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Who is the greatest light welterweight boxer of all time?

12.06.2025 09:00

Who is the greatest light welterweight boxer of all time?

Boxrec for records, statistics

Arguello apologized publicly to Futch after he did worse in the second fight than the first.

The great Larry Holmes said it best, after watching Pryor knock out Arguello:

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Pryor, when asked once why he fought so ferociously hard in the ring, said:

Pryor was then offered a fight against rising lightweight champion Alexis Arguello. Arguello was attempting become the first boxer to win world titles in four weight divisions, and was a 12-5 favorite over Pryor. Ray Leonard- who had sparred with Pryor in a vicious exchange, remarked of the odds:

After boxing

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1980 #4 lightweight

“Ray had been shadowboxing and he worked up a good sweat, we called Aaron and when he arrived, I told him to warm up, but he refused because he wanted to quickly get into the ring with Ray . . . Ray was warmed up and Aaron was still cold, but they went to war.”

Although Pryor had risen to #4 in the lightweight rankings, none of the other top contenders would fight him except Alexis Arguello, who was #3 - and no promoter was willing to meet Arguello’s price for that fight.

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1982 #1 at lightweight, WBA champion at Light Welterweight

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Arguello said simply:

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Pryor had been trained by Panama Lewis for his first fight with Arguello. Lewis had his license revoked after he removed the padding from the gloves of Luis Resto before his match with Billy Collins. Pryor hired Larry Holmes trainer Richie Giachetti to train him, but they had a falling out and just two weeks before the Arguello rematch, Pryor turned to Manny Steward, who came in and saved the day.

Cervantes spoke in awe about the lightweight’s incredible power:

Pryor's purse was $1.6 million, while Arguello's was $1.5 million, both career highs for both men.

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Nor was that all.

Leonard did say of Pryor:

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“The first time I saw him I thought he was a crazy [expletive], Aaron was there among the top fighters during that time. I don’t care if Aaron was going to fight Joe Schmoe, he still had a kamikaze mentality. He had heart. He fought with conviction.”

Ring August 2020 Anson Wainwright

Amateur career

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“Aaron beat Arguello’s ass like he stole something.”

Sims would recall the incident after Pryor’s death, saying:

Alexis Arguello through tears after the fight said:

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Arguello was trained by Lupe Sanchez for the Pryor rematch.

Aaron Pryor in the professional ranks, became one of the most avoided fighters ever.

At his natural weight class, lightweight, Pryor had 20 fights, and 18 stoppages for a mind boggling 90% knockout percentage

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though Pryor lost to Howard Davis Jr. at the 1976 Olympic Trials, Davis later pointedly refused to fight Pryor as a professional)

Arguello and Pryor

Leonard would only say:

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Who was the Hawk, Aaron Pryor?

Years at the top:

“Aaron was a great, great, fighter and more importantly, he is my friend.”

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“No one could beat Aaron. He’d throw 200 punches per round and keep going.”

But Pryor, also visibly stunned on at least two occasions, was never really hurt.

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Both Jim Watt and Hilmer Kenty absolutely refused to even consider Pryor for a title shot at lightweight no matter what was offered.

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Pryor participated as an alternate in the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal.

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The two got together several times a year until Arguello's death, apparently by a self-inflicted gunshot, in 2009. Pryor died on October 9, 2016. He never stopped grieving for his friend…

Both men earned career high purses over their career high payday for their first fight. Pryor's purse was $2.25 million and Arguello's was $1.75 million. This time however, Pryor was a 2½ to 1 favorite.

The early rounds were all Pryor, but by the half way stage, Arguello was right back in the fight with his precision counter-punching. Pryor had only boxed beyond 10 rounds once before, but Arguello had done so 10 times.

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“We sparred on several occasions and we never thought we’d fight each other because of the difference in weight class. And when we did spar, once in a while I’d get him and once in a while he’d get me.

