John Ruiz vs. James Toney

John Ruiz vs. James Toney was a professional boxing match contested on April 30, 2005 for the WBA heavyweight championship.

John Ruiz vs. James Toney
DateApril 30, 2005
VenueMadison Square Garden in New York City, New York
Title(s) on the lineWBA and IBA heavyweight titles
Tale of the tape
Boxer John Ruiz James Toney
Nickname "The Quietman" "Lights Out"
Hometown Chelsea, Massachusetts Grand Rapids, Michigan
Pre-fight record 41–5–1 68–4–2
Height 6 ft 2 in (188 cm) 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Weight 241 lb (109 kg) 233 lb (106 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBA heavyweight champion IBA heavyweight champion
3-division world champion
Result
No Contest

Background

After losing his WBA title to Roy Jones Jr., John Ruiz was able to almost immediately regain the belt by winning an uneventful unanimous decision against Hasim Rahman for the interim version of the WBA belt, which was upgraded to the full version after Jones decided to returned permanently to the Light Heavyweight division. Ruiz then made two defences, stopping Fres Oquendo and getting a very controversial unanimous decision over Andrew Golota where most observers had Golota winning.[1]

James Toney had entered the Heavyweight division under two years earlier shortly after he won his first world title in nearly 8 and half years by beating IBF Cruiserweight champion Vassiliy Jirov. In his Heavyweight debut on Showtime he upset four time former champion Evander Holyfield by 9th-round TKO. Despite some interest in a rematch with Roy Jones Jr, he would have one more fight against Rydell Booker, before agreeing to face Ruiz.[2][3] Going in to the fight both the WBA & WBC ranked Toney as their number 1 contender, with the IBF ranking him 3rd.[4]

Toney was attempting to become only the third boxer to win world titles at both Heavyweight & Middleweight, after Roy Jones Jr & Bob Fitzsimmons.

The fight

Toney would control most of fight, knocking Ruiz down in the 7th round on route to a unanimous decision win, with scores of 116-111, 116-111 and 115-112.[5] HBO's Harold Lederman also had the bout scored as 116-111 to Toney.

Aftermath

Ruiz would retire immediately after this bout however, in the days after the bout Toney would fail his post-fight drug test by testing positive for the anabolic steroid stanozolol. This led to the New York Athletic Commission declaring the bout a "no-contest" and banning Toney from boxing for 90 days. The WBA would then reinstate Ruiz as its champion and that Toney be ineligible for another WBA Heavyweight title shot for two years, this prompted Ruiz end his retirement after 10 days.[6]

Undercard

Confirmed bouts:[7]

WinnerLoserWeight division/title belt(s) disputedResult
Vicente Mosquera Yodsanan Sor Nanthachai WBA World super feather title Unanimous Decision.
Ray Austin Larry Donald vacant WBC–USNBC heavyweight title Majority Decision Draw.
DaVarryl Williamson Derrick Jefferson WBC Continental Americas/WBO NABO Heavyweight titles 2nd round TKO.
Non-TV bouts
Luis Alberto Pérez Luis Bolano IBF World super flyweight title 6th round TKO.
Evans Ashira Quentin Smith Middleweight (10 rounds) Unanimous Decision.
Israel Garcia Andriy Oliynyk Heavyweight (6 rounds) Unanimous Decision.
Elio Rojas Anthony Martinez Featherweight (6 rounds) Unanimous Decision.
Oleksandr Harashchenko Elvir Muriqi Light Heavyweight (6 rounds) Split Decision.

Broadcasting

Country Broadcaster
 CanadaTSN
 FranceCanal+
 PhilippinesSolar Sports
 United KingdomSky Sports
 United StatesHBO

References

  1. "John Ruiz vs. Andrew Golota". BoxRec. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  2. "James Toney vs. Evander Holyfield". BoxRec. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  3. "Toney vs. Ruiz Is a Fight for Title, Attention". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  4. "Archived copy". ibf-usba-boxing.com. Archived from the original on 2 March 2005. Retrieved 13 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. "John Ruiz vs. James Toney Round by Round Coverage - Boxing News". boxingscene.com. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  6. Sandomir, Richard (12 May 2005). "Toney Fails Drug Test and Is Stripped of Title". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-10-24.
  7. "BoxRec - event".
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