Monday, October 20, 2014

Anthony Villanueva Biography

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Anthony Villanueva was scouted by businessman and sport enthusiast Eugenio Puyat. He later qualified for the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. He faced Soviet boxer Stanislav Stepashkin, in the gold medal match but later loss in a 3-2 controversial decision. 7,000 spectators of the match reportedly booed the decision.

Villanueva became a professional boxer at age 20. His first fight as a professional was with Shigeo Nirasawa of Japan at the Araneta Coliseum in Cubao, Quezon City which took place on October 2, 1965 as part of Fiesta Fistiana, a fund raising event organized by the Philippine Sportswriters Association for disable boxers.
Villanueva won the match by a controversial majority decision. The scoring of the judges was criticized and was described as something seen in movies. Judges Alfredo Quiazon and Alex Villacampa choosed Villanueva as the victor with the tight scores 29-28 oand 28-27 respectively. The third judge Jaime Valencia called it a draw with the score 29-all.
Anthony and his father filed a case against Ilang-Ilang Productions of Espiridion Laxa for P45,000 for "exploitation of popularity". The production firm was accused of filming the said match without the consent of the Villanuevas. The results of the case was never announced.

Villanueva was married to his wife Liezel Beldia for seventeen years, and had four children.
In 1976, he went to the United States to earn a living. He worked as a cook in a Mexican restaurant in Massachusetts, then as a security guard in Staten Island and the Philippine Consulate in New York. He also worked as a boxing coach at private gyms. He later returned to the Philippines in 1988 assisted the Philippine national boxing coach team to prepare the team for the 1988 Summer Olympics then later returned the United States after failing in a bid to find a stable job but eventually returned home for good.
Villanueva suffered a mild stroke in 1999. He tried selling his silver medal for 1 million pesoes a year later. He was persuaded to donate the medal to the Philippine Sports Commission instead.
Villanueva died in his sleep on May 13, 2014, in Cabuyao, Laguna. He was 69. Villanueva was bed ridden due to multiple complications including kidney malfunction and severe abnormalities in his heart. He has suffered about five strokes and heart attacks in the past fourteen years before his death. Villanueva won the country's first silver medal at the1964 Summer Olympics, A feat yet to be surpassed except perhaps by Onyok Velasco who later won the country's second silver medal at the 1964 Summer Olympics.
Manny Pacquaio described Villanueva as the “original Filipino boxing icon who should never be forgotten by the nation.”AIBA president Wu Ching-Kuo also said that the death of Villanueva did not only left a void in Philippine boxing but also “in the hearts of all those who knew this hero around the world.”

Source:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Villanueva

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