...and that was the one memorable thing ever to happen in his career before or since. :yep He did beat a couple of decent names in Martinez & Haugen along the way, but they were ridiculously shot.
Leonard Bundu Frank Shabani 17-0 Daniele Petrucci 28-0-2 Antonio Moscatiello 13-0 Frankie Gavin 19-0 77
Jessie Vargas Joel Gonzalez 1-0 Anthony Lenk 5-0 Roberto Luna Jr. 5-0 Wale Omotoso 23-0 Khabib Allakhverdiev 19-0 Anton Novikov 29-0 82
Putting this thread back on track, before it ends up in the general forum. Some retired fighters... Eder Jofre: Jose Smecca 11-0 Johnny Caldwell 25-0 Bernardo Caraballo 39-0-1 Making 75-0-1 Pedro Carrasco: Borge Krogh 27-0-1 Miguel Velazquez 33-0 Making 60-0-1
Charles 'Kid' McCoy: Geoff Thorne 1-0 Dan Bayliff 1-0-1 Tommy Ryan 30-0-7-3 Abe Ullman 5-0-4-1 Making it 53 fights: 37-0-12-4
+ Jorge Cota in 2012, after this post was made. Cota was 16-0, so 80. It would take some doing, but Golovkin has a nice shiny 30-0 that could put Rubio over the centurion hump. (along with being the biggest W of his career by far)
Not using cheap gimmick based modern fighters: Daniel Londas: late 80s/early 90s Super Featherweight contender and alphabet title holder: Orlando Fernandez 7-0 Racheed Lawal 13-0 Gianni Di Napoli 22-0-1 Jacobin Yoma 14-0 With a couple of wins against possibly unbeaten novices, Londas may be 59-0-2.
not sure if someones beat me to this, but froch has a half decent one pascal 21-0 bute 30-0 dirrell 18-0 groves 19-0 rybacki 15-0 a page 8-0 111-0 AA lost his record to Dirrell via a disputed DQ so could be another 31 there too