Larry Holmes once explained why no champion or contender ever wanted to fight Aaron Pryor:

The fight started as a war, with Pryor roaring forward and throwing punches from every possible angle and some which were not possible, and with the counter-punching Arguello hitting him with shots which would have flattened any other living fighter.

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At lightweight Pryor had a higher knockout rate than the great Roberto Duran…

But from that day forward, Pryor was convinced he had Leonard’s number.

Aaron Pryor, known to boxing fans as “the Hawk”, was born on October 20, 1955, and who died on October 9, 2016, competed from 1976 to 1990.

“He was pure class, both inside and outside the ring. He was intelligent. articulate, and a genuinely nice person. He was what any boxer would like to be.”

Pryor dominated the light-welterweight division for six years. He made 11 defenses of his title, all mandatory defenses except the two against the great Alexis Arguello. He could not buy a discretionary defense or fight against another top fighter.

Pryor’s first fight as a pro was with Larry Smith, for which he made $400.

Pryor entered the top 10 as a lightweight in 1979:

Arguello suffered a cut over his left eye in round six, and slowly but surely, the damage accumulated from Pryor’s unstop assault.

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Ring for ratings

Pryor’s incredible power:

1981 #1 at lightweight, WBA champion at Light Welterweight

The great Aaron Pryor was the greatest light welterweight who ever lived.

“The first time I saw him I thought he was a crazy [expletive], Aaron was there among the top fighters during that time. I don’t care if Aaron was going to fight Joe Schmoe, he still had a kamikaze mentality. He had heart. He fought with conviction.”

In 1979, he fought 6 times, but in his last match, Pryor was pitted for the first time ever against a once or future world champion when he faced former WBA light welterweight champion Alfonso "Peppermint" Frazer of Panama. Frazer, a legitimately great fighter, was the first prime great fighter faced by Pryor, who knocked out Frazer in the 5th round, advancing his fight record to 20-0 with 18 knockouts. After defeating Fraser, Pryor entered the World Boxing Association rankings.

1985 #5 Junior Welterweight

Both Arguello and Pryor are members of the Hall of Fame, and the two formed a deep and abiding friendship in their retirement. When Arguello ran for office, Pryor went down to Nicaragua to support Arguello's political career, and travelled around the country advocating for him.

for his career, Pryor had 40 fights, 39 wins, and 35 knockouts, for an incredible 89.74% knockout percentage

“Best puncher I ever faced was Aaron Pryor. I had 106 fights and was only stopped twice, once by Pryor. I felt his hands.”

“I fight so hard to stay out of the streets I was born in.”

Leonard did say of Pryor:

1979 #8 lightweight

In the years before his death. Pryor lived in his hometown of Cincinnati with his wife, Frankie Pryor, and his four children. Pryor became an ordained deacon at New Friendship Baptist Church and used to travel making personal appearances and spreading his message against drugs.

Till his death, Pryor remained active in the sport of boxing, training both professional and Golden Gloves amateur boxers.

Pryor struggled for years with drug addiction, but finally,"The Hawk" kicked his habit.

The fight took place in Pryor's hometown of Cincinnati and was televised nationally by CBS. Pryor was knocked down in round one, but he got right back up and knocked out Cervantes in round four to become light welterweight champion.

Former Pryor trainer Frankie Sims said wryly:

1984 #1 Junior Welterweight

At 140 pounds, Pryor had 20 fights, 19 wins, and 17 stoppages, for an almost as great 89.47% knockout percentage

According to Sims, Leonard controlled the first round with his jab, and in the second, knocked Pryor down. But towards the end of the round, Pryor got warmed up, and started closing the distance. The third round, he dominated Leonard, beating him all over the ring.

the National AAU Lightweight Championship in 1975

Born into terrible poverty, the native of Cincinnati began boxing at 13, first to defend himself in the slums he grew up in, and then as a way to get out of poverty.

