Roy Jones Jr.

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Roy Jones Jr.

Rou Jones Jr..jpg
Jones in 2012

Statistics
Real nameRoy Levesta Jones Jr.
Nickname(s)

  • Junior

  • Superman

  • RJ

  • Captain Hook

Weight(s)

  • Middleweight

  • Super middleweight

  • Light heavyweight

  • Cruiserweight

  • Heavyweight

Height5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Reach74 in (188 cm)
Nationality

  • American

  • Russian

Born
(1969-01-16) January 16, 1969 (age 49)
Pensacola, Florida, U.S.
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights75
Wins66
Wins by KO47
Losses9

Roy Levesta Jones Jr. (born January 16, 1969) is an American former professional boxer, boxing commentator, boxing trainer, rapper, and actor who holds dual American and Russian citizenship.[1] He competed in boxing from 1989 to 2018, and is a multiple time world champion in four weight classes, having held titles at middleweight, super middleweight, light heavyweight, and heavyweight; and is the only boxer in history to start his professional career at light middleweight and go on to win a heavyweight title. As an amateur he represented the United States at the 1988 Summer Olympics, winning a silver medal in the light middleweight division.


Jones is considered by many to be one of the best boxers of all time, pound for pound, and left his mark in the sport's history when he won the WBA heavyweight title in 2003, becoming the first former middleweight champion to win a heavyweight title in 106 years. Prior to that, in 1999, he became the undisputed light heavyweight champion by unifying the WBA, WBC, and IBF titles. During his prime, Jones was known for possessing exceptional hand speed, athleticism, movement and reflexes.


As of February 2018, Jones holds the record for the most wins in unified light heavyweight title bouts in boxing history, at twelve. The Ring magazine named Jones the Fighter of the Year in 1994, and the World Boxing Hall of Fame named him the Fighter of the Year for 2003. He is also a three-time winner of the Best Boxer ESPY Award (1996, 2000, and 2003). The Boxing Writers Association of America named him as the Fighter of the Decade for the 1990s.




Contents





  • 1 Amateur career


  • 2 Professional career

    • 2.1 Early years


    • 2.2 Middleweight champion

      • 2.2.1 Roy Jones vs. Bernard Hopkins



    • 2.3 Super middleweight champion

      • 2.3.1 Roy Jones vs. James Toney


      • 2.3.2 Miscellaneous defenses



    • 2.4 Light heavyweight champion

      • 2.4.1 Roy Jones vs Mike McCallum


      • 2.4.2 Roy Jones vs. Montell Griffin I & II



    • 2.5 Career from 1998 to 2002


    • 2.6 WBA heavyweight champion

      • 2.6.1 Roy Jones vs. John Ruiz


      • 2.6.2 Roy Jones vs. Antonio Tarver



    • 2.7 Fall from grace

      • 2.7.1 Roy Jones vs. Antonio Tarver II


      • 2.7.2 Roy Jones vs. Glen Johnson


      • 2.7.3 Roy Jones vs. Antonio Tarver III


      • 2.7.4 Fallout with HBO



    • 2.8 Comeback trail

      • 2.8.1 Back to winning ways


      • 2.8.2 Roy Jones vs. Félix Trinidad


      • 2.8.3 Roy Jones vs. Joe Calzaghe


      • 2.8.4 Roy Jones vs. Omar Sheika


      • 2.8.5 Roy Jones vs. Jeff Lacy



    • 2.9 Consecutive defeats

      • 2.9.1 Roy Jones vs. Danny Green


      • 2.9.2 Roy Jones vs. Bernard Hopkins II


      • 2.9.3 Roy Jones vs. Denis Lebedev



    • 2.10 Cruiserweight

      • 2.10.1 Roy Jones vs. Max Alexander


      • 2.10.2 Roy Jones vs. Paweł Głażewski


      • 2.10.3 Roy Jones vs. Zine Eddine Benmakhlouf


      • 2.10.4 Miscellaneous fights


      • 2.10.5 Roy Jones vs. Enzo Maccarinelli


      • 2.10.6 Roy Jones vs. Vyron Phillips


      • 2.10.7 Roy Jones vs. Rodney Moore


      • 2.10.8 Roy Jones vs. Bobby Gunn


      • 2.10.9 Roy Jones vs. Scott Sigmon




  • 3 Professional boxing record


  • 4 Pay-per-view bouts


  • 5 Personal life


  • 6 Music career


  • 7 Discography

    • 7.1 Album


    • 7.2 With Body Head Bangerz


    • 7.3 Solo singles


    • 7.4 Featured singles



  • 8 Filmography


  • 9 References


  • 10 External links




Amateur career


Jones won the 1984 United States National Junior Olympics in the 119 lb (54 kg) weight division, the 1986 United States National Golden Gloves in the 139 lb (63 kg) division, and the 1987 United States National Golden Gloves in the 156 lb (71 kg) division. As an amateur, he ended his career with a 121–13 record.


Jones represented the United States at the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games, where he won the silver medal.[2] He dominated his opponents, never losing a single round en route to the final. His participation in the final was met with controversy when he lost a 3–2 decision to South Korean fighter Park Si-Hun despite pummeling Park for three rounds, landing 86 punches to Park's 32.[2] Allegedly, Park himself apologized to Jones afterward and the referee told Jones that he was dumbstruck by the judges' decision.[3] One judge shortly thereafter admitted the decision was a mistake and all three judges voting against Jones were eventually suspended. Marv Albert, calling the bout on American television for NBC, reported judges from Hungary and the Soviet Union scored the bout in favor of Jones, while those from Morocco and Uruguay favored Park. The fifth judge, from Uganda, scored the bout as a draw, leaving the outcome to be decided on other criteria.


An official IOC investigation ending in 1997 found that, although the offending judges had been wined and dined by South Korean organisers, there was no evidence of corruption in the boxing events in Seoul.[4] Jones was awarded the Val Barker trophy, as the best stylistic boxer of the 1988 games, which was only the third and to this day the last time in the competition's history when the award did not go to one of the gold medal winners. The incident led Olympic organizers to establish a new scoring system for Olympic boxing.[3]



Professional career



Early years


On turning professional, he had already sparred with many professional boxers, including NABF Champion Ronnie Essett, IBF Champion Lindell Holmes and Sugar Ray Leonard. Jones began as a professional on May 6, 1989, knocking out Ricky Randall in two rounds in Pensacola at the Bayfront Auditorium. For his next fight, he faced the more experienced Stephan Johnson in Atlantic City, beating him by a knockout in round eight.


Jones built a record of 15–0 with 15 knockouts before stepping up in class to meet former World Welterweight Champion Jorge Vaca in a Pay Per View fight on January 10, 1992. He knocked Vaca out in round one to reach 16 knockout wins in a row. After one more KO, Jones went the distance for the first time against future world champion Jorge Castro, winning a 10-round decision in front of a USA Network national audience.



Middleweight champion



Roy Jones vs. Bernard Hopkins


Jones made his first attempt at a world title on May 22, 1993. He beat future Undisputed middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins by unanimous decision in Washington, D.C. to capture the IBF middleweight championship. Jones was ahead on all three judges scorecards (116-112 three times). Jones landed 206 of 594 punches (35%) and Hopkins connected on 153 of 670 (23%).[5] Jones claimed he had entered the bout with a broken right hand, but still managed to outpoint Hopkins and secure a unanimous decision win. Jones reminded the world of this claim on his hit single "Ya'll Must've Forgot" later in his career.


For his next fight, he fought another future world champion, Thulane "Sugar Boy" Malinga, in a non-title affair. Jones beat Malinga by knockout in six rounds. Jones finished the year with another win, beating Fermin Chirino by decision. In 1994, Jones beat Danny "Popeye" Garcia by knockout in six, then retained his IBF title against Thomas Tate in two rounds at Las Vegas on May 27.



Super middleweight champion



Roy Jones vs. James Toney



On November 18, 1994, Jones was set to face undefeated IBF super middleweight Champion James Toney, who was ranked highly in the "pound for pound" rankings. Toney was undefeated after 46 bouts and was rated the best in the world at 168 lbs. Billed as "The Uncivil War", Toney vs. Jones was heavily hyped and on PPV. Jones, for the first time in his career, was the underdog.


