scheduled a third fight with Antonio Tarver, on October 1, 2005, at the St. Pete Times Forum in Tampa, Florida, which aired on HBO PPV. For only the second time in his career, Jones was considered an underdog going into the fight. Tarver won by unanimous decision (117–111, 116–112, 116–112).
After the loss in the third Tarver bout, Jones resumed his duties as a commentator for HBO World Championship Boxing, calling the Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Sharmba Mitchell fight on November 19, 2005 and the Jermain Taylor-Bernard Hopkins rematch on December 3, 2005. His return to the network was short lived, as Jones was let go from his ringside analyst role in January 2006. HBO cited his reported lack of commitment to attending the network's production meetings.[citation needed]
Jones took on Prince Badi Ajamu on July 29, 2006, at the Qwest Arena in Boise, Idaho. Jones defeated Ajamu by a unanimous decision, winning the WBO NABO Light Heavyweight title.[14]
Next up for Jones was the undefeated Anthony Hanshaw, on July 14, 2007, at the Mississippi Coast Coliseum in Biloxi, Mississippi. Hanshaw was knocked down in the 11th round.[15] Jones won the bout by unanimous decision.
On January 19, 2008, Jones faced former 147 and 154 pound five-time world champion Félix Trinidad at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The bout was fought at a catchweight of 170 lbs.[16] Jones had a noticeable size and speed advantage, and in round seven, a short right hand to the temple dropped Trinidad to his knees.[17] Jones fired a combination in the tenth round to send Trinidad down once more.[18] Jones won the fight by scores of 117–109 and 116–110 (twice).[19] This was the first time a former Heavyweight Champion returned to fight successfully at 170 lbs.
After Joe Calzaghe's split from promoter Frank Warren, it was officially announced that Roy Jones Jr. and Joe Calzaghe had reached an agreement to fight for the The Ring Light Heavyweight Championship in New York City at Madison Square Garden on September 20, 2008 on HBO PPV. However, Calzaghe claimed injury to his right hand in training, so the fight had to be postponed a couple of weeks, with November 8 being set as the new date. Calzaghe was knocked down by an accidental forearm and cut on the bridge of the nose in the first round. Calzaghe resumed control almost immediately and dominated Jones throughout the remainder of the fight. Calzaghe toyed with Jones and mocked him from the center of the ring, daring Jones to try and hit him and then countering with fast combinations. The Welshman opened a cut over Jones' left eye. Jones' corner, who had never seen Roy cut before, didn't know how to properly handle the situation. Blood covered the left side of Jones' face. Ultimately, Jones lost by unanimous decision, winning only 2 rounds on the 3 official judges cards.
Jones defeated Omar Sheika on March 21, 2009, via fifth-round technical knockout. Sheika had previously defeated Glen Johnson, who had knocked out Jones in 2004. On August 15, 2009, Jones beat former Super Middleweight Champion Jeff Lacy in 10 rounds after Lacy's corner stopped the fight. Lacy had never been knocked out or stopped before.
In December 2009, Roy Jones was set to face Australian boxer Danny Green in Sydney, Australia. In the weeks leading up to this fight, there were reports in the newspapers indicating difficulties getting Roy's sparring partners into Australia.[20] Then on December 2, 2009, following an extensive pre-fight delay due to hand wrap protests, Danny Green defeated Jones in a first round TKO.
Roy Jones Jr. and Bernard Hopkins met in a rematch bout, on April 3, 2010 in Las Vegas. After going the distance, Hopkins was awarded with a unanimous decision.
On May 21, Jones travelled to Russia to face Denis Lebedev, who had just come off a controversial split decision loss to Marco Huck. Weighing in at 198 lbs, Jones looked slow and old. Despite this, he gave a decent showing and was heading for at least a majority decision loss at the beginning of the 10th round. However, with less than 20 seconds remaining, Lebedev landed a big right followed by an uppercut. Jones, having bent down holding his head and in no position to continue, was then hit by a final big right hand as Steve Smoger hesitated to stop the fight. Jones lay on the canvas for several minutes before getting up.
