In 1990, then-current Puerto Rican boxing standouts included John John Molina, Wilfredo Vazquez, Hector "Macho" Camacho Sr., Edwin Rosario, and Rosario's nemesis
Juan Nazario. Early in 1990, a small controversy ensued between
Felix Trinidad Sr., a former national Featherweight champion in Puerto Rico, and the Puerto Rican Boxing Commission, regarding the possible participation of Trinidad Sr.'s son,
Felix Trinidad, at the
1992 Barcelona, Spain, Summer Olympics, the Trinidads taking the decision of having Felix Jr. become a professional boxer instead. On March 10, 1990, Trinidad Jr., debuted as a professional boxer, knocking out the also debuting Angel Romero in round two at Miramar ward, San Juan, Puerto Rico. Also in 1990, former world light-heavyweight champion José Torres of Ponce was elected as president of the surging World Boxing Organization; and avenging a loss that Rosario had, coincidentally, inflicted him in the same round and for the same title but in Chicago, Illinois two and a half years before. This had been Rosario's third term as world Lightweight champion. The Rosario-Nazario rematch was televised by HBO Boxing. On Saturday, August 11, 1990, Camacho Sr. successfully defended his WBO world Junior-Welterweight title by beating his personal friend,
Tony Baltazar by a twelve-rounds unanimous decision at the
Caesars Tahoe hotel in
Stateline, Nevada. That same evening and at the same location, Nazario fought
Pernell Whitaker, trying to unify his WBA world Lightweight title with the WBC and IBF ones, which were held at the time by Whitaker. In a rare show of power by him, Whitaker stopped the Puerto Rican, winning by first-round knockout. On February 23, 1991, Camacho lost his WBO world Junior-Welterweight title to
Greg Haugen in a fight at the Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas. Camacho and Haugen were close on the scorecards, but a moment in round twelve when Camacho refused to touch gloves with his challenger proved costly: Camacho was deducted a point by referee
Carlos Padilla and as a consequence, he lost the fight by scorecards of 113–114 and 112–114 against him and a 114–112 for him. Haugen allegedly had an illegal substance found on his body during the after-fight urinalysis, and the result was over-turned into a no-contest; the WBO retained Haugen as their champion; the result was again overturned into a Camacho loss after Camacho's 1992 contest with Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. Camacho-Haugen I is considered a boxing classic by such outlets as
ESPN. Haugen and Camacho had an immediate rematch, held on May 18, 1991, at the
Reno-Sparks Convention Center in
Reno, Nevada. The second time, Camacho dropped Haugen in round eleven and edged out an equally close, split decision to reclaim the WBO world Junior-Welterweight title, with scores of 115–112 and 114–113 for him and 112–115 against him. The possible match between him and Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. was now one of the most hotly anticipated fights of the era by then. On Friday, June 14, 1991, Rosario beat
Loreto Garza by way of a third-round knockout to win his fourth world championship and his second divisional title, the WBA world Junior-Welterweight championship, in a contest which was carried on HBO Boxing's Pay-Per-View leg, TVKO. This fight took place at the
Arco Arena. in champion Garza's hometown of
Sacramento, California. This was Rosario's last win of significance; he soon lost his title to
Akinobu Hiranaka of Japan and faced drug and alcohol problems. Rosario died in December 1997. On October 4, 1991, Ponce's
Alex Sanchez debuted by beating Carlos Figueroa by a first-round knockout at
the western Puerto Rican city of Mayaguez, in a Minimumweight bout. Sanchez would later emerge as a lower-weights star and also establish himself as a mainstream celebrity in the island. In 1991, Carlos Ortiz became the first Puerto Rican boxer to be elected into the International Boxing Hall of Fame. Another monumental moment in the history of the Puerto Rico-Mexico boxing rivalry took place when Julio Cesar Chavez defended his WBC world Junior-Welterweight title against Hector Camacho, in a contest that gained great attention in Mexico, Puerto Rico and internationally. Camacho's WBO world Junior-Welterweight title was not at stake because at the time, the WBC did not recognize the WBO as a world boxing sanctioning entity. Chavez pressured Camacho relentlessly, ultimately winning by a 12-rounds unanimous decision and retaining his belt. That fight was held on
Mexican Independence Day's weekend, on September 12, 1992, at the
Thomas and Mack Center, also in Las Vegas, Nevada. Trinidad's win over Blocker began a title reign that saw him defend his championship 15 times over the next six years, adding the WBC championship along the way. On Wednesday, December 22, 1993, the fast-rising star, Alex Sanchez, became the WBO's world Minimumweight champion, defeating
Orlando Malone for the vacant belt at the
Caribe Hilton Hotel in San Juan by a first-round knockout. Eventually, a match-up between him and Mexican
Ricardo Lopez would become one of the most anticipated ones among the lower weights in the decade.
