Arce vs. Cordova
Arce vs. Fanni
Arce vs. Carbajal
Arce vs. Virgen
Arce vs. Rubillar I
Arce vs. Choi
Arce vs. Luna
Arce vs. E. Castro
Arce vs. Sandoval
Arce vs. C. Castro I
Arce vs. Gamboa
Arce vs. C. Castro II
Arce vs. Rubillar II
Arce vs. Hussein
Arce vs. Priolo
Arce vs. Hussein II
Arce vs. Rivas I
Arce vs. Rivas II
Arce vs. Alvarez
Arce vs. Makepula
Arce vs. Ler
Arce vs. Lookmahanak
Arce vs. Garcia
Arce vs. Darchinyan
Arce vs. Angkota
Arce vs. Santos
Arce vs. Parra
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Jorge Arce Career DVDs
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Fights included in this set:
Jorge Arce (pronounced "ar-say"; born July 27, 1979 in Los Mochis, Sinaloa, Mexico) is a Mexican
professional boxer. He is the former WBO World Light Flyweight Champion, WBC World Light Flyweight
Champion, WBC World Flyweight Interim Champion, WBA World Super Flyweight Interim Champion and
WBO World Super Flyweight Champion. A world champion in three weight divisions, Arce remains a
favorite fighter among many boxing fans.

Arce's trademark ring entrance features him wearing a black cowboy hat (thus earning him the
nickname "The Mexican Cowboy") and sucking a cherry lollipop.

Professional career
Early years at Light Flyweight
Arce turned pro at the age of 16, winning his first four fights. He lost to future champion Omar Romero
and drew with Gabriel Munoz in back-to-back fights in the summer of 1996, but then won 10 straight
bouts and a pair of regional belts before losing on points to veteran (and future IBF light flyweight
champion) Jose Victor Burgos on December 12, 1997.

He recovered from that setback with four straight wins, earning his first world title shot on December 4,
1998 against Juan Domingo Córdoba for the WBO light-flyweight title. Arce won the fight and became a
world champion at the age of 19.

After making one successful defense of his title, Arce drew a big-money fight in Tijuana against
three-time former champion Michael Carbajal on July 31, 1999. Arce was ahead on all three judges'
scorecards after 10 rounds, but in the 11th, the veteran Carbajal connected with a stunning right hand
and captured the crown via a technical knockout, as Arce was unable to continue.

After a four-month layoff, Arce returned to the ring and won a WBO regional belt, while working his way
back up the rankings for another title shot. That came on October 20, 2001, when he defeated Juanito
Rubillar for the interim WBC version of the light flyweight title. Nine months later, he beat Yo-Sam Choi,
the reigning champion who had been out with an injury, to take full distinction. He held the title until the
summer of 2005 before relinquishing it to move up in weight.

Towards the end of 2003, he participated in the Televisa version of Big Brother, the Big Brother V.I.P.
show that put celebrities together. He arrived in third place, then went training for his next defense,
against former world champion Joma Gamboa on January 10 of the following year. Arce invited his Big
Brother celebrity friends to the fight with Gamboa, his first fight of 2004, which he won by a second
round knockout. But during and after the fight, chaos ensued. One of his friends, actress Arleth
Gonzalez, was kicked off her chair by another person. And Verónica Castro was pursued by the press
when she was trying to leave the fight site, taking her more than two hours to get to the site's parking
lot.

On April 24, 2004, Arce successfully defended his title against former champ Melchor Cob Castro in
Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas. Arce had beaten Castro in May 2003, but the fight was called off after six
rounds due to a clash of heads which injured Arce. The fight went to the scorecards and Arce won a
narrow, but controversial, decision. He left no doubt in the rematch, knocking Castro out in the fifth
round.

On September 4 of that same year, he retained the title with a twelve-round decision in a rematch with
Rubillar. The fight caused some controversy afterwards, when Rubillar's manager accused the fight's
judges of robbing his fighter, going on to offer Arce 100,000 dollars for a rematch, which would be held
in the Philippines.

Arce moved on to defend his title once again on December 18, defeating Juan Centeno by a
third-round TKO. He then decided to try his luck in the flyweight (112-pound) weight division.

