![]()
CHAMPIONS WASTELAND; SHOZO SAIJO
By Jim Amato
April 26, 2008 - Today with so many governing bodies and organizations around
it has become very hard to take someones claim of " world champion " seriously.
I mean there is the WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO, IBA and God knows how many more will pop
up in the future. Split titles are not anything new to boxing but in days gone
by it was a lot less complicated. As much as I hated it when either the WBA or
the WBC " stripped " a champion of his crown for some bogus reason and then "
made " their own champion. At least it kept the rift between just two claimants.
In some cases there were much needed unification fights like Bob Foster and
Vincente Rondon or Carlos Monzon against Rodrigo Valdez. There were also cases
where a unification bout would have generated a lot of fan interest and cleared
up the situation but they never came off. Some bouts that come to mind are
Salvador Sanchez vs Eusebio Pedroza, John Conteh vs Victor Galindez and Carlos
Palomino vs Pipino Cuevas. There is one bout that could have taken place in 1971
pitting two champions from Japan who each claimed a portion of the featherweight
title. They were WBC title holder Kuniaki Shibata and his WBA rival, Shozo Saijo.
Alas the fight never materialized. It seems that today Shibata is still
remembered as the man who made great Vincente Saldivar surrender. What about
poor Shozo Saijo ? He has been long forgotten outside of Japan and somehow that
just does not seem quite fair.
Saijo was born in 1947 and turned pro in 1964. Shozo was not an instant
sensation and over his first twenty fights he compiled a less then earth shaking
14-4-2 record. In 1968 he lost a decision to the highly regarded Jose Luis
Pimentel. In a rematch Saijo turned the tables and he got the verdict. That led
to a fight with the rugged Raul Rojas.After the retirement of Saldivar, Rojas
defeated Enrique Higgins to claim the vacant WBA featherweight title. Rojas was
matched with Saijo in a non title battle and Saijo copped the decision. On
September 27th, 1968 in a rematch with the title on the line Saijo became the
new WBA champion.
Saijo did not just sit on his laurels. He was a very active champion who
defended his title five times and won seven of eight non title affairs. His only
loss was to WBA super featherweight champion Hiroshi Kobayashi with no title at
stake. Finally on September 2nd, 1971 Shozo lost his championship when he was
hallted in five rounds by Venezuala's Antonio Gomez. Saijo never fought again.
His overall record stood at 29-7-2. He scored eight stoppage victories and
suffered only one knockout loss and that was to Gomez. The path of Saijo and
Shibata never crossed when they both held the title at the same time.Shibata
held his portion of the title from 12-11-1970 to 5-19-1972. Saijo had a longer
reign from 9-27-1968 to 9-2-1971, holding his piece of the crown for nearly
three years. A champion like Saijo should not be forgotten.
Home About Us-Boxing Directories Boxing Schedule Columnists Feedback Inside Coverage Local Scene Links Welcome Search InsideBoxing Join eGroup Submit News/Articles Tell Friends Copyright Notice