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5'4" featherweight (125 lbs)
Marcela ‘La Tigresa’ Acuña was born on 16 October 1976 in Formosa, Argentina.
She began training
in the martial arts under the guidance of husband-to-be Ramón Chaparro at the
age of 7. By age twelve, she was a black belt, and at the age of 14, South American
champion, a title she defended successfully 16 times, with 14 wins inside the
distance and one draw.
She began boxing after amassing a 17-1-1 record as a kickboxer, still trained by husband
Ramón.
She made her pro boxing debut at Florida's Pompano Beach Amphitheater on December 5, 1997,
going a full ten rounds against hard-hitting and experienced Christy Martin.
Martin, who was fighting in her home state for the first time in over a year, had
promised her fans a knockout. Martin (140 lbs) controlled Acuña (140¼ lbs)
with her right and landed good flurries to her head and body early in the fight.
Acuña's best moments came in the third and fourth rounds when she landed well to
Martin's head, but Martin connected with a strong right in the fifth and Acuña's eye
began to swell. Martin was rarely in difficulty in the later rounds but Acuña's skills
prevented her from landing solidly enough to produce the KO that Christy had
predicted. The closest that Martin came was in the final round when
she dropped Acuña with a left-right combination to the head. Acuña put in a game
performance in what was clearly a mismatch, but lost by a wide (99-90,99-90,100-90)
margin. Martin improved her record to 24-1-2.
Her second professional bout took place on September 25, 1998 at the Foxwoods Casino in
Ledyard, Connecticut. This time, Marcela (135¼ lbs) faced another of the world's
most formidable female fighters ... Lucia Rijker (137½ lbs, 11-0)
of Los Angeles ... for the newly created WIBO junior welterweight title.
Rijker had been trying unsuccessfully to line up a bout with Christy Martin for
a rumored seven-figure purse, and was looking for a title belt from a men's sanctioning
to bolster her case. Martin vs. Rijker was widely seen as the most exciting matchup
possible in women's boxing at the time. When no deal could be done, Rijker instead went
about displaying her talents to the boxing world by fighting former Martin opponents ... and
showing that she could dispatch them more convincingly than the “Coal Miner's Daughter”
had done!
It was no surprise that the undefeated Rijker was far too much for the
courageous but overmatched Acuña on September 25. Lucia established her jab in the first four rounds then
went to the body in the fifth, ending the fight with a brutal hook to Acuña's body that sent
her to the canvas at the end of the round. Acuña had occasional success landing her own
right, but (like most of Lucia's previous opponents) she was overpowered once the hard-hitting veteran really got to work.
After this baptism of fire, Acuña took a two-and-a-half-year break from professional boxing competition.
She reappeared as a featherweight on April 28, 2001 at Federacion Argentina de Boxeo in
Buenos Aires, Argentina, in the first sanctioned professional women's boxing
bout ever fought in that country. This time she was matched fairly and posted
her first pro win ... a four-round split decision over Jamillia Lawrence of Atlantic City,
New Jersey. The 24-year-old Acuña put on a strong finish with a sustained body attack in the
final round. The scores (on the half-point system used by the
F.A.B.) were 39.5-38.5 and 39-37.5 on two cards,
while the third judge saw it 39-37 for the American, who fell to 7-4 (4 KO's) with the
loss.
Lawrence was a very credible opponent who had stopped Suzanne Riccio-Major, and had gone
the distance with Mary Elizabeth Ortega, with highly-rated Canadian
Kathy Williams (defeating
her once) and with IFBA World Bantamweight champion Eva Jones-Young.
After the fight, the American felt she’d done enough to win saying
"I felt much stronger and had much more experience than Marcela, which is why I hoped when the
final bell rang that they would give the fight to me. She needs to improve her speed of movement
around the ring and learn how to build attacks on that.” She went on to compliment Acuña:
“Her style is good and when she perfects it,
‘La Tigresa’ will be well placed to establish herself as a contender at international level.”
