Johnston to move back down to lightweight!

31/07/2006

Johnston to move back down to lightweight!

Press Release: Crafty veteran Stevie “Little But Bad” Johnston has decided to continue his career and return to his natural fighting weight of 135 pounds, back to the lightweight division he dominated for four years. After taking the fight on two weeks notice, Johnston was decisively beaten by Vivian Harris over the weekend.

The 5-foot, 5-inch Johnston (38-4-1, 17 KOs), 33, captured the WBC lightweight championship twice between 1997 and 2000, registering seven successful title defenses at 135 pounds. Technically speaking, at least for 30 minutes, Stevie captured the WBC lightweight belt for the third time, when he was announced as the winner of a 12-round majority decision against Jose Luis Castillo on September 9, 2000. A scoring error was revealed resulting in a draw. The classy Johnston went to Castillo’s dressing room to personally return the WBC title belt.

“I’m too little to fight at 140,” Johnston realized after losing to 5-11
Vivian Harris last Saturday night. “After the fight I hydrated and still only weighed 147 pounds with my clothes and shoes on. When I started my comeback, I weighed 180 and we felt that 140 pounds was what I should fight at. I walk around at 148. I train hard and just can’t keep enough weight on between fights to fight at 140. I only weighed 136 when I fought Steve Quinonez in January. I could probably get down to 130, but I’m more comfortable at 135, and that’s where I’ll be making noise at from now on. Stevie Johnston isn’t going away. I’m just going back to where I belong.”

As a lightweight, Stevie defeated world champions Sharmba Mitchell, Jean Baptiste Mendy, Saul Duran, Cesar Bazan, James Page, Angel Manfredy and Alejandro Gonzalez. He’s also beaten major world title challengers such as Hiroyuki Sakamoto, Ever Beleno, Julio Alvarez, Billy Schwer, Aldo Nazareno Rios, Demetrio Ceballos, George Scott, Mark Fernandez and Corey Johnson.

Johnston, a Denver native now fighting out of Vero Beach, overcame a life-threatening car accident in 2003 and returned to the ring 2 ½ years later as a light welterweight. He captured the IBO junior welter title, which he is abdicating in order to give other 140-pounders an opportunity to fight for these belts. Johnston is promoted by Silverhawk Boxing and managed by Rider Boxing and trained by Henry Hill.