Jones won a 10-round unanimous decision against Max Alexander on December 10, 2011 in Atlanta, snapping a three-match losing streak, and winning the UBO Intercontinental Cruiserweight Championship.
Jones will face Dawid Kostecki in a ten round bout at Atlas Arena, Poland on June 30th. The bout will be in the cruiserweight division at a contracted weight limit of 185 pounds.[21]
| 55 Wins (40 knockouts, 15 decisions), 8 Losses (4 knockouts, 3 decisions, 1 disqualification), 0 Draws[22] | |||||||
| Res. | Record | Opponent | Type | Rnd. Time | Date | Location | Notes |
| Win | 55–8 | UD | 10 | 2011-12-10 | Won vacant UBO Intercontinental Cruiserweight title. | ||
| Loss | 54–8 | KO | 10 (10), 2:58 | 2011-05-21 | |||
| Loss | 54–7 | UD | 12 | 2010-04-03 | |||
| Loss | 54–6 | TKO | 1 (12), 2:02 | 2009-12-02 | For IBO Cruiserweight title. | ||
| Win | 54–5 | RTD | 10 (12), 3:00 | 2009-08-15 | Retained WBO NABO Light Heavyweight title. | ||
| Win | 53–5 | TKO | 5 (12), 1:45 | 2009-03-21 | Won vacant WBO NABO Light Heavyweight title. | ||
| Loss | 52–5 | UD | 12 | 2008-11-08 | For The Ring Light Heavyweight title. | ||
| Win | 52–4 | UD | 12 | 2008-01-19 | |||
| Win | 51–4 | UD | 12 | 2007-07-14 | Won vacant IBC Light Heavyweight title. | ||
| Win | 50–4 | UD | 12 | 2006-07-29 | Won WBO NABO Light Heavyweight title. | ||
| Loss | 49–4 | UD | 12 | 2005-10-01 | For The Ring, IBO & vacant NBA Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Loss | 49–3 | KO | 9 (12), 0:48 | 2004-09-25 | For IBF Light Heavyweight title. | ||
| Loss | 49–2 | TKO | 2 (12), 1:41 | 2004-05-15 | Lost WBC, WBA (Super), IBO, IBA & The Ring Light Heavyweight titles. For vacant WBF & vacant NBA Light Heavyweight titles. |
||
| Win | 49–1 | MD | 12 | 2003-11-08 | Retained The Ring & IBO and won WBC and vacant WBA (Super) Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Win | 48–1 | UD | 12 | 2003-03-01 | Won WBA Heavyweight title. | ||
| Win | 47–1 | TKO | 6 (12), 1:29 | 2002-09-07 | Retained WBC, WBA (Super), IBF, IBO, NBA, WBF, IBA & The Ring Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Win | 46–1 | KO | 7 (12), 1:55 | 2002-02-02 | Retained WBC, WBA (Super), IBF, IBO, NBA, WBF & IBA Light Heavyweight titles. Awarded vacant The Ring Light Heavyweight title. | ||
| Win | 45–1 | UD | 12 | 2001-07-28 | Retained WBC, WBA (Super), IBF, IBO & NBA and won WBF & vacant IBA Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Win | 44–1 | RTD | 10 (12), 3:00 | 2001-02-24 | Retained WBC, WBA (Super), IBF & IBO and won NBA Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Win | 43–1 | RTD | 10 (12), 3:00 | 2000-09-09 | Retained WBC, WBA & IBF and won IBO Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Win | 42–1 | TKO | 11 (12), 1:41 | 2000-05-13 | Retained WBC, WBA & IBF Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Win | 41–1 | UD | 12 | 2000-01-15 | Retained WBC, WBA & IBF Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Win | 40–1 | UD | 12 | 1999-06-05 | Retained WBC & WBA and won IBF Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Win | 39–1 | TKO | 2 (12), 2:59 | 1999-01-09 | Retained WBC & WBA Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Win | 38–1 | TKO | 10 (12), 1:18 | 1998-11-14 | Retained WBC & WBA Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Win | 37–1 | UD | 12 | 1998-07-18 | Retained WBC and won WBA Light Heavyweight titles. | ||
