About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 80. Chapters: Sugar Ray Leonard, List of boxing triple champions, Jayson Vemoa, Joe Calzaghe, List of boxing quadruple champions, Roy Jones, Jr., James Toney, List of boxing quintuple champions, Shane Chapman, Anthony Mundine, Jean Pascal, Marcus Davis, Edison Miranda, Artem Levin, Carl Froch, Librado Andrade, Lucian Bute, Curtis Bush, Sakio Bika, Allan Green, Nigel Benn, Steve Collins, Francisco Sierra, Vladine Biosse, Nicky Piper, Patrick Mendy, Marco Antonio Periban, Jeff Lacy, List of super middleweight boxing champions, George Tahdooahnippah, Charles Adamu, Luis Garcia, Markus Beyer, Mads Larsen, Denis Inkin, Jerson Ravelo, Jaidon Codrington, Sam Soliman, Anthony Dirrell, Thulani Malinga, Glenn Catley, Monica Nunez, Dingaan Thobela, Silvio Branco, Kenny Anderson, Caleb Truax, Chong-Pal Park, Tim Littles, James McGirt Jr., Roberto Cocco, Eric Lucas, Randie Carver, Danny Morgan, In-Chul Baek, Sava Kaya, Dominic Wade, Omar Sheika, Sam Horton, Jesus Angel Nerio, Carlos Gallegos, Segundo Mercado, Dave Peterson, Eric Crumble, Danny Santiago, Lester Gonzalez Perez, Alejandro Berrio, Maxim Vlasov, Rogelio Vargas, Ray Domenge, Brian Sanchez, Rommel Rene, Adrian Taihia, Maneno Oswald. Excerpt: In boxing, a triple champion is a boxer who has won world titles in three different weight classes. For most of the 20th century it was a remarkable achievement, possibly securing one a spot in the Boxing Hall of Fame with other immortals of the sport. Beginning in the 1970s, Triple Champions have become increasingly more common because of the numerous weight divisions (17) and the countless professional boxing entities that claim a "World" championship. Example: Wilfredo Gomez won his first belt at 122 pounds. Later he won the 126-pound crown and finally won the 130-pound title as well. The first Triple Champion of boxing was Bob Fitzsimmons w...