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Miguel 'Silky Smooth' Gonzalez: The last man to win a fight with Terence Crawford
Ring Magazine
FEATURED INTERVIEW
Branson Wright
Branson Wright
RingMagazine.com
Miguel 'Silky Smooth' Gonzalez: The last man to win a fight with Terence Crawford
CLEVELAND — The instructions echo loud enough over the dull thud of leather on heavy bags and above the combatants sparing in the ring. Those same commands bounce off the poster-tattered basement walls of Old Angle Gym, a humble boxing space tucked beneath Trinity Lutheran Church in Ohio City, an ear shot from downtown Cleveland.

This has been home for Miguel “Silky Smooth” Gonzalez for most of his life. It’s where he learned to fight under the sharp eye of his father, Sonny, where he grew into one of the nation’s best amateurs, and where he built a professional career that saw him win 25 of 29 fights before his last fight in 2019.

Gonzalez spends most days in that same basement, passing along what he knows to the next wave of Cleveland fighters. But inside his past is a story that never fades, no matter how many years go by.

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Although it happened during the 2007 Olympic Trials, Gonzalez still holds the distinction as the last man to defeat Terence “Bud” Crawford. The same Crawford who became a pound-for-pound king.

Gonzalez’s memory has only grown in significance as Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs) has ascended into the rare air of boxing immortality. And as Crawford prepares for his September 13 showdown with Canelo Alvarez in Las Vegas, Gonzalez can’t help but watch with a mix of pride and wonder — knowing that in his own way, his name is forever stitched into the champion’s story.

“People, especially around the city, know I’m that man, I’m the man that beat Crawford,” Gonzalez told The Ring. “I’m the only fighter to beat him because I came into that fight with my heart. I was slick and I banged like Roberto Duran. I was coming and I walked through Bud.”

At the Trials in Houston, Gonzalez walked into one of the most loaded amateur tournaments in U.S. boxing history. Ten fighters from that field — including Keith Thurman, Deontay Wilder, Danny Garcia, Gary Russell Jr. and Shawn Porter — would go on to become world champions.

Crawford entered as one of the favorites, but an early loss to Sadam Ali dropped him into the losers’ bracket. Gonzalez also fell to Ali in the semifinals, setting up a showdown between the two. It would be their third meeting— Crawford had won the first two, including one by a single point after Gonzalez was penalized for shoving.

This time, Gonzalez was determined not to leave any doubt.




“I wanted to destroy this guy,” Gonzalez said. “I was slick and I banged like Roberto Duran. I walked straight through Bud.”

A southpaw like Crawford, Gonzalez used movement, angles and pressure to keep the future champion off balance. Crawford switched stances, tried boxing, then tried trading, but nothing worked. Gonzalez outpointed him 32–23.

“He tried banging, he tried boxing, but I outslicked him,” Gonzalez said. “I outworked him. I smoked Bud.”

The performance left an impression on those watching from Cleveland’s boxing circle of amateur fighters:

  • Tim VanNewhouse: “That night in Houston, he didn’t just beat Crawford. He outclassed him. It was a masterclass in amateur boxing."
  • Julius Leegrand: “Bud was the favorite … but Miguel wouldn’t let him settle. It was the most serious I saw Bud the whole tournament."
  • Shawn Porter: “Miguel was slick, smart, fast. He knew how to work that point system. It was one of the highlights of his career, amateur or pro.”

Gonzalez’s Olympic dream ended with a loss to Ali in the finals. He and Crawford turned pro the following year, setting off careers that would diverge dramatically — but forever remain linked by that night in Houston. Crawford went on to an incredible career, while Gonzalez built a solid pro career and returned to the same gym where his own journey began.

Now, as Crawford prepares for his showdown with Alvarez on Netflix — a fight that could cement his place among the sport’s immortals — Gonzalez watches with pride, knowing a piece of that legacy runs through him.

“I take my hat off to Bud. He’s had a wonderful career and I’m rooting for him,” Gonzalez said. “But no matter what, people around here know, I’m the man that beat Crawford, and I’ll always have his number.”


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