Over the course of the 12-round unanimous decision, Jones demonstrated his greatness. He danced circles around Toney, utilizing his speed and athleticsm to dictate the action, and landing quick combinations whenever Toney pressured him. Jones scored a flash knockdown in the third round with a leaping left hook after goading Toney by imitating a fighting cock.[6] Ring magazine called Jones' performance the most dominant of any big fight in 20 years. Jones landed 285 of 614 punches (46%) and Toney connected on 157 of 451 (35%). Jones was ahead on all three judges scorecards (117-110, 119-108 & 118-109). The fight generated 300,000 pay-per-view buys.[7][8]



Miscellaneous defenses


In 1995, Jones defended his super middleweight title successfully multiple times. He began the year by knocking out IBF #1 Antoine Byrd in round one. This was the first time a championship fight took place at Pensacola. In a fight billed as 'The Devil & Mr Jones', he faced former IBF lightweight Champion Vinny Pazienza and defeated him in round six, after knocking down Pazienza three times. In the fourth round, Jones became the first fighter in CombuBox history to go an entire round without being hit by his opponent. Pazienza was credited with throwing five punches and landing zero. Pazienza was guaranteed $1.35 million, while Jones, who worked off percentages of the gate and the pay-per-view revenue, was guaranteed at least $2 million.[9][10][11] Jones then beat Tony Thornton in round two by KO three months later.[12][13][14]


In 1996, Jones maintained his winning ways, defeating Merqui Sosa by knockout in two and future world champion Eric Lucas in round 11.[15][16] When he boxed Lucas, he became the first athlete to participate in two paid sports events on the same day. He had played a basketball game in the morning and defended his boxing title in Jacksonville, Florida that evening. He also held a press conference in the ring just before his 3rd bout of the year, taking questions from a chair in the middle of the ring and defending his choice of Bryant Brannon as his opponent instead of Frankie Liles, his nemesis from the amateurs. He then defeated Bryant Brannon in a round two TKO.[17][18][19]



Light heavyweight champion



Roy Jones vs Mike McCallum



In November 1996 at Ice Palace, Tampa, Florida, Jones defeated 40-year-old former three-weight world champion Mike McCallum via a shutout decision (120-107, 3 times) before a crowd of 12,000, to win the vacant Interim WBC Light Heavyweight title. Jones scored a knockdown just before the bell at the end of round 10. Jones landed 254 of 535 punches (47%) throughout the 12 rounds and McCallum connected on 209 of 651 (32%) Jones was soon upgraded to full champion by the WBC when former titlist Fabrice Tiozzo moved up to cruiserweight. Jones made $2.8 million from the fight and McCallum got $750,000.[20][21][22]



Roy Jones vs. Montell Griffin I & II



In 1997 Jones had his first professional loss, a disqualification against Montell Griffin (26-0, 18 KOs) at the Taj Majal Hotel & Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Griffin was trained by the legendary Eddie Futch, who had taught him how to take advantage of Jones technical mistakes and lack of basic boxing fundamentals. Griffin jumped out to an early lead on Jones but by round 9 Jones was ahead on the scorecards by a point and had Griffin on the canvas early in round nine. But as Griffin took a knee on the canvas to avoid further punishment, Jones hit him twice. Subsequently, Jones was disqualified and lost his title. At the time of disqualification, Jones was ahead on two of the judges scorecards (75-76, 77-75, 76-75).[23][24]


Jones sought an immediate rematch five months later at Foxwoods Resort, Connecticut, USA and regained the World Light Heavyweight title easily, knocking Griffin down within the first 2 minutes 31 seconds of the fight, then ending the fight by knocking Griffin out just over two minutes in with a leaping left hand shot. The fight took place in a bingo hall before a sellout crowd of 4,500. Both Jones and Griffin earned a $1.5 million purse.[25][26][27]



Career from 1998 to 2002


In 1998, Jones began by knocking out former light heavyweight and future cruiserweight champion Virgil Hill in four rounds with a huge right hand to the body that broke one of Hill's ribs.[28][29] Jones followed that with a win against WBA light heavyweight champion Lou Del Valle, by a decision in 12 on July 18, to unify the WBC and WBA belts. Jones had to climb off the canvas for the first time in his career, as he was dropped in round eight, but continued to outbox Del Valle throughout the rest of the fight and gained a unanimous decision. Jones then followed with a defense against Otis Grant. He retained the crown by knocking Grant out in ten rounds.[30][31][32]


Jones began 1999 by knocking out the WBC number one ranked contender at the time, Rick Frazier. On June 5 of that year, Jones beat IBF champion Reggie Johnson by a lopsided 12-round decision to become the undisputed light heavyweight champion, as well as the first to unify the WBA, WBC, and IBF titles at that weight since Michael Spinks in 1983. Jones dropped Johnson hard in the second round, but backed off and allowed Reggie to finish the fight.


The year 2000 began with Jones easily beating the hard-punching David Telesco via a 12-round decision on January 15, at Radio City Music Hall to retain his titles. Jones reportedly fractured his wrist a few weeks before this fight and fought almost exclusively one-handed. He entered the ring surrounded by the famous group of dancers, The Rockettes. His next fight was also a first time boxing event for a venue, as he traveled to Indianapolis and retained his title with an 11-round technical knockout over Richard Hall at the Conseco Fieldhouse. Jones ended the year with a 10-round stoppage of undefeated Eric Harding in New Orleans.[33]


In 2001, Jones released Round One: The Album, a rap CD. That year he retained the title against Derrick Harmon by a knockout in ten and against future world champion Julio César González of Mexico by a 12-round unanimous decision before a crowd of 20,409. The three judges scored it (119-106, 118-107, 119-106) all for Jones. Jones knocked Gonzalez down in rounds one, five and twelve and earned a $1.5 million purse. Jones landed 192 of 375 punches (51%) whilst Gonzalez connected on a very low 91 of 609 (15%).[34]


In 2002, Jones retained his title by knocking out Australian boxer Glen Kelly in seven rounds via knockout. Jones put both hands behind his back. As Kelly moved in behind a jab, Jones went over the jab with a right to the head. Kelly went down and was counted out. Jones landed 124 of 249 punches (50%) and Kelly connected on 42 of 171 (25%). Before this bout, Jones was controversially awarded The Ring Championship belt, despite Dariusz Michalczewski still being regarded as the Lineal champion in the same weight class.[35][36][37]


Jones then defeated future world champion, WBC #1 Clinton Woods by technical knockout before a crowd of 16,229. He performed a song from his CD during his ring entrance. The bout was stopped in round 6 after Woods' corner threw in the towel. Jones landed 140 of 300 punches (47%) and Woods connected on 39 of 166 (23%).[38][39]



WBA heavyweight champion



Roy Jones vs. John Ruiz



On March 1, 2003, at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas,[40] Jones defeated John Ruiz, the man who defeated an aging Evander Holyfield, for the WBA Heavyweight title in front of 15,300 fans. Jones officially weighed in at 193 lb (88 kg)[41] and Ruiz at 226 lb (103 kg). Jones became the first former middleweight title holder to win a Heavyweight title in 106 years.[42] Jones also became the first fighter to start his career as a light middleweight and win a heavyweight title.[43] Jones was guaranteed $10 million against 60% of the profits. Ruiz had no guarantee. He received 40% of the profits, which he had to share with promoter Don King. Jones won on all three scorecards (116-112, 118-110 & 117-111).[39][44][45] According to Mark Taffet, HBO's Senior Vice-President of Sports Operations and Pay-Per-View, the fight generated 602,000 pay-per-view buys.



