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Paul Anthony "Paulie" Ayala (born April 22, 1970) is an American former professional boxer who held the NABF and WBA bantamweight titles, and the IBO super bantamweight title. In 1999 he was voted "Fighter of the Year" by ''The Ring'' magazine for his first bout against Johnny Tapia, which also won "Fight of the Year" honors.〔Tim Graham, ESPN.com, (Good guy Ayala gets overlooked ), Accessed June 9, 2014〕〔Jeff Zimmerman, Fight News, (Paulie Ayala’s Punching Out Parkinson’s Biggest Fundraiser to Date: Hall of Famer Terry Norris and Dewey Bozella will be guest speakers ), Accessed June 9, 2014,〕〔Rodger Mallison, August 6, 2013, Star-Telegram, (Former Boxing Champ Paulie Ayala ), Accessed June 9, 2014〕〔Mac Engel, Star-Telegram, January 13, 2013, (Former boxing champion Paulie Ayala stays busy in retirement ), Accessed June 9, 2014〕〔James Slater, June 6, 2014, Eastside Boxing, (Erik Morales: an appreciation ), Accessed June 9, 2014〕〔Emily White Youree and Joan Kurkowski-Gillen, May. 18, 2014, in the Fort-Worth Star-Telegram, a book entitled ''Legendary Locals of Fort Worth'', (New & Notable: Fort Worth in the spotlight ), Accessed June 9, 2014〕 ==Professional career== Ayala began his professional fighting career with a six-round decision win over Jaime Olvera on November 27, 1992. He had seven fights in 1993, including one against future NABO champion and world title challenger Jesse Magana. Ayala won all seven of those bouts, four by knockout. Magana was knocked out in the fourth round, after which Ayala went on to score wins over prospects Evgeny Novoselov and George Acevedo. In 1994, he won all four of his bouts, including one over veteran Lee Cargle. Cargle was knocked out by Ayala in round three. 1995 was a productive year for Ayala, who won all five of his fights, including his first regional championship bout. By defeating Mike Espinoza by knockout in three rounds at the Fort Worth Convention Center, Ayala claimed the NABF bantamweight title. He defended it twice before the end of the year, beating Mario Diaz and Sergio Millan, both by decision in 12 rounds. Ayala only had two fights in 1996, both of them successful defenses of his NABF title. In the first, he knocked out Roland Gomez in seven rounds but was forced to take a seven-month layoff due to a broken Hand. Returning to the ring in September, Ayala defeated Ivan Alvarez by decision in twelve to retain the NABF bantamweight title. He began 1997 by defeating Cuauhtemoc Gomez by decision in twelve, once again retaining his belt as the headliner at the Tropicana Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Ayala won three more bouts that year, defeating heavy-handed puncher Nestor Lopez in a co-main event feature on an HBO pay-per-view card, headlining at The Orleans in Paradise, Nevada with a fifth-round knockout over Roberto Lopez to retain the NABF belt. This was followed by another HBO PPV appearance, in which Ayala won a unanimous decision against Ricardo Medina. At the beginning of 1998, Ayala was very close to a world championship bout. Fighting two more bouts, he received his first chance at a world title by becoming the mandatory contender for the WBC belt. Ayala then traveled to Japan to challenge WBC bantamweight champion Joichiro Tatsuyoshi on August 23. Ayala lost the fight by a sixth-round technical decision when the fight was stopped due to a cut. Tatsuyoshi came out fast in the opening rounds, but Ayala rallied back to win the fifth and sixth rounds unanimously. During the fight, an accidental clash of heads caused a cut and Ayala was docked 2 points. The fight was stopped in round seven due to the severity of the cut, sending the decision to the scorecards and thereby handing victory to Tatsuyoshi.〔http://www.boxingscene.com/?m=show&id=491〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Paulie Ayala」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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