About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 17. Chapters: Agapito Gomez, Alberto Miguel, Alfonso Perez Burrull, Alfredo Evangelista, Antonio Caballero, Antonio Rubio, Antonio Sanchez (boxer), Cecilio Lastra, Diosbelys Hurtado, Emilio Bautista, Enrique Rodriguez (boxer), Faustino Reyes, Gabriel Campillo, Ivan Pozo, Javier Castillejo, Jonathan Alonso, Jose Antonio Hernando, Jose Duran (boxer), Jose Kelvin de la Nieve, Jose Legra, Jose Manuel Gomet, Jose Ortega (boxer), Jose Pastor, Juan Francisco Rodriguez, Julio Gomez, Kiko Martinez, Lorenzo Vitria, Luis Bru, Manuel Sobral, Oscar Vega, Paulino Uzcudun, Pedro Carrasco, Perico Fernandez, Poli Diaz, Rafael Lozano, Ruperto Biete, Sergio Rey, Vicente Rodriguez (boxer), Vicente Valdero, Victor Manuel Baute. Excerpt: Francisco Javier Castillejo (born March 22, 1968) is a professional boxer from Spain. He is the former WBC light middleweight champion and former WBA middleweight champion. He has fought against stars Oscar De La Hoya, Felix Sturm, Fernando Vargas, Julio Cesar Vasquez, Michael Rask, and Mariano Natalio Carrera. Castillejo is considered the best Spanish boxer in history. Nicknamed "El Lince de Parla" ("Parla's Lynx," in English), Castillejo is a native of the Parla area of Madrid. He currently resides and trains in Madrid. Castillejo made his professional debut on July 22 of 1988, when he outpointed Angel Diez over six rounds in Madrid. He had an immediate rematch with Diez, on September 2 of the same year. Their second fight resulted in Castillejo's first knockout win, when he beat Diez in the fourth round. On November 4, he had his first fight outside Madrid, and his first knockout win in the first round, when he beat Juan Perez in Torrejon. Castillejo had four more wins, before he was defeated for the first time. On August 19, 1989, he lost an eight round decision to Del Bryan, in Benidorm. But he followed that loss with a streak of twenty two victories in a row. Among the most notable wins during that streak were a fourth round knockout on October 19, 1990, of Alfonzo Redondo, which gave Castillejo the Spanish Welterweight Championship, at Leganes. On July 5, 1991, he retained that national championship, with another fourth round knockout victory, this time against Domingo Sanchez, in Lugo. On April 10, 1992, Castillejo got his first win against a former or future world champion, when he knocked out former IBF lightweight champion, Puerto Rican Harry Arroyo, in three rounds at Leganes. He followed that victory with another win versus a former world champion, the former WBC light welterweight champion Saoul Mamby of Jamaica, by an eight round decision on May 15, at Bilbao. On December 12 of that year, Castillejo added the WBC's Mundo Hispano light middleweight tit