On June 1, 2001 at the Estadio Centenario in her birthplace of Formosa, Argentina,
Marcela (125½ lbs) won a clear (60-55,60-56,60-53) decision over
Luz Marina Sarabia Ledesma (127¾ lbs) of Cartagena, Colombia. Acuña showed better ring
movement and more aggression than her opponent, who was soon overwhelmed by her pressure.
From the second round onwards, Acuña’s right increasingly found its mark,
and a KO seemed close when the Colombian was wobbled in the fifth.
Sarabia fell to 4-1-1 (1 KO) with the loss (all of her previous fights were in Colombia).
On June 30, 2001 at Club Rivadavia in Desde Necochea, Buenos Aires, Argentina,
Marcela (123½ lbs) scored a second round TKO over an outclassed Andrea Pereyra
(129½ lbs) of Uruguay, who fell to 3-2-1. According to reports sent to me,
Acuña showed greater strength, consistency and penetration than
in her previous fights, landing her right to Pereyra's face easily and precisely.
A left hook followed by a straight right destroyed Pereyra's
resistance and brought referee Luis Guzmán in to stop the one-sided
contest. A jubilant Acuña then told reporters: “I am delighted with the enthusiasm of the public here
in Formosa and many other parts of the country where they are asking to see me fight.
Fortunately, tonight I was able to score the first knockout of my career against a
fighter who showed plenty of courage. I want to continue to grow as a boxer so as
not to disappoint the expectations I have aroused in Argentinean boxing circles.
Now that the door has been opened to me, I intend to fulfill my dreams.”
On August 11, 2001 at Estadio Malvinas Argentinas in Mendoza, Argentina,
Marcela moved her pro record to 4-2 (1 KO) with a six-round unanimous (60-52,60-57,60-54)
decision over Yolanda “Yolis” Marrugo of Colombia.
Acuña showed her technical superiority and was aggressive from the start
of this bout, landing heavily early. The Colombian fought
gamely and frustrated Acuña with good lateral movement for most
of the first four rounds, but she mounted very little offense. She
could not hold off Acuña's attack in the fifth and was staggered by several
hard punches. Marrugo spent
the last minute of the fight on the ropes, barely surviving a ferocious,
if untidy, assault from the Argentinean.
One commentator criticized Acuña for being too predictable early in this fight and throwing
the same one-two combinations, praising her nonetheless for her economy of movement and
noting that she punched very hard.
Acuña said that she thought Marrugo was a very good boxer who had not been
able to show her skills, adding “I looked for a knockout from the beginning of the
fight and she held very well.” Marrugo fell to 4-2-1 with the loss.
On September 21, 2001 in Santa Fe, Argentina, Marcela (125½ lbs) won a fifth-round TKO of
Andrea Pereyra (126½ lbs) of Uruguay in a rematch that had been scheduled for six rounds.
Acuña quickly took command of the center of the ring with a stream of jabs punctuated by
straight rights to which the Uruguayan fighter responded sporadically. Pereyra rarely landed
anything solid, so the fight followed the same basic script until 1:14 into the fifth, when
‘La Tigresa’ unleashed a straight right that sent Pereyra sprawling on her back in a neutral
corner. The count was a formality as Pereyra stayed on the canvas a long time and needed
attention from the ring emergency medical team. (Fortunately, she was not seriously hurt).
The win earned Acuña the “80 Anniversario de LA OPINION” trophy.
On October 12, 2001 in Formosa, Argentina,
Marcela advanced to 6-2 (3 KOs) with a second-round KO over Ana Dos Santos.
On January 19, 2002 at Federación Argentina de Box in Buenos Aires, Argentina,
Marcela (124¾ lbs) advanced to 7-2 (4 KOs) with a first-round KO of 40-year-old
fitness instructor Patricia Quirico (125½ lbs) of
Caseros for the Argentine featherweight title.
