Shane Mosley vs. Antonio Díaz

Shane Mosley vs. Antonio Díaz
DateNovember 4, 2000
VenueThe Theater at Madison Square Garden, New York, New York, U.S.
Title(s) on the lineWBC welterweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Shane Mosley Antonio Díaz
Nickname Sugar Toño
Hometown Pomona, California, U.S. Coachella, California, U.S.
Purse $3,000,000 $360,000
Pre-fight record 35–0 (33 KO) 33–2 (22 KO)
Age 29 years, 1 month 24 years, 4 months
Height 5 ft 9 in (175 cm) 5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
Weight 146+12 lb (66 kg) 146+12 lb (66 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBC
Welterweight Champion
The Ring No. 1 Ranked pound-for-pound fighter
2-division world champion
WBC
No. 15 Ranked Welterweight
IBA
Super Lightweight Champion
Result
Mosley wins via 6th–round technical knockout

Shane Mosley vs. Antonio Díaz was a professional boxing match contested on November 4, 2000 for the WBC welterweight title.[1]

Background

Shane Mosley had scored the biggest victory in his professional career in his previous fight, earning a narrow, and controversial, split decision victory over Oscar De La Hoya in June 2000.[2] Given the closeness of the contest, interest for an immediate rematch was high, with the both fighters promoters Bob Arum and Cedric Kushner hoping to get a deal done soon after. Mosley himself expressed that he had no qualms with granting De La Hoya a rematch should he want one stating after his victory, "he gave me an opportunity to fight him. If he wants a rematch, I've got to give it to him."[3] However, De La Hoya, disappointed with his loss, had little interest in an immediate rematch and claimed that "rethink my whole game plan in life" and mulled retirement. De La Hoya would ultimately not fight for the remainder of 2001, ending any hopes for a planned November 2000 rematch with Mosley.[4]

Unable to secure a rematch with De La Hoya, Kushner instead arranged for Mosley to make his first welterweight title defense against little known Antonio Díaz on November 4, 2000, at the The Theater at Madison Square Garden. Díaz, who had held the fringe IBA super lightweight title December 1997, was fighting for a major world title for the first time.[5]

Fight Details

Mosley controlled the fight from the first round on and had little difficulty with the overmatched Díaz. Mosley scored an early knockdown, sending Díaz down for the first time in his professional career after landing consecutive right hands with just over a minute left in the second round, though Díaz was able to get back to his feet quickly. Díaz, knowing that Mosley had built an early lead, fought more aggressively in the third, but Mosley effectively used his quickness and counter-punching and landed the bigger punches in the round. Mosley maintained control of the fight into the sixth round when he scored another knockdown early in the round with Díaz again answering the referee's 10-count. Sensing the end was near, Mosley went on the offensive against the clearly exhausted Díaz and battered him with a flurry of punches until sending him down again with another big right hand. Feeling that Díaz could no longer continue, referee Arthur Mercante Sr. immediately halted the fight, giving Mosley the victory by technical knockout at 1:36 of the round.[6]

Fight card

Confirmed bouts:[7]

Weight Class Weight vs. Method Round Notes
Welterweight 147 lbs. Shane Mosley def. Antonio Díaz TKO 6/12 note 1
Super Lightweight 140 lbs. Héctor Camacho Jr. def. Joe Hutchinson UD 10/10
Heavyweight 200+ lbs. Danell Nicholson def. Reynaldo Minus TKO 2/10
Heavyweight 200+ lbs. Derrick Jefferson def. Marcus Johnson TKO 1/8
Heavyweight 200+ lbs. LeRoy Berbick def. Ed Hardy TKO 3/6
Super Middleweight 160 lbs. Tokunbo Olajide def. Brad Ekstam KO 1/4

^Note 1 For WBC Welterweight Title

Broadcasting

Country Broadcaster
United States HBO

References

  1. ^ "Shane Mosley vs. Antonio Díaz". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 10 July 2025.
  2. ^ Mosley Takes De La Hoya's Title on Split Decision, N.Y. Times article, 2000-06–18, Retrieved on 2025-07-18
  3. ^ Mosley willing to give rematch to De La Hoya, The Ledger article, 2000-06–19, Retrieved on 2025-07-18
  4. ^ De La Hoya Talks of Retirement While Promoter Talks of Rematch With Mosley, N.Y. Times article, 2000-06–19, Retrieved on 2025-07-18
  5. ^ Mosley Back in Ring At Garden vs. Diaz, N.Y. Times article, 2000-09–29, Retrieved on 2025-07-18
  6. ^ IMosley Defends Title By Stopping Diaz in Six NY Times article, 2000-11-05 Retrieved on 2025-07-19
  7. ^ "BoxRec - event".