Career
Zamora was the silver medalist at the 1972 Munich Olympics. He enjoyed a meteoric rise in his professional career. Bantamweight silver medalist at the 1972 Olympics in Munich.
Results were:
Defeated Ricardo Fortaleza (Philippines) KO 2
Defeated Stefan Forster (West Germany) points
Defeated Juan Francisco Rodriguez (Spain) KO 3
Defeated Ricardo Carreras (United States) points
Lost to Orlando Martinez (Cuba) points
WBA Bantamweight Championship
On April 3, 1976, he knocked out future hall-of-famer Eusebio Pedroza in the second round.
Zamora versus Zarate
Fighting contemporaneously, and holding the WBC crown, was the fellow-Mexican legend, Carlos Zarate. A showdown between the two was inevitable and they met in a non-title match on 23 April 1977.
Zamora went into the bout sporting a record of 29 wins in 29 fights, all by knockout. Zarate"s record was an equally impressive 45 fights, 45 wins, with 44 KOs.
In an eargely anticipated fight Zarate scored a technical knockout over Zamora in the fourth round.
Zamora never seemed to recover from this loss. In his next fight he lost his WBA Bantamweight title to Jorge Luján by knockout in the tenth round. His record thereafter was spotty, and he even was stopped on 16 November 1979 by Eddie Logan, who sported a record of 5 wins and 7 losses.
He retired after losing, again by knockout, to Rigoberto Estrada on 19 September 1980.
In 1983, Zamora was to fight Wilfredo Gomez, the fight ultimately was canceled. Zamora was a knockout seeker, but he seemed to lose confidence after his devastating loss to Zarate.
Nevertheless, he was selected at Number 47 on the The Ring"s list of 100 greatest punchers of all time. His final career record included 33 wins, with 32 KOs, and 5 losses.