Jump to content

Brian Castaño

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brian Castaño
Born (1989-09-12) 12 September 1989 (age 34)
Isidro Casanova, Argentina
Other namesEl Boxi
Statistics
Weight(s)Light middleweight
Height5 ft 7.5 in (171 cm)
Reach68 in (173 cm)
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights20
Wins17
Wins by KO12
Losses1
Draws2
Medal record
Representing  Argentina
South American Games
Gold medal – first place 2010 Medellin Welterweight

Brian Carlos Castaño (born 12 September 1989) is an Argentine professional boxer. He held the WBO light middleweight title between 2021 and 2022 and previously held the WBA interim light middleweight title from 2016 to 2018, and the WBA (Regular) light middleweight title from 2018 to 2019. As of November 2020, he is ranked as the world's fifth best active light middleweight by The Ring magazine, the Transnational Boxing Rankings Board and third by BoxRec.

Early life and amateur career

Castaño started boxing at 11, trained by his father Carlos, who was also a professional boxer. Castaño won a South American Games gold medal and tallied a 181–5–5 record as an amateur,[1] with wins over Errol Spence Jr. and Esquiva Falcão. Castaño participated in the 2009 World Amateur Boxing Championships, winning his first two bout before losing to Jack Culcay-Keth. He also represented Argentina in the World Series of Boxing. Castaño accumulated a 3–0 record in the World Series, including a famous win over Sergiy Derevyanchenko, who had previously been unbeaten in the competition.[2]

Professional career

Early career

Castaño made his professional debut in September 2012, months after his win over Derevianchenko. He beat Alejandro Antonio Dominguez with a round 4 technical knockout at Luna Park. Castaño won his first 8 fights, 7 by way of knockout, before being sidelined due to an arrhytmia which caused several medical complications.[3][4] After recovering, Castaño relocated to the United States.[5] Castaño maintained his winning streak, winning four fights over the course of a year while fighting out of the U.S.

Rise up the ranks

In November 2016, Castaño fought Emmanuel de Jesús for the WBA interim super welterweight title. After knocking De Jesús down on round 1 with a flurry of punches, Castaño went down at the beginning of round 2, following a cross from De Jesús. Castaño survived the round and as the fight went on, De Jesús started slowing down. Castaño eventually won the fight with a body shot towards the end of round 6.[6]

Castaño stepped up against former world title challenger and long-time contender, Michel Soro. Castaño won a close fight by split decision (115–113, 115–113, 112–116). The judges seemed to prefer Castaño's activity and consistency over Soro's calculated pressure, who admitted he had started slow in a post-fight interview.[7] Two months after the fight, Castaño said that Soro's promoter, Univent, had yet to pay most of his purse.[8]

WBA (Regular) light middleweight champion

Castaño vs. Vitu

After Demetrius Andrade vacated his WBA (Regular) title, the WBA elevated Castaño to regular champion. Shortly thereafter, the WBA ordered a fight between Castaño and WBA (Super) champion, Erislandy Lara.[9] Castaño would first face Cedric Vitu on 10 March 2018. Castaño showcased his talent, and defeated Vitu via a 12th-round TKO, dominating him from start to finish to retain his WBA (Regular) title.[10]

Castaño vs. Lara

On 2 March 2019, Castaño defended his title against former world champion Erislandy Lara. The fight ended in a split draw, one judge scoring it 115–113 for Castaño, one judge scoring it 115–113 for Lara while the third had it 114–114.[11][12]

On June 25, 2019, the WBA announced that they are stripping Castaño of his belt, because he did not sign the contract for a rematch against Cedric Vitu, his immediate mandatory challenger.[13]

In his next fight, Castaño faced veteran Wale Omotoso. The fight was a one-sided affair in favor of Castaño, up until the end of the fifth round, in which Omotoso declared a shoulder injury was too painful to proceed, awarding Castaño with the victory.[14]

WBO light middleweight champion

Castaño vs. Teixeira

On 13 February 2021, Castaño defeated WBO light middleweight champion Patrick Teixeira via wide unanimous decision with judges' scores of 119–109, 120–108 and 117–111 in his favor.[15]

Castaño vs. Charlo

Castaño faced unified light middleweight champion Jermell Charlo on 17 July 2021 in San Antonio, Texas in a showdown for the undisputed light middleweight championship. A competitive fight between them ended in a split draw, the second of Castaño's career, with scores of 117–111 Charlo, 114–113 Castaño and 114–114 even.[16] The result was controversial, with much attention being brought to judge Nelson Vazquez's 117–111 Charlo card, which was described as "terrible" by Andre Ward.[17] After the fight, an upset Castaño opined, "[Charlo] won the second, tenth and eleventh [rounds], that’s it... I don’t agree with [the result]. I felt I was robbed, and I demand a rematch."[18]

