Perez visited
Rahway State Prison in
Woodbridge Township, New Jersey, at a time when professional boxing fights were allowed in American prison systems, to oversee the ten round bout between
James Scott and
Alvaro Lopez, Saturday, December 1 of 1979, a match in which Perez also served as a voting judge. Scott, who was an inmate at the same jail at that time, won a ten-round unanimous decision, Perez scoring the fight 8 rounds to 2.
Cooney versus Norton On May 11, 1981, Perez was given referee duties for the
HBO Boxing televised event between Heavyweights
Gerry Cooney and the former WBC world champion, Hall of Fame member
Ken Norton. Cooney won the fight by technical knockout 54 seconds into the first round. The fight catapulted Cooney into his
showdown with Larry Holmes for the WBC world title and culminated Norton's career. Perez was criticized for not stopping the match earlier, as Norton was motionless in a corner seconds before Perez intervened. Next came the WBA world bantamweight title match between champion
Jeff Chandler and fellow Puerto Rican, former world champion
Julian Solís of
Puerto Rico. This was a rematch and Perez refereed it; on Saturday, July 25, 1981, at the
Resorts International in
Atlantic City, New Jersey Chandler retained the title stopping Solis in seven rounds. On August 15, 1981, Zapata outpointed Torres over fifteen rounds. The next major match refereed by Perez pitted an already legendary boxer and (later) Hall of Famer (Arguello) defending his third divisional world title, the WBC Lightweight one, against a future legend, world champion and Hall of Famer himself,
Ray Mancini, at Bally's Park Place Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, October 3, 1981. Arguello retained the title with a fourteenth-round knockout in a fight ended by a highlight reel knockout.
Disqualification of Elisha Obed On November 12, 1981, Perez was involved in two rather large fights,
Rocky Lockridge versus
Refugio Rojas (won by future world champion Lockridge by ten round majority decision; Perez, also a judge in this fight, scored it for Lockridge 7-2-1) and future world Light Heavyweight champion
Bobby Czyz versus former Junior Middleweight world champion
Elisha Obed of
The Bahamas. The Czyz-Obed bout, a Middleweight contest scheduled for ten rounds, was notable because Perez disqualified Obed in round six for what Perez considered to be excessive holding on the Bahamian's part. Obed tried to attack Perez after the match's end, Perez warning him to stay away from Perez.
Refereeing Salvador Sanchez's last bout Perez was the referee, on July 21, 1982, of the last bout fought by legendary Mexican boxer
Salvador Sanchez when he defended, successfully, his WBC world Featherweight title against a then almost unknown, but now also legendary, challenger
Azumah Nelson from
Ghana. Sanchez retained the crown by a fifteenth-round technical knockout, then died tragically 21 days later, killed in a car crash near
Mexico City. Both Sanchez and Nelson later became members of the International Boxing Hall of Fame as well.
Luis Resto versus Billy Collins, Jr. Almost a year after Sanchez-Nelson, Perez was involved in another very controversial fight, although this time no one could blame him for the controversy that arose after the match; On June 16, 1983, in the program headlined by the
Davey Moore versus
Roberto Durán WBA world Junior Middleweight championship bout, Perez got to referee and judge a Junior Middleweight encounter between 14 wins, no losses or draws
Billy Collins, Jr. and 20 wins, 8 losses and 2 draws
Luis Resto. Resto pounded Collins for ten rounds and was initially given a ten rounds unanimous decision win, but Billy Collins, Sr. noticed that padding had been removed from Resto's gloves when Collins, Sr. touched one of them right after the bout. Upon finding evidence of this by the
New York State Athletic Commission, the fight's result was overturned and changed to a "no-contest" instead. Collins, Jr. sustained career ending injuries to his eyes and died on March 6, 1984, when he crashed his car in
Antioch, Tennessee, while Resto and Resto's trainer
Panama Lewis were tried in court during 1986 and sentenced to three and six years in jail, respectively, Resto being released in 1989 and Lewis in 1990. Then, on September 10, 1983, Perez was the referee for the
Larry Holmes versus
Scott Frank WBC world Heavyweight title bout held at the
Harrah's Marina Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City. Holmes beat Frank by fifth-round technical knockout. Five days later, Perez was back at the Madison Square Garden as referee of the Ray Mancini-
Orlando Romero WBA world Lightweight championship match, which Mancini won by ninth-round knockout when Perez counted the Peruvian Romero out as Romero sat on the canvas after a punch.
Coetzee vs. Dokes On September 23, 1983, Perez participated in another historic fight, when
Michael Dokes defended his WBA world Heavyweight title against Gerrie Coetzee. South African
Coetzee beat
Dokes by tenth-round knockout at the
Richfield Coliseum in
Richfield, Ohio, becoming not only the first White world Heavyweight champion since
Ingemar Johansson 23 years before, but also the first world Heavyweight champion from Africa in boxing history.
Hagler's knockdown Perez refereed the March 30, 1984, world Middleweight title fight between champion
Marvelous Marvin Hagler and his Argentine challenger,
Juan "The Hammer" Roldan at the
Riviera Hotel in
Las Vegas, Nevada. In a situation somewhat similar to the Ali-Wepner fight he'd refereed years before, Hagler went down seconds after the first round had begun as he slipped followed by a right hand from Roldan that grazed the champion's head. Perez called it a knockdown, the only official knockdown suffered by Hagler in his professional boxing career. In round three, Roldan became entangled against the ropes after a Hagler combination and fell; Perez also ruled that a knockdown. Hagler eventually retained the title by a tenth-round technical knockout. ==Jamaica's first world championship==