Shoji Oguma

Shoji Oguma
Statistics
Real name Shoji Oguma
Rated at Flyweight
Height 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m)
Nationality Japan Japanese
Born (1951-07-22) July 22, 1951
Koriyama, Fukushima,Japan
Stance Southpaw
Boxing record
Total fights 49
Wins 38
Wins by KO 20
Losses 10
Draws 1

Shoji Oguma (大熊 正二 born July 22, 1951 in Koriyama, Japan) was a Japanese professional boxer who held the WBC and Lineal titles in the Flyweight division.

Professional career

Oguma turned pro in 1970 and in 1974 won the WBC Flyweight Title by winning a split decision over Betulio González. He lost the title three months later in his first defense against Miguel Canto. In 1976, Oguma challenged WBA Flyweight Title holder Alfonso Lopez but lost a majority decision. In 1978 he landed a rematch with WBC Flyweight Title holder Canto but came up short with a split decision loss. Later that year he fought his third bout with Canto, and this time lost a more clear unanimous decision to complete their trilogy.[1] In 1979 he rematched WBA Flyweight Title holder Gonzalez and the result was a draw. Later that year they fought a rematch and Gonzalez came up with the victory via a 12th round KO in their third match.

Winning the lineal championship

In 1980 Oguma landed a shot at WBC and Lineal Flyweight Champion Chan-Hee Park and KO'd Park in the 9th round to capture the titles. He defended the titles twice the same year, including a split decision over Park, and his annual performance was named Ring magazine Comeback of the Year for 1980. In 1981 Oguma defended the titles successfully again against Park, but lost the belts in his following bout by KO to Antonio Avelar. He then moved up in weight and in 1982 took on WBA Super Flyweight Title holder Jiro Watanabe, but was TKO'd in the 12th. Oguma retired after the bout.

See also

References

  1. "July 6, 1979: Gonzalez vs Oguma IV". The Fight City. Retrieved 1 December 2016.

External links

Achievements
Preceded by
Betulio González
WBC Flyweight Champion
1 Oct 1974–8 Jan 1975
Succeeded by
Miguel Canto
Preceded by
Chan-Hee Park
Lineal Flyweight Champion
18 May 1980–12 May 1981
Succeeded by
Antonio Avelar
Preceded by
Chan-Hee Park
The Ring Flyweight Champion
18 May 1980–12 May 1981
Succeeded by
Antonio Avelar
Preceded by
Chan-Hee Park
WBC Flyweight Champion
18 May 1980–12 May 1981
Succeeded by
Antonio Avelar


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