Castaño vs. Charlo II

On November 27, 2021, it was revealed by ESPN that Castaño and Charlo had agreed to face each other in a rematch.[19] The fight was officially announced on February 8, 2022, and was supposed to take place on March 19.[20] Castaño was forced to withdraw on February 17 however, after suffering a slight biceps tear during training camp.[21] A day later, the WBO ordered Castaño to show cause as to why Charlo should't be rescheduled to make an overdue mandatory title defense against Tim Tszyu.[22] The fight was granted sanctioning approval by the WBO on May 3, under the condition that it takes place by May 14.[23] The bout was officially announced for May 14, 2022, and took place at the Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California.[24] He lost by 10th-round knockout after being knocked down twice.[25] He was down on all three of the judges' scorecards at the time of the stoppage, with scores of 84–87, 83–88 and 82–89.[26]

Professional boxing record

20 fights17 wins1 loss
By knockout121
By decision40
By disqualification10
Draws2
No.ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
20Loss17–1–2Jermell CharloKO10 (12), 2:3314 May 2022Dignity Health Sports Park, Carson, California, U.S.Lost WBO light middleweight title;
For WBA (Super), WBC, IBF, and The Ring light middleweight titles
19Draw17–0–2Jermell CharloSD1217 Jul 2021AT&T Center, San Antonio, Texas, U.S.Retained WBO light middleweight title;
For WBA (Super), WBC, IBF, and The Ring light middleweight titles
18Win17–0–1Patrick TeixeiraUD1213 Feb 2021Fantasy Springs Resort Casino, Indio, California, U.S.Won WBO light middleweight title
17Win16–0–1Wale OmotosoRTD5 (10), 3:002 Nov 2019MGM National Harbor, Oxon Hill, Maryland, U.S.Won vacant WBO Inter-Continental light middleweight title
16Draw15–0–1Erislandy LaraSD122 Mar 2019Barclays Center, New York City, New York, U.S.Retained WBA (Regular) light middleweight title
15Win15–0Cédric VituTKO12 (12), 2:2710 Mar 2018La Seine Musicale, Boulogne-Billancourt, FranceRetained WBA (Regular) light middleweight title
14Win14–0Michel SoroSD121 Jul 2017Casino d'Évian, Évian-les-Bains, FranceRetained WBA interim light middleweight title
13Win13–0Emmanuel de JesúsKO6 (12), 2:2326 Nov 2016Polideportivo Juan Domingo Perón, González Catán, ArgentinaWon WBA interim light middleweight title
12Win12–0Marcus UpshawTKO5 (10), 2:0312 Jul 2016Robinson Rancheria Resort & Casino, Nice, California, U.S.
11Win11–0Aaron GarcíaUD818 Dec 2015Palms Casino Resort, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.
10Win10–0Jonathan BatistaDQ5 (6), 1:1529 Aug 2015Staples Center, Los Angeles, California, U.S.Batista disqualified for low blows
9Win9–0Todd ManuelTKO1 (6), 2:5326 Jul 2015Little Creek Casino Resort, Shelton, Washington, U.S.
8Win8–0Críspulo Javier AndinoTKO2 (10), 0:074 Apr 2015Club Almirante Brown, San Justo, Argentina
7Win7–0César Sastre SilvaTKO4 (8), 0:196 Jun 2014Villa La Ñata Sporting Club, Benavídez, Argentina
6Win6–0Juan CuellarTKO2 (6), 2:4012 Apr 2014Estadio República de Venezuela, San Carlos de Bolívar, Argentina
5Win5–0Claudinei LacerdaTKO5 (8), 2:4612 Oct 2013Polideportivo Gustavo Toro Rodriguez, San Martín, Argentina
4Win4–0César VélezTKO2 (10), 2:2725 May 2013Luna Park, Buenos Aires, Argentina
3Win3–0Pablo RoldanUD626 Jan 2013Polideportivo Municipal, Monte Hermoso, Argentina
2Win2–0Jose Carlos PazTKO5 (6), 1:4020 Oct 2012Luna Park, Buenos Aires, Argentina
1Win1–0Alejandro Antonio DominguezTKO4 (6), 2:5922 Sep 2012Luna Park, Buenos Aires, Argentina

See also

References

External links

Sporting positions
World boxing titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Jack Culcay
WBA light middleweight champion
Interim title

26 November 2016 - 22 October 2017
Promoted
Title discontinued
Preceded by WBA light middleweight champion
Regular title

22 October 2017 - 20 June 2019
Vacated
Vacant
Title next held by
Erislandy Lara
Preceded by WBO light middleweight champion
13 February 2021 – 14 May 2022
Succeeded by
🔥 Top keywords: Main PageSpecial:SearchWikipedia:Featured picturesYasukeHarrison ButkerRobert FicoBridgertonCleopatraDeaths in 2024Joyce VincentXXXTentacionHank AdamsIt Ends with UsYouTubeNew Caledonia2024 Indian general electionHeeramandiDarren DutchyshenSlovakiaKingdom of the Planet of the ApesAttempted assassination of Robert FicoLawrence WongBaby ReindeerXXX: Return of Xander CageThelma HoustonFuriosa: A Mad Max SagaMegalopolis (film)Richard GaddKepler's SupernovaWicked (musical)Sunil ChhetriXXX (2002 film)Ashley MadisonAnya Taylor-JoyPlanet of the ApesNava MauYoung SheldonPortal:Current eventsX-Men '97