This was a much-hyped fight in Argentina and some women's boxing promoters in
the USA might take lessons from the build-up that it got! Quirico, for all her 23 exhibition boxing matches and a lifetime in athletics, baseball and the
Korean martial art of sipalki, was in fact making her pro boxing debut. She had
chosen the title ‘La Leona’ or ‘Lioness’, “because I’m fighting to provide for my girls and
give them a better life” .. her daughters Sheila (12 years) and Marlene (10) are said to be
“her number one fans”. Quirico had also opined that Acuña had beaten no one of note.
She had fought an exhibition bout with Acuña two years earlier and dismissed Acuña's
vaunted punching power: “all I can say is that on that occasion I didn’t feel the
hands of the Tigress. I know very well what I can do, I hit hard and I can
take the heat up there in the ring. There’s no doubt in my mind that I’m going to take
the title.” Marcela, whose own children would be at ringside for the title fight,
was livid that this “novice” who was “still a nobody” should be
belittling her achievements ... “I’d like to see how she’d have got on against the same opponents” ...
and vowed to “eat her raw”.
I'm told that the bad blood between Acuña and Quirico began because Acuña felt
that the honor of participating in the first-ever Argentinean title fight (and an
assured place in Argentinean boxing history) should have gone to her friend
Carmen Montiel. She alleged that Quirico had backed out of a meeting with
Montiel that would have decided which of them fought Acuña for the title.
Quirico also infuriated Acuña with allusions to her defeats at the hands of
Martin and Rijker. People from Quirico's gym added to the hype
by talking about how hard Quirico hit, claiming that she had stunned male sparring
partners once or twice in training and that they'd needed a pause to recover.
Acuña, for her part, told interviewers “normally I try to keep a low profile
before a fight, but this time, no; I'm going to teach that woman some
manners”, and “Quirico has shown me a lack of respect and she’s going to pay
dearly for that, that’s one thing I’m absolutely sure of. She´s going to find
out what boxing’s all about when I lay on her the knockout of her life.” Quirico had arrived at the pre-fight press conference in a limousine,
scowling and flanked by heavies as though she were Mike Tyson.
The two women then began shouting at each other and photographers had to plead with
them to pose together. Each promised to knock the other out, but Acuña's deeds in the
ring eventually spoke louder than any words.
Quirico certainly felt Acuna's hands this time as Marcela dispatched ‘The Lioness’ with her first punch
barely 4 seconds into the bout! Acuña almost ran across the ring as the bell sounded, steadied herself
and then speared a right cross through Quirico's guard. Quirico tried to pull her head back and closed
her eyes ("she may not have seen the punch, but she felt it" commented one reporter) and was already on
her way to the canvas as the following left (see picture) brushed past her cheek.
Down she went, heavily, in her own corner. At four she tried to rise but staggered and
referee Luis Guzmán, ruling that she was in no state to continue, counted her out on her feet
at 0:14 seconds. Quirico later claimed she'd been trying to touch gloves ... a view greeted with skepticism ...
and accused the referee of being biased, claiming she had been perfectly capable of continuing.
Acuña saw things differently: “She was in a bad way. Her eyes were crossed and her legs were wobbly.” Qurico refused to shake Acuña's hand or even acknowledge the crowd.
Back in Acuña’s home town, with a mixture of astonishment and delight, fans following the
live telecast in bars all round the city cheered as they watched replays from every angle
of Marcela’s right cross exploding against Quirico’s jaw.
Having outlined before the fight how
she would use her height to keep Acuña at a distance and then knock her out in
the fifth, an embarrassed Quirico was left to vent her frustration in a corner of
the dressing room, giving the same reply to every question: she was “fine”, she
would “carry on” and she “wanted a return”.
Acuña’s response was withering: “A return? No, first let her train, build up
some strength, have a few fights, and then we’ll see. As for ‘revenge’ ... after
a knock-out as fast as that, what possible revenge could I give her?”.
Rubbing further salt into the wound, Acuña told Clarin: “I never imagined that
I could win the title that quickly. I think I even frightened myself and I was
a bit worried when she went down. But afterwards, I was sorry that Quirico refused
to congratulate me and that she was such a bad loser. But that's life: once again
I've made history and proved that I'm a serious boxer.”
