Former Champ Luján Suffers Stroke
Former Panamanian WBA bantamweight world champion Jorge Luján, 70, reportedly suffered a transient cerebrovascular accident and is hospitalized at the Ciudad de la Salud in Panama City.
On November 19, 1977, Luján upset the Mexican Olympic silver medalist and WBA bantamweight world champion Alfonso Zamora, at the Los Angeles Sports Arena to become the eleventh Panamanian world champion during the golden age of boxing in that country, led by General Omar Torrijos, who two months earlier had signed the Torrijos-Carter Treaties.
In a professional career between 1972 and 1985, Luján achieved a professional record of 27 wins and 9 losses (16 KOs). He was never knocked out, and he made five defenses of his championship, all of them outside of Panama.
His wife and Panamanian boxing historian Daniel Alonso are keeping the boxing community informed, as they await the health of the well-known “Mocho” Luján, one of the best counter punchers in the history of Latin American and world boxing.
The post Former Champ Luján Suffers Stroke appeared first on fightnews.com.