MANILA, Philippines—From the pioneering Asian great Pancho Villa to Gabriel “Flash” Elorde and surefire future Hall of Famers Manny Pacquiao and Nonito Donaire Jr., the Philippines has a long and rich history in boxing.
Fast forward to present day, however, the Philippines finds itself longing for a world champion in the sport after its last remaining titlist Mark Magsayo failed in his first title defense, yielding the WBC featherweight belt to Mexico’s Rey Vargas on Sunday.
It was only six months ago when Magsayo became the fifth active Filipino boxing champion after he edged Gary Russell Jr. for the 126-pound strap.
Between January and July, one Filipino champion after another was knocked off his pedestal.
Dethroned
Longtime IBF super flyweight champion Jerwin Ancajas was the first to fall following a stunning loss to Fernando Martinez of Argentina on February 26. Ancajas (33-2, 22KOs) had held the IBF crown since January 2017.
While Ancajas was able to make nine successful title defenses, his compatriot John Riel Casimero’s reign ended abruptly after he got stripped of his WBO bantamweight belt in May 2022.
The enigmatic Casimero was forced to relinquish his title after he failed to defend it against Paul Butler on two occasions.
The first time came in December of last year when Casimero was a no-show during the official weigh-in, citing a case of gastritis and then four months later after he broke strict medical policy by the British Boxing Board of Control (BBBoC) for using a sauna to cut down weight prior to his rescheduled title bout in Liverpool, England.
The misery continued for Philippine boxing in June when Donaire lasted just inside two rounds against top pound-for-pound fighter Naoya Inoue in their much-awaited unification rematch in Saitama, Japan.
Donaire (42-7, 28KOs) was dropped twice en route to a second-round TKO loss as Inoue added the WBC bantamweight crown to his collection.
It took a turn for the worse the following month with both Rene Cuarto and Magsayo losing their world titles less than two weeks apart.
Cuarto (20-3-2, 11KOs), who was defending his IBF minimumweight belt, took a split decision loss to Mexican Daniel Valladares in Mexico while Magsayo also lost via split decision despite scoring a ninth-round knockdown.
Failed bids
Two Filipino contenders in Jonas Sultan and Mark Anthony Barriga also failed to make the most of their respective world title shots this year.
Sultan(18-6, 11KOs) was tapped as Casimero’s replacement against Butler in April for the vacant WBO interim title.
Butler won by unanimous decision and was later elevated to full champion status by the WBO.
Barriga (11-2, 2KOs) also lost on points to Puerto Rico’s Jonathan Gonzalez for the WBO light flyweight championship last June.
Next man up
Donnie Nietes, who holds the distinction as the longest-reigning Filipino champion, failed to end the losing trend as he botched his bid reclaim the WBO super flyweight title in a rematch with Japan’s Kazuto Ioka in Tokyo.
Nietes lost to Ioka via unanimous decision in a lopsided bout on Wednesday at Ota City General Gymnasium in Tokyo, Japan.
He (43-1, 23KOs) beat Ioka by split decision in their first fight to win the vacant WBO crown back in December 2018 in Macau.
But Nietes decided to vacate the belt after he refused WBO’s order to fight fellow Filipino Aston Palicte for a second time to pursue other champions in the 115-pound class.
After Nietes, Ancajas is likely next for a shot at regaining his champion status.
Ancajas has been very vocal about avenging his loss to Martinez and reclaiming the IBF title in a bout targeted for later this year before potentially moving up in weight.
A title shot is also not far down the road for Casimero. Despite his troubles, Casimero remains the number one ranked contender by the WBO.
Up-and-comer Melvin Jerusalem (18-2, 10KOs) is also on track for a crack at a world title as the number one ranked fighter by the WBO at the minimumweight class. He is also ranked No. 2 by the WBC.
Like Nietes, flyweight prospect Dave Apolinario (16-0, 11KOs) is also fighting for the world title—albeit the unwidely recognized International Boxing Organization (IBO) belt—against South African Gideon Buthelezi on July 29 in East London, South Africa.
While there is currently no Filipino boxing champion, it doesn’t take away the fact that the Philippines is a hotbed for talent in the sport and it’s only a matter of time before another is crowned.