On March 1, 2002 at Club Olimpia in Paraná, Entre Rios, Argentina,
a full house of 1,500 saw Marcela (125 lbs) defend the Argentine featherweight
title and advance to 8-2 (4 KOs) with a clear unanimous ten-round (99-87.5,99-88,99-87.5) decision
over Carmen Montiel (“La Guapa”, 122¾ lbs) of Buenos Aires. Montiel, who
was a former sparring partner of Acuña, was making her
own professional debut. Acuña had said before the bout that she would go for another
knockout, but reports sent to me said that she kept plenty in reserve and even pulled punches
that could have ended it by KO. Montiel stood up to everything thrown at her and left the
ring to an ovation. Asked if she had gone out to humiliate Montiel the way she did Quirico,
Acuña said she had not “because I wanted to do my job, which was to keep her at
a distance. Carmen is my friend; and besides, I wanted to see how well I could
last ten rounds.” For her part, the 37-year-old Montiel said “Marcela has blazed a trail
for all of us. That doesn’t mean that I don’t want to beat her, though.”
Acuña next prepared for a shot at the WIBA world title against
Damaris Pinock Ortega of Panama on April 6, but the Argentinean econonomic
crisis led to the bout being postponed.
On June 29, 2002 at Rio Gallegos, Santa Cruz, Argentina, Marcela won an eight-round decision over her former
sparring partner Carmen Montiel ("La Guapa") of Buenos Aires in their second bout of the year. Acuña moved to 9-2 (4 KOs);
Montiel fell to 0-2.
On November 15, 2002 at Super Domo Orfeo in Cordoba, Argentina, Alicia
Ashley (120¾ lbs) of Westbury, New York won a controversial ten-round split (96-94,96-94,95-97) decision over
Acuña (120½ lbs) to win the vacant IWBF Super Bantamweight (aka Junior Featherweight?) title in what was the first
women's world title fight to be staged in Argentina. Ashley advanced to 8-4-1 (0 KO) while Acuña's record slipped to 9-3-0
(4 KO) as she absorbed her first pro boxing loss in her own country. Acuña had said that she "dreamed of holding up the
title belt with the crowd chanting my name" and that she was more confident than on previous occasions because in this
(weight) category I'm not giving anything away." The judging was Terry O'Neill (USA) 96-94 for Ashley, Carlos Villegas
(Argentina) also 96-94 for Ashley, Francismo Seleme (Argentina) 97-95 for Acuña.
My correspondent tells me that this was a fight in which few heavy punches landed but, until the last two rounds when
she began to fade, the Argentinean had the initiative throughout having Ashley in trouble several times with digging right
hands. Ashley moved around the ring well but threw nothing of consequence - none of her seven victories has been inside the
distance - one newspaper described her strategy as 'cynical'. Acuña quickly adjusted to the problems of fighting a
southpaw, whose left hooks in the first two rounds presaged a danger that never materialized. Ashley´s attempts to use her
superior reach to keep Acuña off are said to have faltered in the fifth round and from then until the ninth when she began
to fade, it was all Acuña. The Argentinean press had Ashley winning only the last two rounds.
The Argentinean news agency DyN had Acuña winning 98-92, and the newspaper La Mañana reported that Ashley's corner told
her going into the last round that she needed a knockout. Apparently angry at the Argentinean judge, Villegas, who gave the
fight to Ashley, a tearful Acuña concluded: "I´m going to have to emigrate and get out this ... country in which I get no
recognition whatsoever," adding in a whisper: "It´s obvious that the judges were watching a different fight." Most of the Argentinean press seemed to agree, describing the decision as ´pathetic´, a ´scandal´, ´a robbery of historic proportions´
and even ´criminal´ ... though Horacio Pagani, in Clarin, clearly no supporter of women´s boxing, took a different view,
contenting himself with the following comment on the top-of-the-bill women's world title fight:
"in a female spectacle that
was a long way from true boxing ... Ashley demonstrated her technical superiority."