Roy Jones vs. Antonio Tarver



Jones chose to return to the light heavyweight division and on November 8, 2003 he defeated Antonio Tarver to retain The Ring Light Heavyweight Championship and win Tarver's WBC title, as well as the vacant WBA (Super) title.[46] Jones appeared a lot weaker after coming back down to the light heavyweight division, losing the muscle he gained for the heavyweight fight seemed to have taken a toll on his aging body and his cat-like reflexes appeared diminished. Jones won by majority decision, the judges giving him 117–111,116–112 and 114–114.[46][47][48][49]



Fall from grace



Roy Jones vs. Antonio Tarver II



On May 15, 2004, Jones faced Tarver in a rematch. Jones was heavily favored to win, but Tarver knocked him down at 1:31 of the second round. Jones had won the first round (Tarver only landed two punches in the first round), but in the second, as Jones tried a combination, he was caught by a big counter left hook from Tarver. Jones got on his feet by the count, but for the first time in his career was ruled unable to continue by referee Jay Nady.[50][51]



Roy Jones vs. Glen Johnson



On September 25, 2004, Jones attempted to win the IBF light heavyweight title from Glen Johnson in a match in Memphis, Tennessee.[52] Johnson knocked out Jones 49 seconds into the ninth round. Jones lay on the canvas for three minutes after being counted out.[53] Johnson was ahead on all three judges' scorecards at the time of the knockout (77–75, 77–75, 78–74) and had landed 118 punches to Jones's 75.[54][55] Jones used the ring's canvas that night as a billboard for his upcoming rap CD, which came out November 1.



Roy Jones vs. Antonio Tarver III



After almost a year away from the ring, focusing on training and working as an analyst for HBO Boxing, Jones scheduled a third fight with Antonio Tarver, on October 1, 2005, a sellout crowd of 20,895 at the St. Pete Times Forum in Tampa, Florida, which aired on HBO PPV. For only the second time in his career, Jones was considered an underdog going into the fight.


Tarver won by unanimous decision (117–111, 116–112, 116–112) and had Jones out on his feet in the 12th round. Tarver landed 158 of 620 punches (25%) and Jones connected on 85 of 320 (27%). Despite being clearly behind from early in the contest, there was little urgency in either Jones' corner or his performance as he seemed content to make it to the end of the fight following his back-to-back knockout losses.[56][57]


In the post-fight interview with ESPN's Brian Kenny, Jones said that he would like to fight again. He would welcome a fourth bout with Tarver or another duel with Johnson. The fighters earned in excess of $4 million apiece plus a share of pay-per-view revenues, with the fight generating 440,000 pay-per-view buys.[58]



Fallout with HBO


After the loss in the third Tarver bout, Jones resumed his duties as a commentator for HBO World Championship Boxing, calling the Floyd Mayweather Jr.–Sharmba Mitchell fight on November 19, 2005, and the Jermain Taylor–Bernard Hopkins rematch on December 3, 2005. His return to the network was short lived, as Jones was let go from his ringside analyst role in January 2006. HBO cited his reported lack of commitment to attending the network's production meetings.[citation needed]



Comeback trail



Back to winning ways


Jones took on Prince Badi Ajamu (25-2-1, 14 KOs) on July 29, 2006, at the Qwest Arena in Boise, Idaho. Jones defeated Ajamu by a unanimous decision (119-106, 3 times), winning the WBO NABO light heavyweight title.[59] Ajamu won the first round on all three official scorecards, however it was the only round he won. Ajamu also lost two points for repeated low blows in round seven and one more in round eight.[60]


Next up for Jones was the undefeated 29 year old Anthony Hanshaw (24-0-1, 14 KOs), on July 14, 2007, at the Mississippi Coast Coliseum in Biloxi, Mississippi. Hanshaw was ranked 11th by the IBF at super middleweight.[61][62] Hanshaw was knocked down in the 11th round. Jones won the bout by unanimous decision (114-113, 117-110, 118-109) to claim the vacant International Boxing Council light heavyweight title.[63][64]



Roy Jones vs. Félix Trinidad



On January 19, 2008, Jones faced former 147 and 154 pound five-time world champion Félix Trinidad at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The bout was fought at a catchweight of 170 lbs.[65] Jones had a noticeable size and speed advantage, and in round seven, a short right hand to the temple dropped Trinidad to his knees.[66] Jones fired a combination in the tenth round to send Trinidad down once more.[67] Jones won the fight by scores of 117–109 and 116–110 (twice).[68] This was the first time a former heavyweight champion returned to fight successfully at 170 lbs. The fight generated 500,000 pay-per-view buys and $25 million in domestic television revenue. This was also the last fight of Trinidad's career.[69]



Roy Jones vs. Joe Calzaghe



After Joe Calzaghe's split from promoter Frank Warren, it was officially announced that Roy Jones Jr. and Joe Calzaghe had reached an agreement to fight for The Ring Light Heavyweight Championship in New York City at Madison Square Garden on September 20, 2008 on HBO PPV. However, Calzaghe claimed injury to his right hand in training, so the fight had to be postponed a couple of weeks, with November 8 being set as the new date.[70]


In the first round, Jones caught Calzaghe with an uppercut and knocked him down, as well as cutting the Welshman on the bridge of the nose. However, Jones failed to capitalize on the knock down. In the 2nd round Calzaghe began to control the action and dominated Jones throughout the remainder of the fight. As the fight progressed Jones absorbed more and more punishment and suffered a cut over his left eye. Jones' corner, who had never seen Roy cut before, didn't know how to properly handle the situation and blood covered the left side of his face. Ultimately, Jones lost by unanimous decision, winning only one round (10-8 in the first) on the 3 official judges cards. There was a crowd of 14,152. The fight generated 225,000 pay-per-view buys.[71][72][73]



Roy Jones vs. Omar Sheika


It was announced that Jones would next fight Omar Sheika (27-8, 18 KOs) on March 21, 2009, at the Civic Center, Pensacola, Florida.[74] Jones defeated Sheika via fifth-round technical knockout to claim the vacant WBO NABO light heavyweight title.[75] The fight was the main event of a pay-per-view titled "March Badness", which included both boxing and mixed martial arts matches. Sheika had previously defeated Glen Johnson, who had knocked out Jones in 2004 and came into this fight having lost six of his last ten bouts. It was only his second fight since September 2005. Jones came in ranked as the #6 light heavyweight in the world by The Ring.[76]



Roy Jones vs. Jeff Lacy


On August 15, 2009, Jones beat former super middleweight champion Jeff Lacy (25-2, 17 KOs) in 10 rounds after Lacy's corner stopped the fight. The fight, billed as "Hook City", going off the boxers nicknames of 'Captain Hook' and 'Left Hook', took place at the Coast Coliseum in Biloxi, Mississippi.[77] Lacy had never been knocked out or stopped before. Lacy had tried to pin Jones on the ropes throughout the fight, but Jones was unaffected by the tactic and seemed more worried about playing to the crowd than about Lacy's punches. There was a discussion in Lacy's corner after the ninth round about stopping it, but Lacy, convinced his team to give him another round. Jones landed 249 of 500 punches (50%) while Lacy connected on 104 of 429 (24%). Jones was ahead on all three judges scorecards at the time of stoppage (99-91, 100-89, 98-92).[78][79]



Consecutive defeats



Roy Jones vs. Danny Green



In December 2009, Roy Jones was set to face Australian boxer Danny Green in Sydney, Australia. In the weeks leading up to this fight, there were reports in the newspapers indicating difficulties getting Roy's sparring partners into Australia.[80] Then on December 2, 2009, following an extensive pre-fight delay due to hand wrap protests, Danny Green defeated Jones via first-round TKO. Jones was initially gracious in his humbling defeat, stating that "We don't make excuses, it was a great performance by Danny."[81] However, less than a month later, Jones would launch a formal complaint, accusing Green of using illegal hand wraps and demanding his loss be overturned, though the decision was upheld.[82] Though Jones' rematch with Hopkins looked to be in trouble following Jones' loss, the two sides would officially come to an agreement in February 2010 for an April 3 bout.[83]



Roy Jones vs. Bernard Hopkins II



Roy Jones Jr. and Bernard Hopkins (50-5-1, 32 KOs) met in a rematch bout, on April 3, 2010 at the Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino in Las Vegas, 17 years after their first fight.[84] Jones entered with a record of 5-5 in his previous ten bouts dating back to May 2004 whilst Hopkins came in 4-1 since June 2006. After going the distance, Hopkins was awarded with a unanimous decision (118-109, 117-110 twice). Hopkins landed 184 of 526 punches (35%), while Jones connected on 82 of 274 (30%). Hopkins collapsed to his knees in his dressing room, drained from a brutal fight and exhausted by the end of his 17-year wait for revenge against Jones. The fight generated 150,000 pay-per-view buys.[85]



