Francisco Bojado
In-game article clicks load inline without leaving the challenge.
Francisco Bojado (born 11 May 1983) is a Mexican former professional boxer who competed from 2001 to 2007. As an amateur, he competed at the 2000 Summer Olympics. Francisco is also the brother of amateur boxer, Angel Bojado.
Amateur career
He compiled an amateur record of 168–15 and represented Mexico at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia.
Francisco lost in the second qualifying round at the games. He returned home with his eyes set on turning professional. Shortly after, he was signed by Shelly Finkel, a man who also managed Evander Holyfield and Mike Tyson, among many others. Finkel soon helped Bojado sign a multi-fight deal with cable television channel Showtime.
Professional career
On January 13, 2001, he made his professional debut by beating Derrick Castor by knockout in the second round in Uncasville, Connecticut. He followed that victory with eight more knockout wins, including wins over veterans Mauro Lucero, Glenn Forde and Eleazar Contreras. But on February 16, 2002, also in Uncasville, he was upset by Juan Carlos Rubio, who beat him by a ten-round decision. He would later avenge the loss to Rubio, by 12-round decision.
On January 24, 2004, Francisco defeated experienced Emmanuel Clottey in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
On July 24, however, he suffered another setback, when former world Jr. Lightweight champion Jesse James Leija beat him by a split ten-round decision. He walked away from the sport following the loss.
In April 2007, Bojado signed a deal with promotional company Golden Boy Promotions, and made his return to the ring on May 4, 2007, against Dairo Esalas at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Bojado won a unanimous decision.
On October 6, 2007, Stephen Forbes won a split-decision upset over Bojado in a junior welterweight bout.
Outside the ring
Bojado made an appearance on the HBO short series De La Hoya/Mayweather 24/7 as a sparring partner for Oscar De La Hoya.
Bojado was arrested in 2011 after allegedly failing to stop at US Border security, which resulted in shots being fired at him by police.
Professional record
| 18 Wins (12 knockouts), 3 Losses, 0 Draw | |||||||
| Res. | Record | Opponent | Type | Rd., Time | Date | Location | Notes |
| Loss | 18- | United States Steve Forbes | SD | 10 (10) | Oct 6, 2007 | NevadaMandalay Bay Resort & Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada | |
| Win | 18-2 | Mexico Rogelio Castañeda, Jr. | TKO | 10 (1:30) | Jul 27, 2007 | ArizonaDesert Diamond Casino, Tucson, Arizona | |
| Win | 17-2 | Colombia Dairo Esalas | UD | 10 (10) | May 4, 2007 | New JerseyBoardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey | |
| Loss | 16-2 | United States Jesse James Leija | UD | 10 (10) | Jul 24, 2004 | ConnecticutMohegan Sun Casino, Uncasville, Connecticut | |
| Win | 16-1 | United States Andre Eason | UD | 10 (10) | May 8, 2004 | ArizonaCasino Del Sol, Tucson, Arizona | |
| Win | 15-1 | Ghana Emmanuel Clottey | UD | 10 (10) | Jan 24, 2004 | New JerseyBoardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey | |
| Win | 14-1 | Mexico Juan Carlos Rubio | UD | 12 (12) | Nov 22, 2003 | TexasReliant Park, Houston, Texas | IBA Continental and WBC Continental Americas titles |
| Win | 13-1 | United States Lemuel Nelson | UD | 10 (10) | Aug 9, 2003 | FloridaMiami Arena, Miami, Florida | |
| Win | 12-1 | Armenia William Adamyan | TKO | 6 (3:00) | May 10, 2003 | CaliforniaPechanga Center, Temecula, California | |
| Win | 11-1 | Puerto Rico Frankie Santos | TKO | 10 (0:45) | Feb 1, 2003 | ConnecticutMohegan Sun Casino, Uncasville, Connecticut | |
| Win | 10-1 | United States Frankie Sanchez | UD | 8 (8) | Oct 19, 2002 | TexasReliant Park, Houston, Texas | |
| Loss | 9-1 | Mexico Juan Carlos Rubio | UD | 10 (10) | Feb 16, 2002 | ConnecticutMohegan Sun Casino, Uncasville, Connecticut | |
| Win | 9-0 | Mexico Mauro Lucero | KO | 1 (0:12) | Nov 3, 2001 | NevadaMGM Grand, Las Vegas, Nevada | |
| Win | 8-0 | United States Eleazar Contreras | KO | 2 (2:00) | Oct 13, 2001 | New JerseyTropicana Hotel & Casino, Atlantic City, New Jersey | Won WBC Youth Light Welterweight title |
| Win | 7-0 | United States Manuel Varela | TKO | 1 (2:17) | Sep 1, 2001 | TexasDon Haskins Convention Center, El Paso, Texas | |
| Win | 6-0 | United States Glenn Forde | KO | 2 (0:08) | Jun 23, 2001 | ConnecticutMohegan Sun Casino, Uncasville, Connecticut | |
| Win | 5-0 | Mexico Ernesto Fuentes | TKO | 1 (2:41) | May 19, 2001 | ConnecticutMohegan Sun Casino, Uncasville, Connecticut | |
| Win | 4-0 | Mexico David Montes | KO | 3 (2:48) | May 5, 2001 | TexasDon Haskins Convention Center, El Paso, Texas | |
| Win | 3-0 | United States Mario Lacey | KO | 1 (1:24) | Apr 20, 2001 | New JerseyBallys Park Hotel Casino, Atlantic City, New Jersey | |
| Win | 2-0 | Mexico Alejandro Rivera | TKO | 1 (2:08) | Mar 2, 2001 | NevadaTexas Station Casino, North Las Vegas, Nevada | |
| Win | 1-0 | United States Detrick Castor | TKO | 2 (1:38) | Jan 13, 2001 | ConnecticutMohegan Sun Casino, Uncasville, Connecticut |
External links
- from BoxRec (registration required)