On February 21, 2003 in Buenos Aires, Marcela won the vacant Argentinian super bantamweight title with a second-
round TKO of Lourdes Gonzalez, who had not seen action since her first-round KO loss to
Regina Halmich in March 1999. Gonzalez fell to 10-4-0 (5 KO).
On May 10, 2003 at Rio Grande, Tierra del Fuego, Marcela won a fifth-round TKO over debut fighter Ana Davila
Ferreira of Brazil.
On June 14, 2003 at Complejo Republica Venezuela in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Alicia Ashley (119¼ lbs) of Westbury, New York
successfully defended her IWBF Super Bantamweight title by a convincing ten-round unanimous (98-92,97-92,97-94) decision
over Marcela (120 lbs) in a rematch that the IWBF had required after reviewing
tape of their previous bout. In this rematch,
instead of boxing defensively and relying on counter-punching as she had done in
their first fight, Ashley consistently beat Acuña to the punch, and was in and
out before the Argentinean could find her range with her response. Ashley
even outhustled Acuña in the clinches, to the dismay of Acuña's fans.
“Ashley was a hieroglyphic she had no idea how to decipher,” wrote DyN of
this rematch. Ashley improved to 9-4-1 (0 KO) with the win. On August 22, 2003 at Club Ciclista Juninense, Junin, Buenos Aires, Argentina, Marcela (126¾ lbs) won a six-
round unanimous decision over her former sparring partner Carmen Montiel of Buenos Aires (126¼ lbs). Acuña improved
to 12-4-0 (6 KO) while Montiel fell to 0-3.

Referee Aníbal Andrade stops the fight
with Pinock Ortega
On December 6, 2003 at Estadio Luna Park in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Marcela (121 lbs) won the vacant WIBA Super Bantamweight world title
with a sixth-round TKO of Damaris
Pinock Ortega (122 lbs) of Panama. According to a report received on fight night by WBP,
"The Tigress came out with
all guns blazing, as though the fact of being escorted to the ring by her two sons had given her something extra. As
soon as the bell sounded, she went all out to demolish the Panamanian and was one punch away from putting her away
in the first, but Pinock Ortega showed her mettle and clung on. In the second round, the Tigress calmed down
somewhat and began to pick her shots, all the time building up a lead on the scorecards. In the fourth, her husband,
Ramón Chaparro, told her to finish it, and 40 seconds from the end of the round, she rocked the Panamanian with a
violent right. Pinock Ortega’s legs were wobbling when she returned to her corner at the end of the round. The end
was not far away. The fifth was another thrashing and in the sixth, the demolition was terrible until with 17
seconds remaining, the referee rightly put an end to the suffering of Pinock Ortega, who remained courageous to the
end, and crowned the Tigress champion." Acuña improved her record to 13-4-0 (7 KO) with the win while Pinock Ortega
fell to 6-2-2 (5 KO). (See also the
Fight Report by
Ewan Whyte).
On May 26, 2004 at Estadio Luna Park in Buenos Aires, Argentina,
Marcela (121 lbs) won by a TKO just 0:43 into the first-round TKO over Daysi
Padilla (118¾ lbs) in a scheduled 10-round defense of her WIBA Super
Bantamweight world title. Evidently stung by criticism that she had taken five
and a half rounds to finish off Damaris Pinock Ortega last December, Acuña
wasted no time or pity on the lanky Colombian Daysi ('Demolition') Padilla.
Sensing an initial hesitation on the part of her opponent, the champion moved
swiftly across the ring ('like a tigress with the cage door open' as Olé put it)
catching Padilla almost immediately with a hard right to the cheek that had her
reeling and following up with a furious assault that forced referee Raúl Ilvento
to stop the fight. Padilla, who had claimed a 14-1-0 (14 KO) record and boasted
that she would ´make the Tigress dance to my tune´, lacked the experience (as ex
world champion Ricardo Cardona in her corner later admitted) to cling to Acuña
when she was hurt, to give her head clear time to clear. Commented Acuña:
"Even dazed, Padilla managed to throw a few punches and I could feel she hits
hard, but I kept beating her to the punch and she could do nothing." At
midnight, Padilla was admitted to hospital as a precautionary measure, though
she was perfectly lucid. (See also the
Fight Report by
Ewan Whyte).