| Win | 36–1 | KO | 4 (12), 1:10 | 1998-04-25 | |||
| Win | 35–1 | KO | 1 (12), 2:31 | 1997-08-07 | Won WBC Light Heavyweight title. | ||
| Loss | 34–1 | DQ | 9 (12), 2:27 | 1997-03-21 | Lost WBC Light Heavyweight title. Disqualified for hitting a downed opponent. | ||
| Win | 34–0 | UD | 12 | 1996-11-22 | Won interim WBC Light Heavyweight title. | ||
| Win | 33–0 | TKO | 2 (12), 2:23 | 1996-10-04 | Retained IBF Super Middleweight title. | ||
| Win | 32–0 | RTD | 11 (12), 3:00 | 1996-06-15 | Retained IBF Super Middleweight title. | ||
| Win | 31–0 | TKO | 2 (12), 2:36 | 1996-01-12 | |||
| Win | 30–0 | TKO | 3 (12), 0:45 | 1995-09-30 | Retained IBF Super Middleweight title. | ||
| Win | 29–0 | TKO | 6 (12), 2:58 | 1995-06-24 | Retained IBF Super Middleweight title. | ||
| Win | 28–0 | TKO | 1 (12), 2:06 | 1995-03-18 | Retained IBF Super Middleweight title. | ||
| Win | 27–0 | UD | 12 | 1994-11-18 | Won IBF Super Middleweight title. | ||
| Win | 26–0 | TKO | 2 (12), 0:30 | 1994-05-27 | Retained IBF Middleweight title. | ||
| Win | 25–0 | KO | 6 (10), 2:59 | 1994-03-22 | |||
| Win | 24–0 | UD | 10 | 1993-11-30 | |||
| Win | 23–0 | KO | 6 (10), 1:57 | 1993-08-14 | |||
| Win | 22–0 | UD | 12 | 1993-05-22 | Won vacant IBF Middleweight title. | ||
| Win | 21–0 | TKO | 1 (10), 2:23 | 1993-02-13 | |||
| Win | 20–0 | TKO | 4 (12), 3:00 | 1992-12-05 | Won vacant WBC Continental Americas Super Middleweight title. | ||
| Win | 19–0 | TKO | 8 (10), 3:00 | 1992-08-18 | |||
| Win | 18–0 | UD | 10 | 1992-06-30 | |||
| Win | 17–0 | KO | 1 (10), 1:40 | 1992-04-03 | |||
| Win | 16–0 | KO | 1 (10), 1:45 | 1992-01-10 | |||
| Win | 15–0 | KO | 8 (10), ? | 1991-08-31 | |||
| Win | 14–0 | TKO | 2 (10), ? | 1991-08-03 | |||
| Win | 13–0 | TKO | 3 (10), ? | 1991-04-13 | |||
| Win | 12–0 | KO | 1 (10), 0:46 | 1991-01-31 | |||
| Win | 11–0 | TKO | 5 (10), ? | 1990-11-08 | |||
| Win | 10–0 | KO | 4 (10), 2:56 | 1990-09-25 | |||
| Win | 9–0 | KO | 1 (10), 2:02 | 1990-07-14 | |||
| Win | 8–0 | KO | 2 (10), 2:28 | 1990-05-11 | |||
| Win | 7–0 | TKO | 3 (10), 2:20 | 1990-03-28 | |||
| Win | 6–0 | TKO | 2 (8), 2:57 | 1990-02-28 | |||
| Win | 5–0 | KO | 2 (8), ? | 1990-01-08 | |||
| Win | 4–0 | TKO | 3 (8), 2:00 | 1989-11-30 | |||
| Win | 3–0 | TKO | 7 (8), 2:43 | 1989-09-03 | |||
| Win | 2–0 | TKO | 8 (8), 2:04 | 1989-06-11 | |||
| Win | 1–0 | TKO | 2 (8), 2:46 | 1989-05-06 | |||
Major World Titles:
Minor World Titles:
The Ring/Lineal Championship Titles:
Regional/International Titles:
|
|
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2011) |
