Olivares has a claim Pound 4 Pound as the harderst ever puncher of all time.
Olivares's left hook was most likely the single hardest punch in Bantamweight history.
He wasn't nicknamed ''Roackabye Ruben'' for nothing. He was given that nickname for his ability to put opponents to sleep at any given time.
Olivares wasn't a big trainer, wasn't dedicated to boxing, and claimed defence was for sissies.
But all he needed to do was tag you with that left hook and more than likely you were going to sleep.
His record and stats speak for it's self. Olivares stopped 54 of his first 57 opponents. In his first ever title fight Ruben was 50-0-1 with 48 KO's. Thats a KO Ratio of 94 percent. Incredible.......
His destruction over then Bantamweight Champion Lionel Rose, who had made 3 defences of his Bantamweight Crown and had defeated the legendary Fighting Harada was just a sign how hard Olivares punched.
Olivares dropped Rose with a Hook in the 2nd round. Beat him up for the next two and then dropped him 3 times and stopped him in the 5th. Rose would never be the same fighter.
Kind of funny. That at times and when he felt in the mood. Olivares was a capable defensive fighter and was also a good counterpuncher, with a sound boxing brain.
But his lack of dedication to the sport of boxing contributed to many of his defeats and his was a factor in his moves up in weight class's.
Rick Farris a sparring parther of Ruben claimed due to his lifestyle he was struggiling to make the the 118lb limt thus moving up to Featherweight.
Farris also claimed Ruben wasn't a hard sparrer saying....
''I worked as one of Olivares' sparring partners for his title defense against Jesus Pimentel in 1971.When I first joined the Olivares camp, I was very aware of Ruben's awesome punching power and knew that I would get a taste of it sooner or later. During the two weeks I worked with Ruben, I'd guess we sparred about 30 rounds or so. I was a fast featherweight and Olivares' trainer, Cuyo Hernandez, liked Olivares to start with me for two or three rounds before boxing with the other sparring partners. They wanted me to start fast and press the champion to prevent him from getting lazy and starting too slowly. I was Ruben's designated "wake-up" call.
''I was aware that if I got careless with Olivares I might be the one in need of a wake-up call. I did what I was supposed to do and was surprised that Olivares never once hammered me with one of those explosive punches. In fact, I recall bloodying his nose with a crisp jab in one exchange and expected a major retaliation. However, it never happened''.
''After our first workout, I climbed out of the ring and one of Olivares' seconds pulled off my gloves. I saw Hernandez cleaning the blood out of the champion's nose with a Q-tip and told the second that I was surprised how easy Ruben worked. The trainer spoke very little English but answered, "He no go hard in gym, but in fight . . Ay ya ya"!
Olivares's left hook was most likely the single hardest punch in Bantamweight history.
He wasn't nicknamed ''Roackabye Ruben'' for nothing. He was given that nickname for his ability to put opponents to sleep at any given time.
Olivares wasn't a big trainer, wasn't dedicated to boxing, and claimed defence was for sissies.
But all he needed to do was tag you with that left hook and more than likely you were going to sleep.
His record and stats speak for it's self. Olivares stopped 54 of his first 57 opponents. In his first ever title fight Ruben was 50-0-1 with 48 KO's. Thats a KO Ratio of 94 percent. Incredible.......
His destruction over then Bantamweight Champion Lionel Rose, who had made 3 defences of his Bantamweight Crown and had defeated the legendary Fighting Harada was just a sign how hard Olivares punched.
Olivares dropped Rose with a Hook in the 2nd round. Beat him up for the next two and then dropped him 3 times and stopped him in the 5th. Rose would never be the same fighter.
Kind of funny. That at times and when he felt in the mood. Olivares was a capable defensive fighter and was also a good counterpuncher, with a sound boxing brain.
But his lack of dedication to the sport of boxing contributed to many of his defeats and his was a factor in his moves up in weight class's.
Rick Farris a sparring parther of Ruben claimed due to his lifestyle he was struggiling to make the the 118lb limt thus moving up to Featherweight.
Farris also claimed Ruben wasn't a hard sparrer saying....
''I worked as one of Olivares' sparring partners for his title defense against Jesus Pimentel in 1971.When I first joined the Olivares camp, I was very aware of Ruben's awesome punching power and knew that I would get a taste of it sooner or later. During the two weeks I worked with Ruben, I'd guess we sparred about 30 rounds or so. I was a fast featherweight and Olivares' trainer, Cuyo Hernandez, liked Olivares to start with me for two or three rounds before boxing with the other sparring partners. They wanted me to start fast and press the champion to prevent him from getting lazy and starting too slowly. I was Ruben's designated "wake-up" call.
''I was aware that if I got careless with Olivares I might be the one in need of a wake-up call. I did what I was supposed to do and was surprised that Olivares never once hammered me with one of those explosive punches. In fact, I recall bloodying his nose with a crisp jab in one exchange and expected a major retaliation. However, it never happened''.
''After our first workout, I climbed out of the ring and one of Olivares' seconds pulled off my gloves. I saw Hernandez cleaning the blood out of the champion's nose with a Q-tip and told the second that I was surprised how easy Ruben worked. The trainer spoke very little English but answered, "He no go hard in gym, but in fight . . Ay ya ya"!
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