On September 11, 2004 at Polideportivo Carlos Cerutti in Córdoba, Argentina,
Marcela (121¼ lbs) TKO'd Ada Camila Santos (119½ lbs) in the third round of a
scheduled 4-rounder.
On January 22, 2005 at Club Centenario in Formosa, Argentina,
Marcela (124¼ lbs) won the vacant WIBA Featherweight title with a TKO of Maria
Andrea Miranda (123¼ lbs) of Moñitos, Córdoba, Colombia at 1:37 in the third
round of in a scheduled ten-rounder. Miranda went down three times in the final
round and the fight ended with the "warrior from
Colombia prostrate before the Argentinian, her eyes directed towards her corner,
beseeching them to throw in the towel" (see the full
fight report
by WBAN's Ewan Whyte).

Sharon Anyos vs. Marcela Acuña for
the WBC title
Photo supplied by Team Anyos
On October 21, 2005 at Gold Coast Convention Center in Broadbeach, Queensland,
Australia, 35-year-old Sharon Anyos of Australia won a
ten-round unanimous (97-93,96-94,96-94) decision over Marcela for the vacant WBC
Women's Featherweight title. The hard-hitting Acuña landed the most
damaging punches in this fight, but Anyos was busier and used her reach
advantage to outbox her for the decision. Anyos kept her distance to take the
first two rounds but got into a slugging match and took some heavy shots in the
third. Anyos looked in danger of losing her composure according to Eastside
Boxing's ringside correspondent Tony Nobbs, but she got back to boxing in the
later rounds to control the action, holding off a strong charge by Acuña in the
ninth. Anyos, who sported a badly swollen left cheek, said. "I felt strong
every round. The girl can punch and she also head-butts quite well. I felt
I won at least eight of the 10 rounds which to me is all that matters. I've been
to war to win the best world title you could ever be given." Acuña
said she believed she had won at least seven rounds and accused the Thai,
Japanese and Australian judges of being blind. Acuña said she would consider a
re-match with Anyos, but not in Australia. "Not even for a million dollars,"
added Acuña, who lodged an official complaint to the WBC over the decision.
Acuña fell to 19-5-0 (12 KOs) with the loss while Anyos improved to 11-3-0
(2 KO).
On August 12, 2006 in Buenos Aires, Argentina Marcela Acuña (121½
lbs) won a ten-round unanimous (100-90) decision over 21-year-old Anays
Gutierrez Carrillo (122 lbs) of Barranquilla, Colombia for the WBA Junior
Featherweight (Super Bantamweight) world title. According to Juan E. Brignone of
www.boxeo.org, Acuña
dominated the fight from beginning to end and never abandoned the hunt for a
T(KO) but she was unable either to break the spirit or to find the jaw of the
young Colombian. The result should open the door to a unification fight between
Acuña and the WBC champion in the same
division, Alejandra Oliveras. Gutierrez Carillo fell to a reported 9-1-1 (2 KOs).
On October 14, 2006 at Luna Park in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Marcela Acuña (120
lbs) took barely 40 seconds
to retain the WBA Super
Bantamweight title by
demolishing 23-year-old Paola Esther Herrera
Gómez (5'6", 120½
lbs) of Cartagena, Colombia.
“The Tigress set out to devour her,” reads the report in
TyC,
translated for WBAN by Ewan Whyte
: Acuña attacked; Herrera essayed a rearguard
action - trying desperately to use technique to fend her off - but the champion
connected anyway, and Herrera’s challenge began to unravel.