Roy Jones, Jr., was born in Pensacola, Florida,[23] to two very different parents. His mother, Carol, was warm and easy-going, whereas his father, Roy Sr., was much like a Marine Drill Instructor with respect to his son. A decorated Vietnam veteran, ex-club fighter and retired aircraft engineer who had taken up hog farming, Roy Sr. was hard on his son from early on, taunting the child, ``sparring'` with him, enraging Roy Jr., yelling at him and beating the child, often for 20 minutes at a time. This behavior never really changed; if anything it became more brutal as Roy Jr. grew up. Many people would call the father's treatment out-and-out abuse, but he believed he had a good reason for it: to make Roy Jr. tough enough to be a champion. In this pursuit, he was relentless and Roy Jr. lived in constant fear of his father's verbal and physical violence against him.[citation needed]
Jones described his childhood in Sports Illustrated: ``After a while I didn't care about gettin' hurt or dyin' anymore. I was in pain all day, every day, I was so scared of my father. He'd pull up in his truck and start lookin' for something I'd done wrong. There was no escape, no excuse, no way out of nothin'. ... Getting' hurt or dyin' might've been better than the life I was livin'. ... Used to think about killin' myself anyway.'` There's no way to know whether or not Jones would have become a world champion fighter without this extremely punitive upbringing, but there's little question it toughened the young man.[citation needed]
Roy Sr. ran his own boxing gym, to which he devoted all his available time and financial resources. He offered direction and useful discipline to numerous youths and steered many of them away from trouble. Roy Sr. did everything possible to expand the program and help more kids. But towards his own son he was merciless, driving Roy Jr. to the brink of exhaustion, screaming at him in front of all the other fighters, assaulting him. Roy Sr.'s father had been a hard-working laborer and had been tough on him the way he was on Roy Jr. But Jones, the world champion boxer, will not continue this line of treatment. He is very attuned to others' anguish; on his web site, he says, ``What gets [me] down?'` is watching other people be hurt and mistreated.'` It is a feeling he has known very well.[citation needed]
Using his birds as an image for his own predicament, Jones said in the same Sports Illustrated piece: ``I spent all my life in my dad's cage. I could never be 100 percent of who I am until I left it. But because of him, nothing bothers me. I'll never face anything stronger and harder than what I already have.'` Jones' father, with his overbearing and overwhelming personality, had created a powerful craving in the boxer—the need to become his own man.
Former Heavyweight Champion George Foreman said Jones, "hits like a heavyweight and moves like a lightweight."
Boxer Montell Griffin, who faced Jones twice at 175 lbs and sparred with Floyd Mayweather Jr. at 140 lbs said, "Floyd was no comparison as far as speed. Roy was much faster."