Roy Jones vs. Denis Lebedev


In February 2011, Vladimir Hryunov confirmed that negotiations were taking place for Denis Lebedev (21-1, 16 KOs) to fight Jones in Moscow. Lebedev had just come off a controversial split decision loss to Marco Huck. At the time, Lebedev was ranked #4 at cruiserweight by The Ring.[86] On 24 March, a deal had been agreed which would see Jones earn a $500,000 purse.[87] The fight, a 10-round bout, which was billed as the "Battle of Two Empires" was announced to take place on May 22 at Dynamo Palace of Sports in Krylatskoye.[88] 2,000 tickets were reportedly sold on the day of release. The promoters expected a sell out.[89]


Lebedev knocked Jones out with 2 seconds left in their 10-round bout. After round 9, the scorecards read (87–84, 85–86, 90–81). The controversy arose when Lebedev punched Jones, when it was, to some, clear that Jones was not responsive and was out on his feet. The final punch put Jones out cold on the canvas and he did not regain his senses for more than 5 minutes amid active medical help.[90] After the bout, Lebedev said that he had nothing to be sorry about.[91][92][93] Referee Steve Smoger was also accused of incompetence because he did not stop the fight even though Jones could no longer defend himself which led to Jones taking unnecessary damage.[94] In a statement following the fight, Smoger said, "I didn't stop the fight because there were only a matter of seconds remaining in the fight and it seemed that Roy was pretending, trying to trick his opponent. He did this repeatedly in the fight. So I thought Jones was doing the same thing here, trying to deceive Lebedev in the final seconds of the fight in order to lure Denis in to land a big punch [which Jones managed to do in the previous round]."[95] Jones, when asked about his feelings on the punch responded "I forgive him".[96]



Cruiserweight



Roy Jones vs. Max Alexander


Jones won a 10-round unanimous decision against Max Alexander on December 10, 2011, in Atlanta, snapping a three-match losing streak, and winning the Universal Boxing Organisation (UBO) Intercontinental cruiserweight championship.[97][98] The three judges scored the bout all in Jones' favour (100-90, 100-90 & 99-91). Jones rarely pressed over the first seven rounds, but put together several combinations in the eighth and 10th rounds to beat Alexander. After the fight, Jones said, "I'm feeling wonderful. I want a cruiserweight title, the world title", said Jones, who weighed in at 189 pounds. "This is just a start. I'm not through yet."[99] The fight was aired live on Internet PPV channel Ustream for $9.99.[100]



Roy Jones vs. Paweł Głażewski


Jones was due to fight Polish boxer Dawid Kostecki (39-1, 25 KOs) in a ten-round bout at Atlas Arena, Poland on June 30.[101] Days before the fight, Kostecki was arrested on June 19 in order to begin serving a 2 and a half year prison sentence for a prior conviction of running a prostitution ring.[102][103] Jones negotiated his deal with 12 Knockout Promotions, the fight's promoter, he was assured that Kostecki would not start serving his sentence until after the fight. 12 Knockout Promotions tried to secure a temporary release for Kostecki but were unsuccessful. Paweł Głażewski (17-0, 4 KOs), who was on standby all week, stepped in as a replacement. Jones defeated Głażewski by split decision (96-93, 94-95 & 96-94).[104] There was some controversy from the decision. Many believed due to Jones being lined up to challenge then-WBC cruiserweight champion Krzysztof Włodarczyk, he was given the decision.[105]



Roy Jones vs. Zine Eddine Benmakhlouf


On December 21, 2013, Jones defeated Zine Eddine Benmakhlouf (17-3-1, 8 KOs) by unanimous decision for the vacant WBU cruiserweight title at the Dynamo Palace of Sports in Krylatskoye in Moscow, Russia.[106] The fight was billed as a "Winner Takes All" match, with the winner receiving the entire purse.[107] Benmakhlouf took a knee after Jones wobbled him with a left hook early in the third round.[108] The judges scored the bout 120-108, 119-109 and 118-111.[109][110]



Miscellaneous fights


Jones, fighting at the Ķīpsala International Exhibition Centre in Latvia, defeated Courtney Fry (18-5-0) via RTD in the 5th round on July 26, 2014. Jones was ahead on all three judges scorecards by the end of the fourth round, (50-44, 50-44 & 50-45).[111] On September 26, 2014, Jones defeated Hany Atiyo via 1st-round KO after 75 seconds. This fight took place in front of a sold out crowd at The Basket Hall in Krasnodar, Russia.[112][113] This was a second straight stoppage and fifth consecutive victory for Jones.[114] Jones' next bout, for the first time 4 years, took place in USA at the Cabarrus Arena in Concord, North Carolina and ultimately saw him defeat Willy Williams via 2nd-round TKO.[115] Near the end of the same month on March 28, Jones was again back in the ring, this time against Paul Vasquez (10-6-1, 3 KOs), defeating him via 1st-round TKO for the WBU (German Version) cruiserweight title at the Pensacola Bay Center in Florida.[116] On August 16, 2015, Jones scored his 62nd professional victory and 45th knockout win by defeating Eric Watkins via 6th-round KO.[117][118]



Roy Jones vs. Enzo Maccarinelli


On October 28, 2015, it was announced that Jones would be fighting former WBO cruiserweight champion Enzo Maccarinelli, 35, who had a career record of 40 wins and 7 losses, for the WBA 'super' world cruiserweight title. However, this was a 'false rumour'. It was however announced that they would fight on December 12, 2015, in a non-title cruiserweight battle.[119] This was Jones' first fight since being granted Russian citizenship and he was going into it with 8 straight victories, with the last 4 inside the distance.[120] The fight took place at the VTB Ice Palace in Moscow.


After an evenly matched 3 rounds, the 4th round started more in Maccarinelli's favour. Halfway through the round, Maccarinelli dropped Jones with an uppercut. Jones beat the count and carried on for 10–12 seconds more with his gloves to his face, eating several more uppercuts. Against the ropes, he then absorbed a huge right hook which caused him to stiffen and fall face down on the canvas. Referee Ingo Barrabas waved off the fight in what was Jones' 9th career defeat, the 5th by KO.[121]



Roy Jones vs. Vyron Phillips


On March 20, 2016, Jones fought in Phoenix, Arizona at the Celebrity Theatre against 33-year-old MMA fighter Vyron Phillips, who had won the right to fight him after having been selected through a vote on Facebook. Phillips, who fought in his first boxing match, was 5-3 in MMA bouts and 6-1 as an amateur boxer. Phillips would have received $100,000 if he had knocked Jones out, but was knocked down in the second round by Jones.[122] The referee then stopped the fight.[123]



Roy Jones vs. Rodney Moore


Square Ring Promotions announced on July 29, Jones would return to his hometown, Pensacola Bay Center in Pensacola, Florida on August 13 against journeyman "Rockin'" Rodney Moore (17-11-2, 7 KOs) in a cruiserweight bout. The fight headlined the "Island Fights 38" card, an ongoing series that combines boxing matches and MMA bouts on the same show. Jones last fought in Pensacola in March 2015, when he knocked out Paul Vasquez in the first round. Moore did not fight between 2005 and 2012 and has lost nine consecutive fights, although only one of them came by knockout. That was a second-round stoppage to top cruiserweight contender Murat Gassiev 13 months ago.[124] On fight night, in front of more than 5,000 fans in attendance, in a slow-paced affair, Jones won a one-sided 10 round unanimous decision with shutout scores of 100-90 on all three cards.[125]


It was noted that Jones incurred a tear in his right biceps in round five and fought the rest of the bout one handed and admitted after the bout the healing time required for his torn right biceps probably meant the end of his long career.[126] In October, Jones stated his intentions to continue fighting on and not retiring from the sport.[127]



Roy Jones vs. Bobby Gunn


On December 2, 2016, David Feldman Promotions confirmed a fight between Jones and undefeated bare-knuckle fighter and former world title challenger Bobby Gunn would be announced for February 17, 2017, for the vacant WBF Cruiserweight championship at a press conference on December 6 at the Chase Center in Delaware. At the time of announcement, Gunn was a former IBA cruiserweight champion and bare-knuckle heavyweight champion, with a record of 72-0 with 72 knockouts.[128] The fight was made official at the press conference on December 7. Jones spoke of his long-awaited desire to fight Gunn, "I always do things that people don't expect me to do. I promised Bobby a long time ago that I would give him the opportunity, and I am a man of my word. Come February 17th, I am going to shock the world again."[129][130] At the official weigh-in Jones came in 199 pounds and Gunn weighed in lighter at 197.4 pounds.[131] In a slow-paced fight, Jones stopped Gunn in the beginning of the 8th round, before Gunn had even left his corner, to win the vacant World Boxing Foundation cruiserweight title. Gunn injured his nose and was out boxed by Jones throughout seven rounds. In the post fight, Jones and Gunn both embraced.