“The worst mistake of my life,” said

Perhaps Pryor summed up Arguello the best when he said:

Pryor chased Sugar Ray Leonard for years

Pryor, nicknamed The Hawk, was a great amateur fighter, with an incredible record of 204 wins and 16 losses.

On August 2, 1980, Pryor faced two-time world champion Antonio Cervantes of Colombia for the WBA light welterweight championship. His purse was $50,000. Cervantes was looking for an easy fight, and figured the lightweight Pryor was too inexperienced to pose a threat, or stand up to his power. He was wrong on both counts.

The fight was a dirty one. Arguello was deducted a point in round eight for low blows. But in the end, it did not matter, Arguello had swelling under his right eye by the third round, and Pryor knocked down Arguello three times: once in round one, once in the fourth, and for the count in the tenth. Arguello was counted out while sitting on the canvas with his arms draped around his knees.

Competition faced:

Pryor vs Arguello Two

Leonard signed to fight Pryor in 1982, until his first “retirement.”

a silver medal at the Pan American Games, losing in the final to Canadian Chris Clarke in 1975.

Flight of the Hawk: The Aaron Pryor Story by Aaron Pryor and Marshall Terrill

Ironically, Arguello and Pryor both found theirs greatest acclaim, greatest purses, and lifelong friendship, in each other

The International Boxing Research Organization has this one dead right.

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Janks Morton, Leonard’s trainer, stopped the sparring after the third round…

Alexis Arguello

Frankie Sims, Pryor’s trainer at the time, was in the Queen City Gym that day, and suggested they call Aaron Pryor:

Beloved Warrior: The Rise and Fall of Alexis Argüello by Christian Giudice

“Aaron quickly got up from that knockdown and the tide turned in his favor. Aaron was getting the best of Ray in the third round and that’s when Ray’s trainer Janks Morton said the session was over.”

Pryor had also beaten the 1980 WBA lightweight champion Hilmer Kenty five times in the amateurs. Manny Steward - who would not consider a fight with Pryor for Tommy Hearns! - had no intention of putting Kenty in with the Hawk.

Pryor continued to fight for relative peanuts, forcing him to work other jobs to make ends meet. As more people in the boxing game became aware of his skills, the less able he was to get meaningful fights.

(Pryor had been ranked by Ring for over a year, since late 1979)

Pryor also fought contenders:

Arguello would later note that changing trainers was:

Pryor could only fight those who would fight him, and two of them are in the Hall of Fame, 5 were ranked #3 or higher at some point in their careers:

Pryor went on to defeat Arguello after an entire barrage of punches ended the fight at the start of the 14th round. Ring Magazine named that battle the Fight of the Decade.

Pryor, who believed he could beat any fighter remotely near his weight class, and who had yearned for a definitive career defining fight, had signed to fight Sugar Ray Leonard in the fall of 1982 for the Undisputed World Welterweight Championship, but Leonard suffered a detached retina and retired.

Sugar Ray Leonard had shared a ring once with lightweight Aaron Pryor in 1979. Leonard, preparing to fight for the welterweight championship against Wildred Benitez, was in Cincinnati to promote the fight. Working out, he needed a sparring partner.

Pryor won:

140 pound Light welterweight champion Antonio Cervantes, an all time great light welterweight, was looking for a discretionary title defense, and he was willing to come to Cincinnati for the right price.

the National Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) Lightweight Championship in 1973.

Antonio Cervantes

Gaetan Hart

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“You could run a bull into Aaron and couldn’t knock him out,”

Pryor beat future champion Thomas Hearns in the lightweight finals of the 1976 National Golden Gloves

“They must not know Aaron!”

Arguello believed a poor fight plan by Eddie Futch had cost him the fight, and wanted a rematch with a different trainer.

Pryor, who could have made lightweight his entire career, moved to 140 to get a title shot

“I didn’t want to risk my life. On the third knockdown, I was protecting myself. I thought about how good Pryor is and I said, ‘Jesus, I will stay here.'”