WELCOME BACK TO JAPAN, HILARIO ZAPATA


February 11, 2015

TOKYO, JAPAN

It was surprising for this reporter to see former three-time world champion Hilario Zapata of Panama here in Japan as the 56-year-old ex-champ served cornerman/trainer of Venezuelans Breilor Teran and Luis Araguayan on Monday and Tuesday respectively. Zapata belonged to the league named gArtful Dodgersh that consisted of Young Griffo, Jack Johnson, Gene Tunney (65-1-1, 48 KOs; we should more evaluate The Fighting Marine), Willie Pep, Miguel Canto, Pernell Whitaker, Floyd Mayweather Jr., etc.

Zapata used to be a household name in the Japanese squared circle, where he was undefeated in five bouts all with the world title at stake. The flexible Panamanian southpaw annexed the WBC 108-pound belt by a close but unanimous decision over defending titlist Shigeo Nakajima in Tokyo, Japan, in 1980. Since then, Japan was a lucrative market for his manager Luis Spada and Zapata. The lanky southpaw, in his third defense, stopped ex-champ Nakajima in eleven rounds of a rematch in Gifu.

Zapata, a very flexible technician with excellent body work, lost his WBC belt to Amado Ursua, who, however, yielded his belt to Japanfs Tadashi Tomori, from whom Zapata regained the same belt via split duke in 1982. The Panamanian southpaw came back to Japan to face ex-champ Tomori, whom he badly halted in eight lopsided rounds in November of the same year.

The Panamanian forfeited his WBC 108-pound belt to gKorean Hawkh Jung-Koo Chang via third-round stoppage in Korean in 1983, when he was close to a limit of going on as a 108-pounder, which seemed a gMission impossibleh for him to stay in the category any longer.

Zapata moved up to the flyweight category, where he became the WBA flyweight champ again by winning a vacant WBA throne on a unanimous decision over Alonzo Gonzalez in 1985. The Panamanian defense master came back to Japan in his second defense and defeated Shuichi Hozumi by a unanimous nod in 1986.

To make a long story short, Zapatafs last fight was against WBC super-fly ruler Sung-Kil Moon, who kept his belt by a quick blitzkrieg in the first round in 1993. Itfs Zapatafs farewell to arms.

This reporter had something to do with Hilario Zapata. I was the trainer of the dethroned champ Nakajima, and was also the matchmaker of his last appearance against Sung-Kil Moon in Korea. When this reporter met Hilario in the dressing room at the Korakuen Hall, he looked much older than he was fighting (though logical). I said, gDonft you remember me, Hilario?h It was natural that the Panamanian ex-champ forgot my face and name, since thatfs a very long time ago?some twenty years ago.

(2-11-2015)


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