Jones spoke about his desire to continue his boxing career further, "Anything is possible, I'm not going to make an immediate decision. Why would I stop when I looked that good though?... I want a shot at a cruiserweight title ... I do intend on fighting and we'll see what happens in the future. I looked good."[132][133] Jones later told On The Ropes Boxing Radio, "Yeah I think it's my last year in boxing, and I tell people all the time." Hinting he may retire at the end of 2017.[134] On December 3, 2017, after Miguel Cotto's farewell fight re-iterated his desire to continue boxing.[135]



Roy Jones vs. Scott Sigmon


On December 30, 2017, Jones announced that he would return to the Bay Center in Pensacola, Florida to headline the Island Fights 46 on February 8, 2018. Jones had previously headlined Island Fights, which is a show that included both boxing and MMA bouts. Speaking of the event, Jones said, "My last day at the Bay. It's my last one for the bayfront ... Civic Center, Pensacola, Bayfront Arena, whatever you want to call it. So if you want to come to see my last day in Pensacola, be there February 8. That's my last one there." He stated it would be his final fight.[136][137] Jones announced Scott Sigmon (30-11-1, 16 KOs) as his opponent for the 10 round bout.[138] Jones ended his boxing career defeating Sigmon via a one-sided 10 round unanimous decision, also winning the vacant World Boxing Union cruiserweight title in the process. All three judges scored the fight 98-92 in favour of Jones.[139][140] Jones started off the better boxer landed upper cuts and hooks and remained in control throughout the fight. Jones landed an uppercut in round 5 which knocked Sigmon's mouthpiece out. In round 6, Sigmon began throwing more punches, although they were weak combinations easily blocked by Jones. Jones was also able to counter most of the shots Sigmon threw.[141] After the fight, Jones stated he had fought with a bicep injury. He also called for a boxing match against 42-year-old former UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva. In the post-fight interview, he said, "I knew Scott was tough, I knew Scott was game and I knew Scott would keep coming. However, I don't make excuses, but last week I tore my biceps in my left arm again and I refused to pull out. Other than that [fight], chapter closed."[142][143]



Professional boxing record

















Professional record summary


75 fights

66 wins

9 losses

By knockout
47
5

By decision
19
3

By disqualification
0
1













































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































No.
Result
Record
Opponent
Type
Round, time
Date
Location
Notes
75
Win
66–9

United States Scott Sigmon
UD
10
Feb 8, 2018

United States Bay Center, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

Won vacant WBU (German version) cruiserweight title
74
Win
65–9

Canada Bobby Gunn
TKO
8 (12), 0:07
Feb 17, 2017

United States Chase Center, Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.

Won vacant WBF (Foundation) cruiserweight title
73
Win
64–9

United States Rodney Moore
UD
10
Aug 13, 2016

United States Bay Center, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

72
Win
63–9

United States Vyron Phillips
TKO
2 (6), 2:30
Mar 20, 2016

United States Celebrity Theatre, Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.

71
Loss
62–9

Wales Enzo Maccarinelli
KO
4 (10), 1:59
Dec 12, 2015

Russia VTB Ice Palace, Moscow, Russia

70
Win
62–8

United States Eric Watkins
KO
6 (10), 2:59
Aug 16, 2015

United States Foxwoods Resort Casino, Ledyard, Connecticut, U.S.

69
Win
61–8

United States Paul Vasquez
TKO
1 (12), 3:00
Mar 28, 2015

United States Bay Center, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

Retained WBU (German version) cruiserweight title
68
Win
60–8

United States Willie Williams
TKO
2 (10), 2:38
Mar 6, 2015

United States Cabarrus Arena, Concord, North Carolina, U.S.

67
Win
59–8

Egypt Hany Atiyo
KO
1 (12), 1:15
Sep 26, 2014

Russia Basket-Hall, Krasnodar, Russia

Retained WBU (German version) cruiserweight title
66
Win
58–8

United Kingdom Courtney Fry
RTD
5 (12), 3:00
Jul 26, 2014

Latvia Ķīpsala International Exhibition Centre, Riga, Latvia

Retained WBU (German version) cruiserweight title
65
Win
57–8

Algeria Zine Eddine Benmakhlouf
UD
12
Dec 21, 2013

Russia Krylatskoye Sports Palace, Moscow, Russia

Won vacant WBU (German version) cruiserweight title
64
Win
56–8

Poland Paweł Głażewski
SD
10
Jun 30, 2012

Poland Atlas Arena, Łódź, Poland

63
Win
55–8

United States Max Alexander
UD
10
Dec 10, 2011

United States Civic Center, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.

Won vacant UBO Intercontinental cruiserweight title
62
Loss
54–8

Russia Denis Lebedev
KO
10 (10), 2:58
May 21, 2011

Russia Krylatskoye Sports Palace, Moscow, Russia

61
Loss
54–7

United States Bernard Hopkins
UD
12

Apr 3, 2010

United States Mandalay Bay Events Center, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.

60
Loss
54–6

Australia Danny Green
TKO
1 (12), 2:02

Dec 2, 2009

Australia Acer Arena, Sydney, Australia

For IBO cruiserweight title
59
Win
54–5

United States Jeff Lacy
RTD
10 (12), 3:00
Aug 15, 2009

United States Coast Coliseum, Biloxi, Mississippi, U.S.

Retained WBO–NABO light heavyweight title
58
Win
53–5

United States Omar Sheika
TKO
5 (12), 1:45
Mar 21, 2009

United States Civic Center, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

Won vacant WBO–NABO light heavyweight title
57
Loss
52–5

Wales Joe Calzaghe
UD
12

Nov 8, 2008

United States Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York, U.S.

For The Ring light heavyweight title
56
Win
52–4

Puerto Rico Félix Trinidad
UD
12

Jan 19, 2008

United States Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York, U.S.

55
Win
51–4

United States Anthony Hanshaw
UD
12
Jul 14, 2007

United States Coast Coliseum, Biloxi, Mississippi, U.S.

Won vacant IBC light heavyweight title
54
Win
50–4

United States Prince Badi Ajamu
UD
12
Jul 29, 2006

United States Qwest Arena, Boise, Idaho, U.S.

Won WBO–NABO light heavyweight title
53
Loss
49–4

United States Antonio Tarver
UD
12

Oct 1, 2005

United States St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa, Florida, U.S.

For IBO and The Ring light heavyweight titles
52
Loss
49–3

Jamaica Glen Johnson
KO
9 (12), 0:48

Sep 25, 2004

United States FedExForum, Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.

For IBF light heavyweight title
51
Loss
49–2

United States Antonio Tarver
TKO
2 (12), 1:41

May 15, 2004

United States Mandalay Bay Events Center, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.

Lost WBA (Super), WBC, IBO, IBA, and The Ring light heavyweight titles;
For vacant WBF (Foundation) light heavyweight title

50
Win
49–1

United States Antonio Tarver

MD
12

Nov 8, 2003

United States Mandalay Bay Events Center, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.

Retained WBA (Super), IBO, and The Ring light heavyweight titles;
Won WBC light heavyweight title

49
Win
48–1

United States John Ruiz
UD
12

Mar 1, 2003

United States Thomas & Mack Center, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.

Won WBA heavyweight title
48
Win
47–1

United Kingdom Clinton Woods
TKO
6 (12), 1:29
Sep 7, 2002

United States Rose Garden, Portland, Oregon, U.S.

Retained WBA (Super), WBC, IBF, IBO, WBF (Federation), IBA, and The Ring light heavyweight titles
47
Win
46–1

Australia Glen Kelly
KO
7 (12), 1:55
Feb 2, 2002

United States American Airlines Arena, Miami, Florida, U.S.

