Los Angeles Times

His success is mostly relative

Leo Santa Cruz, the youngest of four sons, becomes a boxing champion

- By Lance Pugmire lance. pugmire@ latimes. com Twitter: @ latimespug­mire

Leo Santa Cruz is a boxing champion, which is just what his father desired.

Jose Santa Cruz was a young adult working in Mexico when he was drawn to look inside a local boxing gym by the repetitive popping sound of a speed bag.

He was too old to take up the sport himself, but hewas so infatuated by the action in thering, here solved, “I’m going to push my sons to boxing.”

Santa Cruz and his wife ultimately had four boys, raising them around Los Angeles, and they all became boxers. But it was their youngest son, Leo, who would becomea champion.

The 27- year- old Leo Santa Cruz is now one of boxing’s rising stars. Santa Cruz is 30- 0- 1, with 17 knockouts, and has won the world bantamweig­ht and superbanta­mweight titles. On Saturday night on ESPN, Santa Cruz will face his Southland rival and former three- division world champion Abner Mares in a nontitle featherwei­ght fight ( 126 pounds) at Staples Center.

Santa Cruz remembers the day his father lined up his sons, to make clear the family’s mission.

“One of you guys is going to be a champion, but we have to keep working hard,” Jose said to the group. “If it’s not you, it’s going to be you. If it’s not you, it’s going to be you.… Oneof you guys will be a champion.”

The path would be difficult. The Santa Cruz family usually lived in a one- bedroom apartment, with the kids sleeping in the living room, often relying on instant soup bowls as dinner.

But Jose Armando Santa Cruz, the second- oldest boy, recalls thinking, “One of us was going to make it… come on! Out of four brothers, one of us has tomake it!”

One by one, the older brothers’ boxing careers ended without a belt. Antonio quit, saying it was his father’s dream, no this. Robert was struck by lupus following a defeat in 2005. Jose Armando made a bold run but was diagnosed with brain swelling before a fight in 2010, forcing retirement. Only Leo remained. The youngest had thoughts of quitting. He wasn’t thrilled about participat­ing in the family ritual of Jose Sr. waiting after school to take his sons for training in a gym. If there was no bus money, they were forced to walk 10 miles from their neighborho­od in Los Angeles to the gymin Huntington Park.

“When I got done with school, sometimes I wanted to stay around and play with my friends fromschool,” Leo said. “My dad told me, ‘ You have to go the gym,’ and I cried. If I would’ve been by myself, maybe I wouldn’t have wanted to go. But knowing we were all going, there was this desire. … And as I started doing it, I realized this is what I wanted to do.”

Shy and quiet, Leo was observant and “remembered everything I taught him,” Jose Sr. recalls. The boy watched what skills worked best for his siblings, and avoided their mistakes of neglecting sleep and gaining too much weight between fights.

He made it a habit to watch old fight tapes of his dad’s hero, Julio Cesar Chavez, the former Mexican star, renowned for punishing foes with body blows, who was blessed with power in both arms and was undefeated in his first 90 fights.

“They’ll love your style and you’ll be a good fighter,” Jose Sr. told Leo as they watched the Chavez fights. “People can take a lot of punishment to the head, but they won’t fall. With the body, little by little, you break them down and no matter how strong the fighter is, they’re going to end up falling down.”

Said Leo: “When I started, I fought like 14 times without losing. People would tell me I was so good, said I could be a world champion. They gave me the strength and mentality that I could make it. And when it was down to just me, I said to myself, ‘ I’m going to put everything into it and keep that dream for my dad.’ ”

On June 2, 2012, Santa Cruz won a unanimous decision in Carson that made him the Internatio­nal Boxing Federation bantamweig­ht champion.

He accepted the belt in the ring and turned to his father/ trainer, saying, “Here, this belt is yours.”

“If it hadn’t been for him, I’d beworking a regular job,” Leo said.

Now Santa Cruz faces his stiffest test in Mares.

And it comes after Santa Cruz and his manager, Al Haymon, have been criticized for selecting a steady string of soft opponents. ( Haymon is also Floyd Mayweather Jr.’ s manager.) Santa Cruz said he’d heard enough of the complaints, and told Haymon hewanted to fight Mares.

A slender 5- foot- 7, Santa Cruz is aiming for a career marked by multiple world titles as he moves up in weight classes, to as high as 140 pounds.

“This fight means the world to me,” Santa Cruz said about the Mares bout. “It brings me to the next level. I’m ready for the biggest names, the best fighters, and I want to show I’m ready. Getting the win over Abner Mares will prove that.”

 ?? Allen J. Schaben L. A. Times ??
Allen J. Schaben L. A. Times
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Allen J. Schaben
Los Angeles Times ?? LEO SANTA CRUZ, training atWho’s Next Boxing in La Puente, said if it hadn’t been for his father, he’d be working “a regular job.”
Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times LEO SANTA CRUZ, training atWho’s Next Boxing in La Puente, said if it hadn’t been for his father, he’d be working “a regular job.”
 ??  ?? JOSE SANTA CRUZ has trained Leo to bantamweig­ht and super- bantamweig­ht crowns after three older sons came up short in the ring for various reasons.
JOSE SANTA CRUZ has trained Leo to bantamweig­ht and super- bantamweig­ht crowns after three older sons came up short in the ring for various reasons.

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