Pernell Whitaker is being
inducted into the International Boxing Hall Of
Fame in a few weeks. This is an honor he richly
deserves. His storied amateur career along with
his " Who's Who " list of boxers he met in the
professional ranks surely entitles him to this
honor. What a career he had !
Within two years after turning pro Whitaker was
beating the likes of John Montes, Rafael
Williams and former champion Alfredo Layne. In
1987 he outpointed the highly regarded Roger
Mayweather. He garnered his first title shot in
1988 and he lost a decision that has to be
rated among the most unjust of all time. Tough
Jose Luis Rameriz had " retained " his WBC
lightweight title. It was quite a gift.
Pernell regrouped in 1989 and proceeded to give
rugged Greg Haugen a boxing lesson to win the
IBF version of the lightweight title. Later
that year he avenged his " loss " to Rameriz
and picked up the WBC title too. Pernell was
awesome at 135 pounds beating back the
challenges of men like Freddie Pendleton,
Azumah Nelson, Juan Nazario and Jorge Paez. In
1992 he moved up to the 140 pound division and
captured the IBF crown with a win over Rafael
Pineda.
In 1993 Pernell moved up in weight again and
won a decision over the crafty Buddy McGirt to
win the WBC welterweight title. Next came a "
draw " with the unbeaten Mexican legend Julio
Cesar Chavez. This was a ludicrous verdict as
Pernell outboxed, outslicked and frustrated
Chavez throughout the contest. In 1994 Pernell
would again out duel McGirt and in 1995 he
moved up again to challenge Julio Cesar Vasquez
for the WBA light middleweight title. Pernell
put on a boxing clinic in winning another title
belt.
Pernell decided to stay at welterweight and in
1996 he received a stiff battle from feisty
Wilfredo Rivera. Pernell retained his title but
it was really the first time in his pro career
that somebody almost beat him on a legitimate
level. Cracks were beginning to show in his
armour. He defeated Rivera convincingly in a
return match. Then in 1997 he nearly met
disaster against a spirited Diosbelys Hurtado.
Behind on the cards, Pernell showed his
champion's heart by stopping Hurtado in round
eleven. No longer did Whitaker appear
invincible.
Next it was Pernell -vs- the Golden Boy, Oscar
De La Hoya. Although the judges gave Oscar the
decision by a comfortable margin, there were
many who felt Pernell had again been robbed. A
fight against Andrei Pestriaev resulted in a No
Contest after Whitaker tested positive for
cocaine. In 1999 Pernell had one more shot at
the limelight as he faced IBF titleholder Felix
" Tito " Trinidad. An older, slower and fading
Whitaker was soundly defeated by Tito. Pernell
would have one more fight but an injury led to
his defeat in four rounds against Carlos
Bojorquez.
Pernell retired with a stellar 40-4-1 record. I
was not a Whitaker fan when he was on top. I
found him rather boring to watch. He rarely
even lost a round during a fight. Looking back
I see now that Pernell was so boring because he
was so good. I watch tapes of him now and I see
just how gifted he was. Roberto Duran is my
favorite fighter. I feel he was the best
lightweight of my time. Nevertheless I feel
that there was one lightweight who would have
given him fits. That man was Pernell Whitaker.
Ironically They are both being inducted this
year. Two of the finest lightweights I've ever
seen.