Retained WBA (Super), WBC, IBF, IBO, WBF (Federation), IBA, and The Ring light heavyweight titles
46
Win
45–1

Mexico Julio César González
UD
12
Jul 28, 2001

United States Staples Center, Los Angeles, California, U.S.

Retained WBA (Super), WBC, IBF, and IBO light heavyweight titles;
Won vacant WBF (Federation) and IBA light heavyweight titles

45
Win
44–1

United States Derrick Harmon
RTD
10 (12), 3:00
Feb 24, 2001

United States Ice Palace, Tampa, Florida, U.S.

Retained WBA (Super), WBC, IBF, and IBO light heavyweight titles
44
Win
43–1

United States Eric Harding
RTD
10 (12), 3:00
Sep 9, 2000

United States New Orleans Arena, New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.

Retained WBA, WBC, and IBF light heavyweight titles;
Won IBO light heavyweight title

43
Win
42–1

Jamaica Richard Hall
TKO
11 (12), 1:41
May 13, 2000

United States Conseco Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.

Retained WBA, WBC, and IBF light heavyweight titles
42
Win
41–1

United States David Telesco
UD
12
Jan 15, 2000

United States Radio City Music Hall, New York City, New York, U.S.

Retained WBA, WBC, and IBF light heavyweight titles
41
Win
40–1

United States Reggie Johnson
UD
12
Jun 5, 1999

United States Grand Casino, Biloxi, Mississippi, U.S.

Retained WBA and WBC light heavyweight titles;
Won IBF light heavyweight title

40
Win
39–1

United States Richard Frazier
TKO
2 (12), 2:59
Jan 9, 1999

United States Civic Center, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

Retained WBA and WBC light heavyweight titles
39
Win
38–1

Jamaica Otis Grant
TKO
10 (12), 1:18
Nov 14, 1998

United States Foxwoods Resort Casino, Ledyard, Connecticut, U.S.

Retained WBA and WBC light heavyweight titles
38
Win
37–1

United States Lou Del Valle
UD
12
Jul 18, 1998

United States Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York, U.S.

Retained WBC light heavyweight title;
Won WBA light heavyweight title

37
Win
36–1

United States Virgil Hill
KO
4 (12), 1:10
Apr 25, 1998

United States Coast Coliseum, Biloxi, Mississippi, U.S.

36
Win
35–1

United States Montell Griffin
KO
1 (12), 2:31

Aug 7, 1997

United States Foxwoods Resort Casino, Ledyard, Connecticut, U.S.

Won WBC light heavyweight title
35
Loss
34–1

United States Montell Griffin

DQ
9 (12), 2:27

Mar 21, 1997

United States Etess Arena, Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S.

Lost WBC light heavyweight title;
Jones disqualified for hitting Griffin after a knockdown

34
Win
34–0

Jamaica Mike McCallum
UD
12

Nov 22, 1996

United States Ice Palace, Tampa, Florida, U.S.

Won vacant WBC interim light heavyweight title
33
Win
33–0

United States Bryant Brannon
TKO
2 (12), 2:23
Oct 4, 1996

United States Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York, U.S.

Retained IBF super middleweight title
32
Win
32–0

Canada Eric Lucas

RTD
11 (12), 3:00
Jun 15, 1996

United States Coliseum, Jacksonville, Florida, U.S.

Retained IBF super middleweight title
31
Win
31–0

Dominican Republic Merqui Sosa
TKO
2 (12), 2:36
Jan 12, 1996

United States Madison Square Garden, New York City, New York, U.S.

30
Win
30–0

United States Tony Thornton
TKO
3 (12), 0:45
Sep 30, 1995

United States Civic Center, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

Retained IBF super middleweight title
29
Win
29–0

United States Vinny Pazienza
TKO
6 (12), 2:58

Jun 24, 1995

United States Convention Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S.

Retained IBF super middleweight title
28
Win
28–0

United States Antoine Byrd
TKO
1 (12), 2:06
Mar 18, 1995

United States Civic Center, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

Retained IBF super middleweight title
27
Win
27–0

United States James Toney
UD
12

Nov 18, 1994

United States MGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.

Won IBF super middleweight title
26
Win
26–0

United States Thomas Tate
TKO
2 (12), 0:30
May 27, 1994

United States MGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.

Retained IBF middleweight title
25
Win
25–0

Puerto Rico Danny Garcia
KO
6 (10), 2:59
Mar 22, 1994

United States University of West Florida, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

24
Win
24–0

Venezuela Fermin Chirino
UD
10
Nov 30, 1993

United States Civic Center, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

23
Win
23–0

South Africa Thulani Malinga
KO
6 (10), 1:57
Aug 14, 1993

United States Casino Magic, Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, U.S.

22
Win
22–0

United States Bernard Hopkins
UD
12

May 22, 1993

United States Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium, Washington, D.C., U.S.

Won vacant IBF middleweight title
21
Win
21–0

United States Glenn Wolfe
TKO
1 (10), 2:23
Feb 13, 1993

United States Caesars Palace, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.

20
Win
20–0

United States Percy Harris
TKO
4 (12), 3:00
Dec 5, 1992

United States Etess Arena, Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S.

Won vacant WBC Continental Americas super middleweight title
19
Win
19–0

United States Glenn Thomas
TKO
8 (10), 3:00
Aug 18, 1992

United States Bayfront Auditorium, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

18
Win
18–0

Argentina Jorge Castro

UD
10
Jun 30, 1992

United States Civic Center, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

17
Win
17–0

Uganda Art Serwano
KO
1 (10), 1:40
Apr 3, 1992

United States Convention Center, Reno, Nevada, U.S.

16
Win
16–0

Mexico Jorge Vaca
KO
1 (10), 1:45
Jan 10, 1992

United States Paramount Theatre, New York City, New York, U.S.

15
Win
15–0

United States Lester Yarbrough
KO
8 (10)
Aug 31, 1991

United States Interstate Fairgrounds, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

14
Win
14–0

United States Kevin Daigle
TKO
2 (10)
Aug 3, 1991

United States Interstate Fairgrounds, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

13
Win
13–0

United States Eddie Evans
TKO
3 (10)
Apr 13, 1991

United States Interstate Fairgrounds, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

12
Win
12–0

United States Ricky Stackhouse
KO
1 (10), 0:46
Jan 31, 1991

United States Bayfront Auditorium, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

11
Win
11–0

United States Reggie Miller
TKO
5 (10)
Nov 8, 1990

United States Bayfront Auditorium, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

10
Win
10–0

United States Rollin Williams
KO
4 (10), 2:56
Sep 25, 1990

United States Bayfront Auditorium, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

9
Win
9–0

United States Tony Waddles
KO
1 (10), 2:02
Jul 14, 1990

United States Bayfront Auditorium, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

8
Win
8–0

United States Ron Johnson
KO
2 (10), 2:28
May 11, 1990

United States Bayfront Auditorium, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

7
Win
7–0

United States Knox Brown
TKO
3 (10), 2:20
Mar 28, 1990

United States Interstate Fairgrounds, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

6
Win
6–0

United States Billy Mitchem
TKO
2 (8), 2:57
Feb 28, 1990

United States Interstate Fairgrounds, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

5
Win
5–0

United States Joe Edens

KO
2 (8), 2:05
Jan 8, 1990

United States County Fairgrounds, Mobile, Alabama, U.S.

4
Win
4–0

United States David McCluskey
TKO
3 (8), 2:00
Nov 30, 1989

United States Bayfront Auditorium, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

3
Win
3–0

United States Ron Amundsen
TKO
7 (8), 2:43
Sep 3, 1989

United States Civic Center, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.

2
Win
2–0

United States Stephan Johnson
TKO
8 (8), 2:04
Jun 11, 1989

United States Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino, Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S.

1
Win
1–0

United States Ricky Randall

TKO
2 (8), 2:46
May 6, 1989

United States Civic Center, Pensacola, Florida, U.S.