Dommys Delgado Berty, a Puerto Rican boxing administrator, became a WBO supervisor in 1993; she first supervised a WBO world championship fight when she went to
Zaragoza, Spain, to supervise a bout between her countryman, WBO world Super-Bantamweight champion Daniel Jimenez and the Spanish challenger
Felix Garcia Losada from
Pamplona, contest which took place on Friday, October 29, at Zaragoza's Pabellon Principe Felipe. Puerto Rico's Jimenez won that fight to retain his title, by a fifth-round technical knockout. Delgado Berty would later become one of the main female personalities in Puerto Rican boxing (see below). On January 29, 1994, Trinidad made both his Las Vegas and his Pay-Per-View boxing debut when he faced Camacho with Trinidad's IBF world Welterweight title on the line. Unlike on his previous challenge of Chavez, (where he was merely trying to win another world championship belt in a division in which he had already won world championships twice) Camacho this time was attempting to become a member of the four divisions world champions group. This fight was viewed by boxing fans as a sort of passing the torch type of fight, between a legend from the past decade in Camacho and a future star in Trinidad. It was fought as part of a program headlined by Chavez's WBC world Junior-Welterweight championship bout against American
Frankie Randall (a bout in which Chavez suffered his first loss in ninety fights, by a twelve-rounds split decision). Trinidad beat Camacho by unanimous decision to retain his championship, with scores of 116–110, 119–106 and 117–109, all in Trinidad's favor. On September 3, 1994,
Daniel Jiménez established a world record for the quickest knockout in a championship fight, defeating
Harald Geier in 17 seconds (currently the second fastest). By the mid-1990s, Puerto Rican boxing stars included Trinidad Jr., Wilfredo Vazquez Sr., John John Molina, Daniel Jiménez, Alex Sanchez,
Daniel Alicea and
Josue Camacho. Hector Camacho Sr., and Edwin Rosario, meanwhile, were veterans who were still active, in Rosario's case, until his death in December 1997. Also by this time, Molina had been a three-time world Junior-Lightweight champion, as WBO and then IBF champion in 1989 when he beat first Juan Laporte and then
Tony Lopez, and then in 1992, when he beat
Jackie Gunguluza in South Africa. Continuing the Mexico (and Mexican-American) versus Puerto Rico (and Puerto Rican-American) boxing rivalry, Molina challenged
Oscar De La Hoya for De La Hoya's WBO world Junior-Welterweight championship, at the
MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas on Saturday, February 18, 1995. Molina gave the young champion a good fight; some fans and critics alike even suggested he should have won it by a close margin, including HBO Boxing's
Harold Lederman. De La Hoya, however, retained the belt by a twelve-rounds unanimous decision. On Saturday, May 18, 1996, Wilfredo Vazquez fought Venezuelan
Eloy "Kiki" Rojas for Rojas' WBA world Featherweight title. Deeply behind on the scorecards, Vazquez rallied to score a spectacular, highlight-reel film eleventh-round knockout to win the world title. Having beaten Chang-Yong Park for the organization's world Bantamweight title in 1987 and
Raul Perez in 1992 for the organization's world Super Bantamweight title, Vazquez made history by becoming the first three-division world champion to win all three titles with the same organization in boxing history. On March 1, 1997, Hector Camacho faced
Sugar Ray Leonard for the lowly-regarded, International Boxing Council's Middleweight championship. There were speculations that the winner of this fight would face the winner of the upcoming, WBC world Welterweight title match between Pernell Whitaker and Oscar De La Hoya. Camacho won the match, sending the illustrious Leonard into retirement by knocking him out in five rounds at the Convention Center in
Atlantic City, New Jersey, giving the American his first knockout loss in a fight televised on Pay-Per-View. On Saturday, April 12, 1997, De La Hoya beat Pernell Whitaker by a 12-rounds unanimous decision to win the WBC's world Welterweight title. The bout itself did not have particular meaning as far as the history of boxing in Puerto Rico, but it had repercussions, because soon, De La Hoya would meet the challenge of three Puerto Ricans,
Wilfredo Rivera and legends Camacho Sr. and Trinidad Jr. The longly awaited-for unification bout between Sanchez and Mexican legend, the undefeated (46–0)
