It is somewhat of a shame
when the question comes up , who was the greatest
fighter to come out of Mexico ? The answer is
usually Julio Cesar Chavez. Some say Salvador
Sanchez. Others may say Ruben Olivares. These three
are truly legendary fighters. To me one other
outstanding boxer from Mexico is Carlos Zarate.
Zarate began his career in 1970 and won his first
fifty two fights. Fifty one by knockout. A lot of
Zarate's early opposition may have been, in the
words of Greg Haugen when he questioned Chavez's
fine record were over a bunch of Mexican taxi
drivers, amazing!! Well I don't know if I'd go that
far because Carlos beefed up his record but he was
also learning his trade and learning it well.
By 1974 Zarate was moving up in the ratings. He
stopped a tough fighter from Odessa, Texas named
James Martinez. He halted unbeaten Joe Guevara. He
stopped Orlando Amores, Benicio Sosa and Nestor
Jimenez.
In May of 1976 Carlos halted the talented Rodolfo
Martinez in nine rounds to win the WBC bantamweight
title. That would lead to a run of seven title
defenses. In 1977 Carlos would meet WBA champion
Alfonso Zamora in a non-title match. Zarate won the
" Battle Of The Z Bombers " with a convincing fourth
round kayo. In 1978 Carlos would turn back the
challenge of future champion Alberto Davila.
Carlos decided to move up in weight and challenge
the also undefeated Wilfredo Gomez for the WBC 122
pound title. The fight took place October 28, 1978
in Puerto Rico. The extremely gifted Gomez appeared
to be too fast for Zarate. Wilfredo had Carlos down
and the fight was stopped in the fifth round with
Gomez retaining his title.
Zarate would drop back to 118 pounds. He would
defend his WBC title one more time and then meet
tough Lupe Pintor. Zarate started well but Pintor
came on strong in the later rounds. After fifteen
rounds Pintor was awarded a very controversial
decision and the title. In disgust, Carlos would
walk away from the game for nearly seven years.
Carlos returned in 1986 and would reel off twelve
more wins, ten by knockout. In 1987 he took on
Australian sensation Jeff Fenech for the WBC Super
Bantamweight title. Jeff held on to his crown by a
technical decision in four rounds.On February 29,
1988 Carlos met Daniel Zaragoza for the vacant WBC
122 pound title. The rugged Zaragoza stopped Carlos
in the tenth round. It would be Zarate's last fight.
In all Carlos had 70 fights. He won 66 of them.
Sixty three were by the KO route. He was tall and
rangy. He had a stiff jab and a booming overhand
right. He also had one of the best left hooks to the
liver I have ever seen. Three of his four losses
were to boxers now enshrined in the International
Boxing Hall Of Fame. To me he has to rank among the
best bantamweights of all time.
Jim Amato