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Boxing - Johnny Tapia

GOODFELLAS

GOODFELLAS

MuscleHead
May 24, 2012
1,579
41
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -- Johnny Tapia, the five-time boxing champion whose turbulent career was marked by cocaine addiction, alcohol, depression and run-ins with the law, was found dead Sunday at his Albuquerque home. He was 45.

Authorities were called to the house at about 7:45 p.m. on Sunday, spokesman Robert Gibbs said. The death didn't appear to be suspicious, he said.

Tapia won five championships in three weight classes, winning the WBA bantamweight title, the IBF and WBO junior bantamweight titles and the IBF featherweight belt.

He was regarded as the consummate underdog by his fans. The more trouble he found outside the ring -- including several stints in jail -- the more they rallied around him.

In a 1990s-era feud with fellow Albuquerque boxer and former world champion Danny Romero, Tapia's fans anointed him with the slang Spanish title of "Burque's Best."

But his life was also marked by tragedy. He was orphaned at 8, his mother stabbed 26 times with a screwdriver and left to die.
In 2007, he was hospitalized after an apparent cocaine overdose. Several days later, his brother-in-law and his nephew were killed in car accident on their way to Albuquerque to see the ailing boxer.

Tapia was banned from boxing for 3 1/2 years in the early `90s because of his cocaine addiction. But he knocked out Henry Martinez to win the WBO bantamweight title in 1994, and won four more championships over the next eight years.

He last fought in June, outpointing Mauricio Pastrana in an eight-round decision. He finished with a 59-5-2 record.

Gibbs said an autopsy will be performed in the next few days.

si.com
 
mugzy

mugzy

TID Board Of Directors
Aug 11, 2010
4,876
1,801
Tapia was always a mess when it came to drugs however he had the heart of a lion and pretty decent skills.
 
GOODFELLAS

GOODFELLAS

MuscleHead
May 24, 2012
1,579
41
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -- A 911 call made from Johnny Tapia's Albuquerque home reveals the moments when the boxing legend's family members realize he is beyond help.

Police released audio Tuesday in which Tapia's wife, Teresa, can be heard pleading for emergency dispatchers to send an ambulance.

Teresa Tapia initially says her husband as unconscious and not moving. Another woman, believed to be her sister, tells the operator Tapia appears "stiff'' and "purple.''

The operator tries to instruct them on CPR but Tapia's sister-in-law says, "He's gone.''

The 45-year-old Tapia, who had long suffered with public battles of cocaine addiction and depression, died Sunday. Still, he was a hero to many New Mexico boxing fans who gave him the slang Spanish title of "Burque's Best.''

An autopsy is pending.

A public memorial is planned.


si.com
 
BigGameHunter

BigGameHunter

VIP Member
Jun 26, 2012
475
192
Great champion. I read in an interview years ago that quoted Teddy Atlas as saying "fighters fight Tapia because they have to not cause they want to." Nuff said.
 
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