Ricardo Lopez, took place on Saturday, August 27, 1997, at the
Madison Square Garden in New York city, once again igniting the Mexico-Puerto Rico boxing rivalry. Lopez dominated a brave but overmatched Sanchez, knocking him out in round five to retain his WBC world title and add the WBO one to it. With a record of 51 wins, 0 losses and 1 draw (tie), Lopez later retired as a boxing legend and one of the very few world champions ever to retire undefeated. On
September 13, 1997, once again at Mexican Independence Day weekend, Oscar De La Hoya defended his WBC world Welterweight title against Héctor Camacho Sr., who was once again attempting to join the exclusive group of four-division world champions, in a Pay-Per-View event from the Thomas And Mack Center in Las Vegas. De La Hoya dominated the contest, nicknamed "Opposites Attack", despite Camacho's resilience and courage, dropping Camacho in round nine on his way to a comfortable, 12-rounds unanimous decision victory. By this time, clamor for a unification fight between the young stars, De La Hoya and Trinidad, was growing. On
Saturday, April 18, 1998, Vazquez challenged the legendary boxer from England,
Naseem Hamed, for Hamed's WBO world Featherweight title. Hamed was making his tenth title defense. Vazquez had been a world traveler in his world championship fighting days, including fights in Mexico, Spain, France, Japan and the United States. Hamed dominated Vazquez before stopping him in round seven of the last major fight in Vazquez's career, at the
Nynex Arena in
Manchester, England. On February 13, 1999, Oscar De La Hoya defeated former WBA world welterweight champion
Ike Quartey of
Ghana by a twelve-rounds split decision in a tremendous war at Las Vegas' Thomas and Mack Center, to retain his WBC world welterweight title. This contest was shown on HBO Pay-Per-View. The next week, Felix Trinidad defended his IBF world welterweight title against a legendary but faded rival, former four-division world champion Pernell Whitaker at the Madison Square Garden in New York city, in a fight carried live on HBO Boxing. Trinidad dropped Whitaker and dominated the bout, winning by a rather easy twelve-rounds unanimous decision to retain the belt, further cementing the seeds for a super-fight showdown between the two young superstars and world welterweight champions. By then, Trinidad's popularity was growing in Puerto Rico; he was now a crossover celebrity and the worshipping he received from some of his fans began to receive the nickname of "Titomania". After De La Hoya further defended his title against
Oba Carr by eleventh-round knockout on Saturday, May 22, 1999, at the
Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, and Trinidad defended his against Colombian
Hugo Pineda by a fourth-round knockout seven days later, on May 29 at the Roberto Clemente Coliseum in San Juan, the stage was set for the major super-fight between the two world champions. An international press-tour that saw the two visit Puerto Rico, the United States and Mexico, among other places, ensued, while the fans awaited for the contest to take place.
Their fight finally took place on September 18, 1999, once again near Mexican Independence Day. It was held at the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. Trinidad-De La Hoya was for Trinidad's IBF belt and De La Hoya's WBC belt. It was a controversial bout; the fight's result was still being debated decades later. De La Hoya apparently thought he had built a lead large enough so that the fight was his after round nine, but Trinidad became more aggressive after that round and closed the fight winning the last three rounds on the scorecards which proved pivotal in his securing a majority-decision victory with scores of 115–113 and 115–114 for him, and a 114–114 tie. With the victory, Trinidad defended his IBF belt for the fifteenth time and annexed the WBC one. Thousands of his fans celebrated the win in Puerto Rico, and he was the object of a large welcoming at
Luis Munoz Marin International Airport and all the way from there to his house in Cupey the next day. De La Hoya-Trinidad is also considered a chapter of the Mexicans-Puerto Ricans boxing rivalry. By the late 1990s, the landscape of programming showing free professional boxing fights had changed in Puerto Rico: most major fights were shown on the Pay-Per-View system, largely leaving WAPA-TV and Telemundo to showing occasional local programs as free television boxing. == 2000s: Trinidad, Cotto, Ruiz ==