Acuña finished her off with an ‘excellent combination to the head’
that left the challenger staggering helplessly and referee
Aníbal
Andrada no
option but to intervene. Herrera fell to 2-4 in bouts verified by WBAN. The record claimed for
Herrera in Colombia contains about a dozen wins that we cannot confirm, but
whatever her formal record, she was quickly exposed by Acuña in this first-round
TKO.
On December 15, 2006 in Caseros, Buenos Aires,
Argentina, Marcela (121½ lbs) won when Maribel Santana (121 lbs) of the
Dominican Republic retired 37 seconds into the second round. The two were
fighting for the WBA Super Bantamweight Title.
According to WBAN correspondent Ewan Whyte, "Last
night in front of 4,000 spectators in the Centro Deportivo Municipal (CeDeM) Nº
2 in Caseros (Buenos Aires) and a live TV audience ...
the submission ... (came)
only 37 seconds into the second round when the woman from the Dominican Republic
signalled unambiguously to the referee her unwillingness to continue."
On January 27, 2007 at Hotel
Conrad in Punta del Este, Uruguay, Marcela won a ten-round majority decision
over Maria del Carmen Potenza. WBAN's Ewan Whyte
reported
that "the normally implacable
Marcela 'la Tigresa' Acuña of Argentina allowed her fellow countrywoman María
del Carmen Potenza to survive the full ten rounds ... according to TYC Sports,
the fight was little more than an exhibition." Potenza fell to 3-5-1 (0 KO's).
On April 20, 2007 at the Andes Talleres Sport Club
in Mendoza, Argentina, Marcela (121¼ lbs)
won a 10-round unanimous (100-89,99-90,99-90) decision over Jazmin Rivas (122
lbs) of Torreon, Mexico, defending the WBA Super Bantamweight Title. For a
compilation of local reports on the fight translated by WBAN's Ewan Whyte, please go
here.
Marcela improved her record to 24-5-0 (14 KOs) while dropping Rivas to
14-4-0 (7 KOs).
On June 29, 2007 at Club Sportivo América in Santa
Fe, Argentina
Marcela (120¾ lbs) won a sixth round technical decision based on the scorecards
over 38-year-old Maria del Carmen Potenza (118½ lbs) after their scheduled
10-rounder was stopped following a clash of heads. Potenza had received a
standing eight count in the fifth. Scores were 60-56, 59-54, and 59½-55½.
Potenza fell to 3-7-1.
On October 27, 2007 in Buenos Aires, Argentina,
Marcela (121¾ lbs) won a close unanimous
(77-75,79-77,78-76) unanimous eight-round decision over UBC Junior Featherweight
champion Claudia Andrea Lopez (120 lbs) of Argentina in what was described as a
"stellar" fight. According to one news source, López fought with a great
deal of conviction and gave a very good account of herself. Neither woman´s title
belt was at stake. Lopez fell to 8-3-0 (0 KOs).
On February 4, 2008 at the Hotel & Casino Conrad in Punta del Este, Uruguay,
Marcela (123¾ lbs) won a close but unanimous (79-77,78-77,77-76)
eight-round decision over Adriana Salles (123¾
lbs) of Sao Paolo, Brazil in a non-title bout. Salles
fought a hard fight and was the early aggressor, cheered on by Brazilian fans;
she landed well in the middle rounds but appeared to tire in the later rounds
while Acuña paced herself better. (There appeared to be some confusion about the
number of rounds, which was announced as ten, but the Braziian corner stated
that the contract had been for eight.) Acuña improved her
record to 27-5-0 (14 KOs) while Salles fell to 9-3-1 (3 KOs).
On May 15, 2008 at
Sociedad Española in San Luis,
Argentina,
Marcela (126¾ lbs) TKO'd Anays Gutierrez Carrillo (129¾ lbs) of Barranquilla,
Colombia at the start of the third round of a scheduled 10-rounder.