Flyweight
On March 19, 2005, Arce stopped Hussein Hussein in the 10th round of a fight for the right to
challenge Pongsaklek Wonjongkam for his WBC flyweight title. He later relinquished his light-flyweight
crown, and was matched by the WBC with Angel Priolo on July 30 for their interim title after
Wonjongkam suffered an injury. Arce scored a third-round TKO win in the fight, held in La Paz, Mexico.

While waiting to fight Wongjongkam, Arce stayed busy by rematching Hussein on October 8 in Las
Vegas. He retained his WBC interim title with a second-round knockout.

On December 16, 2005, Arce defeated former two time champion Adonis Rivas. In his next bout, Arce
defeated Rivas in a rematch.

Super Flyweight
On April 8, 2006, Arce took on the well regarded, former WBA world Strawweight and Light-Flyweight
champion Rosendo Alvarez of Nicaragua, knocking Alvarez out in the sixth round in a non-title bout. On
September 23, 2006, he moved up to the super-flyweight division where he defeated former light
flyweight champion Masibulele "Hawk" Makepula by fourth round knockout (which, according to the
HBO commentators, he had predicted earlier). On January 27, 2007, he defeated Argentinian Julio Ler
in a 12-round decision, thus earning the WBC #1 super-flyweight ranking.

On April 14, 2007, he lost a 12-round unanimous decision to Cristian Mijares in San Antonio, Texas.
Mijares won the fight by a wide margin, with the official judges scoring the match 119-109, 118-110,
117-111, all in favor of Mijares.

On December 1, 2007, Arce defeated former flyweight champion Medgoen Singsurat by technical
knockout in the first round.

On May 17, 2008, in a very close fight, Arce (49-4-1, 37 KOs) edged Devid Lookmahanak of Thailand
(18-2, 9 KOs) with a majority decision in the main event at the Plaza Monumental Aguascalientes in
Aguascalientes, Mexico. With a sold-out crowd of 18,000 fans cheering him on, Arce had to dig deep
and work hard to pull past the once-beaten Lookmahanak, who turned out to be a very game southpaw
and rarely took a step back. The difference in the fight, which also gave Arce the win, was a knockdown
in the seventh round. The scores were 115-113, 115-114 and 114-114. Without the extra point for the
knockdown, the fight would have been scored a draw. The bout was an eliminator for a shot at the
WBC super flyweight title. Arce moves on to a rematch with Cristian Mijares, who earlier captured the
WBA's version of the title with a points win over Alexander Munoz.

On September 15, 2008, Arce won the WBA interim super flyweight title from holder Rafael Concepción.

Arce blasted Isidro Garcia, on November 1, 2008, via (48 seconds of the) 4th round technical knockout
for a super flyweight belt. He improved to 51-4-1, with 38 wins inside the distance, while Garcia, who
has lost 3 of his last 4 fights, was down to 25-6-2.[1]

On February 7, 2009, Arce was defeated by undisputed super flyweight champion Vic Darchinyan.

Arce fought Simphiwe Nongqayi on September 15, 2009 for the IBF super flyweight title which was
recently vacated by Darchinyan. However, he ended losing by unanimous decision.

Arce defeated Indonesian Angky Angkota on January 30, 2010, winning the vacant WBO junior
bantamweight title.[2] Prior to the bout, Arce stated that he would retire from boxing if he woild have
lost. He is scheduled to move up to the Bantamweight division in his next bout and challenge Eric Morel
for the interim WBO bantamweight title.

Bantamweight
On April 24, 2010, Arce jumped to the bantamweight division to fight fellow Mexican Cecilio Santos
(24-13-3; 14 KO) at the Centro de Usos Multiples in Ciudad Obregon, Sonora, Mexico. Arce defeated
his opponent by KO in the 7th round, improving his record to 54-6-1. This was not his first fight as a
bantamweight: he already fought once in the weight class in 2007.

Arce was scheduled to fight Eric Morel (42-2; 21 KO) of Puerto Rico on June 26, 2010 at the
Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, United States with the interim WBO bantamweight title at stake. The
Los Mochis native withdrew from the fight a few weeks in advance due to a cut he received while in
training. Morel comes from a controversial split decision win against veteran Filipino boxer Gerry
Peñalosa.

In his next fight, on July 31, 2010, Arce took on fellow Mexican Martin "El Gallo" Castillo at the Palenque
de la Feria in Tepic, Nayarit, Mexico. The Los Mochis native won the bout by KO in the first round.