In 1996, High Frequency Boxing's John DiMaio wrote ``The early evidence points toward the real possibility that Jones is the greatest talent this sport has ever seen. His skill so dwarfs that of his nearest ranked opposition...that providing competitive opponents is a more challenging dilemma than the fights themselves.'` The expert opinion of Boxing magazine's editor, Bert Sugar, is provided on Jones' website: ``He possesses the fastest hands in boxing with lightning fast moves and explosive power in both hands.'` After Mike MacCallum lost the World Boxing Council light heavyweight crown to Roy Jones in a 1996 unanimous decision, he called Jones ``the greatest fighter of all time.'`
Selected Awards: Ring Sports Magazine—1993 Fighter of the Year; 1995 Man of the Year; 1996 Sportsman of the Year. Ring, Boxing Illustrated, and Boxing Scene magazines—1994 Fighter of the Year. International Boxing Federation—1995 Fighter of the Year and 1995 Fighter of Unlimited Potential. ESPN ESPY Award—1995 Boxer of the Year. The Sports Network-Boxer of the Decade. Boxing Illustrated's Budweiser ratings, June 1995 onward—Best Pound-for-Pound Fighter in the World. March of Dimes—1995 Honorary Chairman. KO—1996 Best Pound-for-Pound Fighter in the World and 1996 Best Fighter in the World. Congress of Racial Equality—1996 Outstanding Achievement Award. American Association for the Improvement of Boxing (the Marciano Foundation)--1996 Humanitarian of the Year. Boxing 1996—Best Pound-for Pound Fighter in the World. Harlem Globetrotters—Honorary Ambassador of Goodwill (1997). Escambia-Pensacola Human Relations Commission—1997 Olive Branch Award, for humanitarianism.
| Roy Jones, Jr. | |
|---|---|
| Birth name | Roy Lavesta Jones, Jr. |
| Born | January 16, 1969 |
| Origin | Pensacola, Florida, United States |
| Genres | Hip hop, Southern Hip Hop, Crunk, Dirty South |
| Occupations | Boxer, rapper, actor, promoter, sports commentator |
| Years active | 2001–present |
| Labels | Body Head Entertainment |
Jones started his rap music career in 2001 with his album, titled Round One: The Album and the debut single, "You all Must've Forgot". In 2004, Jones formed a group – Body Head Bangerz and released an album. The album, Body Head Bangerz: Volume One, featured B.G., Juvenile, Bun B of UGK, Petey Pablo, Lil' Flip and Mike Jones among others.
| Album information |
|---|
Round One: The Album
|
| Album information |
|---|
Body Head Bangerz: Volume One
|
| Awards | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Inaugural Award |
BWAA Fighter of the Decade 1990–1999 |
Succeeded by Manny Pacquiao |
| Preceded by Michael Carbajal |
Ring Magazine Fighter of the Year 1994 |
Succeeded by Oscar De La Hoya |
| Achievements | ||
| Preceded by James Toney Vacated |
IBF Middleweight Champion May 25, 1993 –1994 |
Succeeded by Vacancy filled by Bernard Hopkins |
| Preceded by James Toney |
IBF Super Middleweight Champion November 18, 1994 – 1997 |
Succeeded by Vacancy filled by Charles Brewer |
| Preceded by Fabrice Tiozzo Vacated |
WBC Light Heavyweight Champion November 22, 1996 – March 21, 1997 Initially interim title |
Succeeded by Montell Griffin |
| Preceded by Montell Griffin |
WBC Light Heavyweight Champion August 07, 1997–2002 |
Succeeded by Vacancy filled by Antonio Tarver |
| Preceded by Lou Del Valle |
WBA Light Heavyweight Champion July 18, 1998 – December 12, 2001 Promoted |
Succeeded by Bruno Girard as Regular champion |
| Preceded by Reggie Johnson |
IBF Light Heavyweight Champion June 5, 1999 – September 7, 2002 |
Succeeded by Vacancy filled by Antonio Tarver |
| Preceded by N/A Inaugural champion |
WBA Light Heavyweight Champion Super title December 12, 2001 – 2002 |
Succeeded by Himself Title reinstated |
| Preceded by John Ruiz |
WBA Heavyweight Champion March 1, 2003 – February 20, 2004 |
Succeeded by John Ruiz Interim champion elevated |
| Preceded by Antonio Tarver |
WBC Light Heavyweight Champion Nov 08 2003 – May 15, 2004 |
Succeeded by Antonio Tarver |
| Preceded by Himself Title reinstated |
WBA Light Heavyweight Super Champion Nov 08 2003 – May 15, 2004 |
|
| Preceded by Michael Spinks Vacated |
The Ring Light Heavyweight Champion 2002 – May 15, 2004 |
|
|
||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)