According to WBAN correspondent Ewan Whyte, "The
non-title fight ... ended in fiasco after four minutes when the Colombian, who
was in any case in no shape to be in the ring, not having fought and scarcely
having trained since 13th October 2006, refused to come out for the third round,
complaining of nausea. She explained afterwards that she only took the fight for
the money and that she was indisposed (meaning apparently that it was the wrong
time of the month)." Acuña improved her
record to 28-5-0 (15 KOs) while Carrillo fell to 11-4-1 (3 KO's).
Marcela Acuña says of her boxing
career: “Our lives have changed a great deal since we decided to leave Formosa and dedicate ourselves to this full time. It
hasn’t been easy. Far from it. Two years ago, a few months before they eventually sanctioned women’s boxing, we were on the
point of returning home. We’d been beating our heads against a brick wall for so long and they never even gave us an
answer. Now it seems that things are changing. But it’s been a long struggle. That Christmas, we didn’t even have any money
to buy Christmas presents for the kids. In the end, we had to borrow money, because the situation had become desperate.”
“My dream is to earn a million dollars and buy my own house so I no longer have to rent. It’s far from the case,
though, that the only thing that interests me is the money. I care about boxing more than money. But I’m also conscious of
the fact that it’s thanks to this sport that I can assure the future of my boys. Everyone that knows me knows that I’m not
ambitious. I don’t want money for money’s sake. The only people I worry about are my boys”, she explains.
A holiday also figures prominently in her future plans. This is something they’ve had to put off for a long time
because, aside from training, Marcela devotes a lot of time to publicity: “I’m not complaining because this is something I
fought long and hard for. But I do feel pretty tired. I have this picture I keep always in my head of myself and Ramón and
the two boys in our own home, enjoying the family life that we’ve had to push into the background.”
Asked how long she intends to continue fighting, she replies
“I haven’t set any time limit. I’m going to continue for as long as my body and my head can keep going.”
Husband and trainer Ramón Chaparro adds
“It’s difficult being the trainer of your own wife.
The person up there in the ring with another woman
beating each other black and blue is the mother of my children, not someone I don’t know.
When Marcela fought Christy Martin and Lucia Rijker, I was nervous because I didn’t want her
to lose by a knockout. Now, when I see how she’s improved, I’m not the least bit worried. What’s more,
we’ve become more professional, both of us. In the ring, we forget that we’re husband and wife.
The important thing is not to think about the bad things that can happen, because if you did, you’d
never climb into the ring in the first place. If I believed that anything could happen to Marcela,
there’s no way in the world that I’d let her get in there. But I’ve got blind faith in her.”
Her sons Maxi and Josué are also a permanent part of Acuña's team. Asked how she would respond if
they decided they wanted to become fighters, she says
“I will always support them. But I won’t let them neglect their studies. For the moment, though,
although they like boxing, they both want to be doctors”. Maxi (aged 9) told reporters
“I love
it that mum’s a boxer. With the money she earns, she buys us
toys. She’s already promised us, before this fight, that she’ll buy us a computer. The bad part is that we
don’t see her much because she’s concentrating on other things. The one good thing is that she leaves
us with my elder brothers and we can make as much mess as we like.” Josué added:
“My mum’s really famous: they even know her at school. I love boxing and having
my picture taken with her, but I’d like to go back to Formosa and be with my friends and to be able
to spend every day with my parents. At the moment, we don’t see them a lot of the time and I miss
them heaps. I don’t want to be a boxer, I want to be a pediatrician.”
Acuna's mother reportedly wanted her to be a ballerina, a talent
that she has been able to exercise a little with a run on the Argentinian TV
show Bailando Por Un Sueño (the
Argentinian equivalent of Dancing with the Stars) "'The Tigress'
displays masses of commitment," says dancing partner Javier Riveros,
"because she has a competitive nature, which you need in boxing."
Many thanks to correspondent Ewan Whyte for his research and translation
of fight reports from the Argentine press ... Dee
Other Marcela Acuña Links
To check out fight reports, complete up-to-date boxing records, with huge digital photos you can go to
the WBAN Records Member Site
Page last updated:
Tuesday June 03, 2008 |
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