Pay-per-view bouts

















































Date
Fight
Billing
Buys
November 18, 1994

Toney vs. Jones

The Uncivil War

300,000
September 9, 2000

Jones vs. Harding
Bourbon St Brawl

140,000
July 28, 2001

Jones vs. Gonzalez
Roy vs. Julio

200,000
March 1, 2003

Jones vs. Ruiz
Never take a Heavyweight Lightly

602,000
November 8, 2003

Jones vs. Tarver

Now It's Personal

302,000
May 15, 2004

Jones vs. Tarver II

More Than Personal

384,000
October 1, 2005

Jones vs. Tarver III
No Excuses

440,000
January 19, 2008

Jones vs. Trinidad
Bring on the Titans

500,000
November 8, 2008

Calzaghe vs. Jones

Battle of the Superpowers

225,000
March 3, 2010

Hopkins vs. Jones II

The Rivals

150,000

Total

9 Pay Per View Fights

3,178,000


Personal life


Jones was born in Pensacola, Florida,[144] to two very different parents. His mother, Carol, was warm and easy-going, whereas his father, Roy Sr., was much like a Marine Drill Instructor with respect to his son. A decorated Vietnam veteran, ex-club fighter and retired aircraft engineer who had taken up hog farming, Roy Sr. was harsh on his son from early on, taunting the child, "sparring" with him, enraging on him, yelling at him and abusing him, often for 20 minutes at a time. This behavior never really changed; if anything it became more brutal as Roy Jr. grew up. Many people would call Roy's father's treatment out-and-out abuse, but he believed he had a good reason for it: to make Roy Jr. tough enough to be a champion. In this pursuit, he was relentless and Roy Jr. lived in constant fear of his father's verbal and physical violence against him.[145]


Jones described his childhood in Sports Illustrated: "After a while I didn't care about gettin' hurt or dyin' anymore. I was in pain all day, every day, I was so scared of my father. He'd pull up in his truck and start lookin' for something I'd done wrong. There was no escape, no excuse, no way out of nothin'. ... Getting' hurt or dyin' might've been better than the life I was livin'. ... Used to think about killin' myself anyway."[145]


Roy Sr. ran his own boxing gym, to which he devoted all his available time and financial resources. He offered direction to numerous youths and steered many of them away from trouble. Roy Sr. did everything possible to expand the program and help more kids. But towards his own son he was merciless, driving Roy Jr. to the brink of exhaustion, screaming at him in front of all the other fighters and assaulting him."[145]


Using his birds as an image for his own predicament, Jones said in the same Sports Illustrated piece: "I spent all my life in my dad's cage. I could never be 100 percent of who I am until I left it. But because of him, nothing bothers me. I'll never face anything stronger and harder than what I already have."[145]


But his father's violence paid him well—after some quick successes initially in his career including 1984 United States National Junior Olympics victory—Jones' hard work started paying him off. He not only gained fame, but wealth—according to a research, Jones' assets exceeded the amount of $45 million as of 2012.[citation needed]


Former Heavyweight Champion George Foreman said Jones, "hits like a heavyweight and moves like a lightweight.".[citation needed]


Boxer Montell Griffin, who faced Jones twice at 175 lbs and sparred with Floyd Mayweather Jr. at 140 lbs said, "Floyd was no comparison as far as speed. Roy was much faster.".[citation needed]


In 1996, High Frequency Boxing's John DiMaio wrote "The early evidence points toward the real possibility that Jones is the greatest talent this sport has ever seen. His skill so dwarfs that of his nearest ranked opposition...that providing competitive opponents is a more challenging dilemma than the fights themselves." The expert opinion of Boxing magazine's editor, Bert Sugar, is provided on Jones' website: "He possesses the fastest hands in boxing with lightning fast moves and explosive power in both hands." After Mike MacCallum lost the World Boxing Council light heavyweight crown to Roy Jones in a 1996 unanimous decision, he called Jones "the greatest fighter of all time.".[citation needed]


On August 19, 2015, Roy Jones met with Vladimir Putin in Sevastopol, Crimea, to ask for a dual Russian-American citizenship. He explained that he often visits Russia for business activity, and a passport would avoid inconvenient rides.[146] Jones was granted Russian citizenship on September 12.[147] For this he was banned from entering Ukraine.[148] Crimea is since March 2014 under dispute by Russia and Ukraine.[149]



Music career

















Roy Jones Jr.
Birth nameRoy Levesta Jones Jr.
Born
(1969-01-16) January 16, 1969 (age 49)
Origin
Pensacola, Florida, United States
Genres
Hip hop, Southern Hip Hop, Crunk
Occupation(s)
Boxer, rapper, actor, promoter, sports commentator
Years active2001–present
LabelsBody Head Entertainment

Jones started his rap music career in 2001 with his album, titled Round One: The Album and the debut single, "Y'All Must've Forgot". In 2004, Jones formed a group – Body Head Bangerz and released an album. The album, Body Head Bangerz: Volume One, featured B.G., Juvenile, Bun B of UGK, Petey Pablo, Lil' Flip and Mike Jones among others.



Discography



Album


Album information

Round One: The Album
  • Released: February 26, 2002

  • Label: Body Head Entertainment

  • Last RIAA Certification: None

  • Singles: "Y'all Must've Forgot", "And Still"


With Body Head Bangerz


Album information

Body Head Bangerz: Volume One
  • Released: October 26, 2004

  • Label: Body Head Entertainment

  • Last RIAA Certification: None

  • Singles: "Can't Be Touched", "I Smoke, I Drank (Remix)"


Solo singles


  • 2001: "Y'all Must've Forgot"

  • 2001: "And Still"

  • 2009: "Battle of the Super Powers"


Featured singles


  • 2004: "Can't Be Touched"


Filmography



  • The Devil's Advocate (1997) – Himself


  • The Sentinel (1998) – Sweet Roy Williams (Episode: "Sweet Science")


  • The Wayans Brothers (1999) – Himself (Episode: "Rope-a-Dope")


  • The Matrix Reloaded (2003) – Captain Ballard


  • Enter the Matrix (2003) – Captain Ballard


  • Cordially Invited (2007) – Lenny Banks


  • Universal Soldier: A New Dimension (2012) – Mess Hall Unisol


  • Southpaw (2015) – Himself


  • Creed II (2018) – Himself


References




  1. ^ https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2015/oct/27/roy-jones-jr-officially-becomes-russian-citizen-with-moscow-passport-ceremony


  2. ^ ab Mamet, David (1988-10-07). "In Losing, a Boxer Won". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-04-10..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


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  4. ^ Ashdown, John (2012-02-15). "50 stunning Olympic moments No14: Roy Jones Jr cheated out of gold". The Guardian.


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  81. ^ Green stops Jones Jr in first round, ABC article, 2009-12-03, Retrieved on 2014-03-15


  82. ^ Jones lodges formal complaint against Danny Green, WA Today article, 2009-12-25, Retrieved on 2014-03-15


  83. ^ Jones, Hopkins to face off April 3, ESPN article, 2010-02-01, Retrieved on 2014-03-15


  84. ^ "Bernard Hopkins, Roy Jones Jr. set for rematch". FOX Sports. 2010-02-02. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  85. ^ Press, Associated (2010-04-04). "Bernard Hopkins claims points win – and revenge – over Roy Jones Jr". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  86. ^ "Roy Jones-Lebedev Negotiations Confirmed By Hryunov". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-01.


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  97. ^ "Venue Named For Roy Jones-Max Alexander 12/10 Clash". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  98. ^ "Roy Jones: Alexander Gets KO'd The First Time He Slips Up". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  99. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. Decisions Max Alexander Over Ten Rounds". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  100. ^ "Roy Jones Jr.-Max Alexander PPV To Land on Ustream". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  101. ^ "Roy Jones Jr.-Dawid Kostecki is Heading To June 30th". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  102. ^ "Roy Jones: I Don't Care Who I Fight, Even Andrew Golota!". Boxingscene.com. Retrieved 2015-04-16.


  103. ^ "Kostecki Sentenced, out of Roy Jones Fight; Glazewski In?". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  104. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. Dropped, Edges Glazewski in Tough Win". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  105. ^ "Jones In Line For Title Shot, Open To Glazewski Rematch". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  106. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. Faces Benmakhlouf on Dec. 21 in Moscow". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  107. ^ "Roy Jones vs. Benmakhlouf Will Be "Winner Takes All"". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  108. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. def. Zine Eddine Benmakhlouf via UD". boxrec.com. Retrieved 2016-06-19.


  109. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. defeats Zine Eddine Benmakhlouf". Boxing News 24.


