Kiyoshi Hatanaka


Kiyoshi Hatanaka is a retired Japanese boxer who is a former WBC super bantamweight champion.

Amateur career

Hatanaka began karate at the first grade of elementary school, and won the Japanese championship in the juvenile division at its sixth grade and the first grade of junior high school. In addition, he began football at the fourth grade of elementary school, and was scouted by a prestigious high school. He also set an interval record in the local ekiden race at the age of a junior high school student. At that time, informed from an acquaintance that a professional boxer got paid 30,000 yen per match in the amount of time, he became interested in boxing and joined Matsuda Boxing Gym. He compiled an amateur record of 26–5 before turning professional.

Professional career

Hatanaka made his professional debut with a first-round knockout victory in November 1984, at the age of a high school student. He won the annual Japanese boxing series, All-Japan Rookie King Tournament in the super flyweight division in March 1986. He captured the Japanese super flyweight title at the Korakuen Hall in February 1987.
In his first world title shot against WBC super flyweight champion Gilberto Román in September 1988, Hatanaka entered the ring of the Nagoya Rainbow Hall with full smile. Román floored Hatanaka in the first round, but was docked a point for a low blow late in the same round. Though Hatanaka was given a full five minutes to recover, he was hit below the belt again in the third round and took three minutes' rest. As the rounds rolled on, Román kept his pace to retain his title via a unanimous decision. Hatanaka was so nervous that he remembered almost nothing after the fight.
After the defeat, Hatanaka decided to become a world champion from his beloved hometown of Nagoya by any means necessary. It was no longer a question of money for him. Hatanaka needed a reliable trainer. He asked Toshihide Tsutsumi three times who once worked as a trainer at Matsuda Boxing Gym, and was at last accepted. He trained with Tsutsumi and did not get anxious anymore.
Hatanaka moved up two weight divisions and fought against Pedro Rubén Décima for the WBC super bantamweight title at the Nagoya International Exhibition Hall, aka Port Messe Nagoya, on February 3, 1991. He was floored in the first round, but felt calm enough to listen to Tsutsumi's instruction between rounds. After knocking down Décima four times in the fourth round, he sent him to the canvas two more times in the seventh and eighth rounds before the referee stopped the bout.
In his first defense against Daniel Zaragoza on June 14 of that year, Hatanaka was cut on the corner of his left eye from an accidental head butt in the fourth round, and the referee took a point away from Zaragoza. From the seventh or eighth round, Hatanaka had triple vision in his right eye, and the blood flowed into his left eye. Finally, Zaragoza was crowned the new champion via a split decision in front of 9,000 spectators at the Nagoya Rainbow Hall. In 2007, Alvaro Morales of ESPN Deportes wrote it as many Asians' consideration, "the best fight of the decade". Although Hatanaka desired a rematch with Zaragoza, he suffered from ophthalmoplegia caused by this fight, and retired as a boxer after four months.

Professional boxing record

No.ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
25LossDaniel ZaragozaSD12 1991-06-14Rainbow Hall, Nagoya, JapanLost WBC super bantamweight title
24Win22–1–1Pedro Rubén DécimaTKO8 1991-02-03Rainbow Hall, Nagoya, JapanWon WBC super bantamweight title
23Win21–1–1Ric BajelotTKO8 1990-12-04Tsuyuhashi Sports Center, Nagoya, Japan
22Win20–1–1Somsak SrichanPTS10 1990-08-05Tsuyuhashi Sports Center, Nagoya, Japan
21Win19–1–1Sawaeng ThaweekoonKO2 1990-03-04Tsuyuhashi Sports Center, Nagoya, Japan
20Win18–1–1Somboonyod SingsamangTKO2 1989-11-25City Gymnasium, Toyota, Japan
19Draw17–1–1Jang Kyun OhPTS10 1989-09-07Tsuyuhashi Sports Center, Nagoya, Japan
18Win17–1Noel CornelioKO7 1989-05-30Tsuyuhashi Sports Center, Nagoya, Japan
17Win16–1Dong Chun LeePTS10 1989-01-24Tsuyuhashi Sports Center, Nagoya, Japan
16Loss15–1Gilberto RománUD12 1988-09-04Rainbow Hall, Nagoya, JapanFor WBC super flyweight title
15Win15–0Constancio DanglaKO3 1988-02-26Tsuyuhashi Sports Center, Nagoya, Japan
14Win14–0Surasit MeeprasertKO1 1987-10-27Tsuyuhashi Sports Center, Nagoya, Japan
13Win13–0Teruaki MiyazatoPTS10 1987-07-10Tsuyuhashi Sports Center, Nagoya, JapanRetained Japanese super flyweight title
12Win12–0Tadashi MaruoKO3 1987-02-23Korakuen Hall, Tokyo, JapanWon Japanese super flyweight title
11Win11–0Masaki SonoKO2 1986-10-18City Hall, Nagoya, Japan
10Win10–0Tadashi MaruoPTS10 1986-07-14Korakuen Hall, Tokyo, Japan
9Win9–0Takashi HirataPTS8 1986-05-09City Hall, Nagoya, Japan
8Win8–0Hiromitsu TatsukiKO1 1986-03-04Nishinari Ward Center, Osaka, Japan
7Win7–0Akio KawamataPTS6 1985-11-30City Gymnasium, Hamamatsu, Japan
6Win6–0Takuji HijiriPTS4 1985-10-08City Hall, Nagoya, Japan
5Win5–0Shinpei SatoKO1 1985-07-28Tatsumioka Hall, Okazaki, Japan
4Win4–0Shuichi SakakibaraKO1 1985-06-26City Hall, Nagoya, Japan
3Win3–0Shigehito HayashiKO1 1985-04-29Sakuranomiya Skating Rink, Osaka, Japan
2Win2–0Tadaharu SanukiTKO1 1985-02-05Prefectural Gymnasium, Osaka, Japan
1Win1–0Harelya YamauchiKO1 1984-11-27City Hall, Nagoya, Japan

Later life

Currently he is the president of Hatanaka Boxing Gym in Nagoya. Hatanaka Promotions has provided a boxing television program Soul Fighting on Chubu-Nippon Broadcasting. Toshihide Tsutsumi who was presented with the tenth Eddie Townsend Award in 1999, serves as a trainer at that gym.