Ricardo Williams (boxer)

Ricardo Williams Jr.
Statistics
Real name Ricardo Williams Jr.
Nickname(s) Slicky Ricky
Weight(s) Welterweight
Height 5 ft 10 in (180 cm)
Nationality United States American
Born (1981-06-25) June 25, 1981
Cincinnati, Ohio
Stance Orthodox
Boxing record
Total fights 26
Wins 22
Wins by KO 12
Losses 3
Draws 0
No contests 1

Ricardo Williams Jr. (born June 25, 1981 in Cincinnati, OH) is a professional boxer. Williams won a Light Welterweight Silver Medal at the 2000 Olympic Games, and turned pro in the following year and was immediately dubbed as a future star in the sport and the best fighter to come out of the 2000 games.

Amateur career

Williams had a stellar amateur career. His highlights include:

  • 1998 United States Amateur Light welterweight champion
  • 1998 National Golden Gloves Light welterweight champion.
  • 1999 United States Amateur Light welterweight champion
  • Represented the United States as a Light welterweight at the 2000 Sydney Olympic games, winning a silver medal. His results were:

Pro career

Known as "Slicky Ricky", Williams was an extremely talented fighter with power in both fists, but quickly become known for his uninspired performances as a pro. Two years after turning pro, Williams tendency to undertrain hurt him severely, as he dropped a unanimous decision to unheralded Juan Valenzuela. The following year, fighting 11 pounds higher than when he had turned pro, Williams turned in yet another disappointing performance against journeyman Manning Galloway, and lost a split decision.

Troubles outside the ring

Rather than going on to win the expected title belt, in 2005 Williams had a serious run in with the law which brought any title dreams crashing down. He was sentenced to three years in prison for his part in a conspiracy to distribute cocaine shipped to Cincinnati via FedEx. [1] This charge was a crushing blow to Cincinnati sports fans, who recently had another boxing titlist and former Olympian, Tim Austin, charged with serious crimes.

Return to boxing

After serving 31 months of his sentence, Williams was released from prison and resumed his boxing training. In his first fight since his release, in June 2008 he stopped Sebastian Hamel after just 91 seconds of a welterweight bout. He has won three other fights since then, including a January 2009 victory against Doel Carrasquillo.[2]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.