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  111. ^ "Roy Jones Stops Courtney Fry in Five Rounds". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  112. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. Battles Hani Atiyo on Sep. 26 in Krasnodar". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  113. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. Event in Krasnodar, Russia is Sold Out". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  114. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. Destroys Hany Atiyo in One Round". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  115. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. Wins In Club Fight, Eyes Huck Title Shot". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


  116. ^ "Roy Jones Picks Up Second KO Win In Less Than a Month". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-02.


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  119. ^ "Enzo Maccarinelli to fight legendary Roy Jones Jr in December". the Guardian.


  120. ^ Bryan Armen Graham. "Roy Jones Jr officially becomes Russian citizen with Moscow passport ceremony". the Guardian.


  121. ^ "Enzo Maccarinelli defeats Roy Jones Jnr with devastating fourth-round knockout". Mail Online. 13 December 2015.


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  124. ^ "Jones Jr. back in action Aug. 13 against Moore". Retrieved 2016-07-29.


  125. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. shuts out Rodney Moore | Boxing News". 2016-08-14. Retrieved 2016-08-14.


  126. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. Tears Right Bicep, Admits Career Could Be Over - Boxing News". www.boxingscene.com. Retrieved 2016-08-15.


  127. ^ "Roy Jones Jr: I'm Addicted To Boxing, No Retirement Right Now - Boxing News". www.boxingscene.com. Retrieved 2016-10-25.


  128. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. vs Bobby Gunn on 2/17". December 2, 2016. Retrieved December 2, 2016.


  129. ^ "Photo: Roy Jones Jr., Bobby Gunn Face Off at Kickoff Presser - Boxing News". www.boxingscene.com. Retrieved 2016-12-07.


  130. ^ Abrams, Marc. "Roy Jones Jr. v Bobby Gunn kick-off press conference round-up". WBN - World Boxing News. Retrieved 2016-12-07.


  131. ^ "Photo: Roy Jones Jr., Bobby Gunn Make Weight, Ready For War - Boxing News". www.boxingscene.com. Retrieved 2017-02-17.


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  133. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. Dominates, Punishes and Stops Bobby Gunn - Boxing News". www.boxingscene.com. Retrieved 2017-02-18.


  134. ^ "Roy Jones Eyes Retirement: I Think It's My Last Year in Boxing - Boxing News". www.boxingscene.com. Retrieved 2017-02-18.


  135. ^ "Roy Jones: No Retirement, I'll Be in The Coffin Throwing Punches!". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2017-12-04.


  136. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. Announces February 8 Return: This is My Final Fight!". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2017-12-30.


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  138. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. vs. Scott Sigmon is Finalized For February 8". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-01-20.


  139. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. Ends His Career With Decision Win Over Sigmon". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 2018-02-09.


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  143. ^ "Roy Jones Jr ends career with win over Scott Sigmon". Sky Sports. Retrieved 2018-02-09.


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  145. ^ abcd Smith, Gary (1995-06-26). "One Tough Bird Roy Jones Jr., The Best Boxer Pound For Pound, Was Raised Under The Rules Of Cockfighting: Win Or Die". Sports Illustrated. New York: Time Inc. Retrieved 2015-04-05.


  146. ^ "Meeting with Roy Jones". Kremlin.ru. August 19, 2015. Retrieved August 22, 2015.


  147. ^ "Подписан Указ о приёме в гражданство Российской Федерации" (in Russian). Kremlin.ru. September 12, 2015. Retrieved September 12, 2015.


  148. ^ SBU issues entry ban against 140 Russian artists, UNIAN (5 November 2016)
    Ukraine's State Security Service bans 140 Russian cultural figures from entering country, TASS news agency (5 November 2016)



  149. ^ Gutterman, Steve. "Putin signs Crimea treaty, will not seize other Ukraine regions". Reuters. Retrieved 2014-03-26.



External links


  • Official website


  • Roy-Jones.net (in Russian)


  • Professional boxing record for Roy Jones Jr. from BoxRec



























































































Sporting positions
Amateur boxing titles
Previous:
Robert Guy

U.S. Golden Gloves
light welterweight champion

1986
Next:
Todd Foster
Regional boxing titles

New title

WBC Continental Americas
super middleweight champion

December 5, 1992 – February 1993
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Carl Jones
Preceded by
Prince Badi Ajamu

WBO–NABO
light heavyweight champion

July 29, 2006 – April 2007
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Otis Griffin

Vacant
Title last held by

Tavoris Cloud

WBO–NABO
light heavyweight champion

March 21, 2009 – December 2009
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Andrzej Fonfara

Vacant
Title last held by

Matamba Debatch Postolo

UBO Intercontinental
cruiserweight champion

December 10, 2011 – August 2012
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

David Radeff
Minor world boxing titles

Vacant
Title last held by

Drake Thadzi

IBO light heavyweight champion
September 9, 2000 – May 15, 2004
Succeeded by
Antonio Tarver

Vacant
Title last held by

Ole Klemetsen

IBA light heavyweight champion
July 28, 2001 – May 15, 2004

Vacant
Title last held by

Mark Baker

WBF (Federation)
light heavyweight champion

July 28, 2001 – February 2003
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Manuel Ossie

Vacant
Title last held by

Rachid Kanfouah

IBC light heavyweight champion
July 14, 2007 – March 2008
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Dawid Kostecki

Vacant
Title last held by

Dennis Ronert

WBU cruiserweight champion
German title

December 21, 2013 – December 2016
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Tefik Bajrami

Vacant
Title last held by

Marino Goles

WBF (Foundation)
cruiserweight champion

February 18, 2017 – February 8, 2018
Retired

Vacant

Vacant
Title last held by

Sotirios Georgikeas

WBU cruiserweight champion
German title

February 8, 2018 – February 8, 2018
Retired
Major world boxing titles

Vacant
Title last held by

James Toney

IBF middleweight champion
May 22, 1993 – November 1994
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Bernard Hopkins
Preceded by
James Toney

IBF super middleweight champion
November 18, 1994 – November 1996
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Charles Brewer

Vacant
Title last held by

Mike McCallum

WBC light heavyweight champion
Interim title

November 22, 1996 – March 1997
Promoted

Vacant
Title next held by

Adrian Diaconu
Preceded by
Fabrice Tiozzo
vacated


WBC light heavyweight champion
March 1997 – March 21, 1997
Succeeded by
Montell Griffin
Preceded by
Montell Griffin

WBC light heavyweight champion
August 7, 1997 – November 2002
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Antonio Tarver
Preceded by
Lou Del Valle

WBA light heavyweight champion
July 18, 1998 – August 2001
Promoted
Succeeded by
Bruno Girard
as Regular champion
Preceded by
Reggie Johnson

IBF light heavyweight champion
June 5, 1999 – November 2002
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Antonio Tarver

Vacant
Title last held by

Michael Spinks

Undisputed light heavyweight champion
June 5, 1999 – November 2002
Titles fragmented

Vacant

New title

WBA light heavyweight champion
Super title

August 2001 – November 2002
Vacated

Vacant
Title next held by

Himself

Vacant
Title last held by

Michael Spinks

The Ring light heavyweight champion
2001 – May 15, 2004
Succeeded by
Antonio Tarver
Preceded by
John Ruiz

WBA heavyweight champion
March 1, 2003 – February 2004
Vacated
Succeeded by
John Ruiz
promoted from interim status


Vacant
Title last held by

Himself

WBA light heavyweight champion
Super title

November 8, 2003 – May 15, 2004
Succeeded by
Antonio Tarver
Preceded by
Antonio Tarver

WBC light heavyweight champion
November 8, 2003 – May 15, 2004
Awards
Previous:
Michael Carbajal

The Ring Fighter of the Year
1994
Next:
Oscar De La Hoya

Inaugural award

BWAA Fighter of the Decade
1990s
Next:
Manny Pacquiao
Previous:
George Foreman

Best Boxer ESPY Award
1996
Next:
Evander Holyfield
Previous:
Oscar De La Hoya

Best Boxer ESPY Award
2000
Next:
Félix Trinidad
Previous:
Lennox Lewis

Best Boxer ESPY Award
2003
Next:
Antonio Tarver
Achievements
Preceded by
Pernell Whitaker

The Ring pound for pound #1 boxer
April 12, 1997 – May 15, 2004
Succeeded by
Bernard Hopkins










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