Name: Acelino Freitas
Career Record:click Alias: Popo
Nationality: Brazilian
Birthplace: Bahia, Brazil
Hometown: Bahia, Brazil
Born: 1975-09-21
Stance: Orthodox
Height: 5' 7"
Reach: 68"
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Acelino Freitas…
4 Time World Champion
Former WBO Lightweight
World Champion
Professional Career
Acelino Freitas (born September 21, 1975), is a native of Bahia, Brazil, and a 4 time world champion.
His nickname is Popó. That nickname was given to him by his mother, after the sound that babies make while drinking milk.
Freitas had a difficult childhood, often sleeping in a sandy floor at his house. Since early in his life, he dreamed of a better place to live for his family. A skilled football player, he was more inclined, however, towards the sport of boxing since an early age. Brazil's Eder Jofre, who is generally recognized as the greatest world champion to come out of that country, was one of Freitas' childhood heroes.
Freitas competed for his native country and won a silver medal at the Pan American Games in Mar del Plata, and afterwards turned into a professional boxer on July 14, 1995 against Adriano Jose Soares. With his win by knockout in the first round that night, Freitas set off a streak of 29 knockout wins in a row, which places as one of the longest knockout wins streak in boxing history. His first 10 wins were against low level competition, but for fight number 11, he took on the much more experienced Edwin Vazquez, knocking him out in the seventh round.
Between 1997 and 1998, Freitas won four more fights and then took on Francisco Tomas Da Cruz, a former world title challenger of Julio Cesar Chavez. Freitas handled Da Cruz with a knockout in two rounds and then added three more knockout wins before getting his first world title try.
That happened on August 7, 1999, when he challenged WBO Jr. Lightweight champion Anatoly Alexandrov. Freitas became a world champion by knocking Alexandrov out in round one. Soon after, he signed a contract with Cable TV giant Showtime, which began to telecast Freitas' fights to the United States. Freitas then made five defenses of his world title and one non title bout, all of which ended in knockout wins. Then, he went to London, and took only 45 seconds to beat Daniel Alicea (a former world title challenger of Naseem Hamed) in another non title affair.
Freitas then beat the former world champion, Alfred Kotey, (brother of David Kotey) by a decision in ten before deciding to sign for a unification bout with the WBA world champion, Joel Casamayor, a Cuban refugee who resides in Florida. Freitas dropped Casamayor in round two and went on to add the WBA belt to the WBO one he already had by beating Casamayor by a close but unanimous 12 round decision on January 12 of 2002. Next, he went to Phoenix, Arizona, to fight Nigeria's Daniel Attah, with only the WBO belt on the line. Freitas kept his world title with a 12 round decision on August 3.
Freitas was able to reach his dream of buying his family a better place to live: He has become a national hero in Brazil, one that evokes memories of the idolatry many Brazilians felt for Freitas' childhood hero, Jofre. Because of that, he has become a campaign spokesman of many companies, to add an extra income to what he already earns from his world title fights.
He has been able to buy mansions for his family, and, in addition to that, he built a soccer field in his own mansion, which allows him to practice his second favorite sport.
This avid autograph signer's fame in Brazil has reached such proportions, that when he got married, his wedding was televised live to all of Brazil, and it broke the all time audience record for a live event in Brazil,
Freitas retained the title in Chicago with a fourth round knockout of Juan Carlos Ramirez. Then, on August 9, 2003, he and Jorge Rodrigo Barrios engaged in what Showtime commentator Steve Albert called a candidate for fight of the year. Freitas was floored in rounds eight and eleven, but retaliated with a knockdown of his own towards the end of the eleventh, and ended up retaining the title by knockout in round twelve.
Freitas began 2004 by winning a 12 round unanimous decision over Artur Grigorian on January 4, to become the WBO's world Lightweight champion.
On February 1 of that year, the WBA announced it had named Freitas their 2003 fighter of the year.
On August 7, 2004, Freitas lost for the first time, losing his WBO world Lightweight title to Diego Corrales by a tenth round knockout in Connecticut. Freitas quit the fight in that round after taking a severe beating.
On April 29, 2006, Freitas won a split decision over Zahir Raheem, to capture the vacant WBO Lightweight title. The win positions Freitas as a potential opponent for the winner of the June 2006 rubber match betweeen Diego Corrales and Jose Luis Castillo.
April 28, 2007 put Freitas up against Juan Diaz in a lightweight title unification bout for the his WBO title and Diaz' WBA title. Freitas lost by TKO round 8 when his trainer Oscar Suarez stopped the fight between rounds 8 and 9.
Cassius Baloyi won his sixth world championship when he beat Mzonke Fana on points to take over the IBF junior lightweight title at Mafikeng on Saturday night.
The challenger regained the belt in a classic scrap at the University Sports Complex when he won 117-111 and 116-112 on two of the cards, with the third judge making it a 114-114 draw.
Fana seemed to be turning the tables from the sixth round but he split one of his gloves in the eighth round just as Baloyi seemed to start fading.
The gloves change certainly gave Baloyi a much needed breather and Fana had to start all over again when the action resumed.
In a battle of former world titlists, junior lightweight Cassius Baloyi (34-3-1, 18 KOs) put himself in line to retake the IBF world title when he beat Gairy St Clair (38-5-2, 17 KOs) on points in an IBF title eliminator at Emperors Palace, Kempton Park, on Monday night. The South African won 116-112 on two cards and 120-108 on the card of a judge who completely missed a splendid performance by the Australia-based Guyanan. St Clair was ahead after six rounds but ran out of gas because of his all-out attack game plan, and allowed Baloyi to take control and win the last six rounds. Baloyi will now fight Mzonke Fana for the IBF title.