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Boxing: Super-Bantamweights
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★ Boxing: Super-Bantamweights

[8.8] JEFF FENECH 33-29(21)-3-1 [Lightweight & Super-Featherweight & Featherweight & Super-Bantamweight & Bantamweight]  The Courier Mail online - The Ring online -

 

Jeff Fenech to be honoured by WBC as its greatest featherweight boxer of the past 30 years: Australia’s most successful boxer Jeff Fenech will be honoured by the World Boxing Council in Las Vegas this weekend as its greatest featherweight of the last 30 years.

 

Fenech will join other boxing greats including Mike Tyson, Lennox Lewis, Evander Holyfield, Roberto Duran, Marvin Hagler and Oscar De la Hoya at the annual WBC convention at the Mirage Hotel and Casino where the Australian fought his epic and controversial 12-round draw with Azumah Nelson in 1991.

 

Fenech will also use the visit to press the case for the boxer he now trains, heavyweight Lucas Big Daddy’ Browne, to face the winner of the January 17 WBC heavyweight title fight between Bermane Stiverne and Deontay Wilder.

 

Browne is the No.5 contender for the heavyweight title.

 

Fenech and Mexican icon Salvador Sanchez were voted the two best featherweights in the 52-year history of the WBC in a poll conducted among 85,000 fight fans worldwide.

 

Images of the two will now grace the belt presented to all WBC featherweight champions.

 

Sanchez died aged just 23 in a wrecked Porsche 928 just a few weeks after beating Azumah Nelson in New York’s Madison Square Garden in 1982.

 

Other champions to be honoured this weekend as the best in their weight classes during the life of the WBC include Lewis and Tyson (heavyweight) Kostya Tszyu (junior-welterweight), Evander Holyfield (cruiserweight) and Roy Jones Jr (light-heavyweight) who was sensationally knocked out in a round by Perth’s Danny Green in 2009.

 

During his 24-year pro career Fenech held the IBF bantamweight, WBC super-bantamweight and WBC featherweight titles and fought a draw with Nelson for the WBC junior-lightweight crown with a majority of commentators believing the Marrickville Mauler deserved the decision.

 

Fenech, 50, who was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2002, said the WBC honour was one of the biggest of his career.

 

To be selected in the company of those greats is a real thrill, he said.

 

Boxing and the WBC gave me opportunities I would never have received otherwise, and I’ll always be grateful for the chance to become a champion on the world stage.’  The Courier Mail online article 9 December 2014 Grantlee Kieza

 

 

Best I Faced: Jeff Fenech: Jeff Fenech is considered one of – if not the – greatest boxers ever produced by Australia.

 

At his brilliant best, he was a whirling dervish of a fighter, winning major titles at 118, 122 and 126 pounds in the 1980s and only controversially missing out on a hugely significant fourth crown at 130.

 

Fenech was a good amateur, winning bronze at the 1983 Commonwealth Games.  The following year, he lost in the quarterfinals at the Olympics in Los Angeles to eventual junior flyweight silver medalist Redzep Redzepovski.  Later that year, he made the logical step into the pros.

 

The Marrickville Mauler quickly made his mark, winning the National junior bantamweight title in just his third outing and, by his seventh bout – just six months into his career – his backers were able to tempt WBA bantamweight titlist Satoshi Shingaki to make the trip to Australia. 

 

Shingaki was no match for Fenech, who demolished the Japanese beltholder in nine rounds.  As well as winning his first world title, he also became the first boxer from the 1984 Olympics to win pro honors.

 

The impressive Australian stayed active, winning a pair of non-title bouts before repeating his win over Shingaki four months later in four brisk rounds.

 

In December of 1985, Fenech took American Jerome Coffee’s unbeaten record in another title defense, going the full 15-round course.  He then outpointed future Hall-of-Famer Daniel Zaragoza, four months later in a non-title outing.  In the summer of 1986, Fenech handed 1984 Olympic flyweight champion Steve McCrory his first defeat by 14th round stoppage.

 

By this time, Fenech was suffering from chronic hand issues that sidelined him for nine months.  He quickly found his groove and, one month after winning the Australian featherweight title, Fenech won the WBC junior featherweight title with a fourth round bludgeoning of Samart Payakaroon.  The beating was so severe, the Thai retired to live in a monastery in his homeland.

 

Fenech successfully turned back the challenges of Greg Richardson (KO 5) and Mexican legend Carlos Zarate (by fourth round technical decision) before migrating to featherweight, where he collected the vacant WBC strap with a hard fought 10th-round stoppage of heavy-handed Victor Callejas.  Impressively, his third world title in consecutive weights came in the space of just three years.

 

Looking back, Fenech says both the Callejas and Payakaroon victories were his best wins.

 

In my third title fight, against Victor Callejas, I fought at 80 per cent.  I had a broken right hand.  That was a great performance, Fenech told RingTV.com, but I think my best was when I won my second world title against Samart Payakaroon.  I think I boxed brilliant.  I knocked him out with a great punch.  The great thing was, though my hands were sore, I hit him early and there was a couple times he hit me and – wow, could he punch.  I wanted to get him out of there as quick as I could.

 

Fenech made three successful title defenses before besting rugged Mexican Mario Martinez at 130 pounds.  Further hand trouble forced Fenech to retire from the sport.  However, just over a year-and-change later, he returned.  After a comeback win, he made his American debut against the legendary Azumah Nelson.

 

If you watched from my first fight to my 28th with Nelson, I may have lost three rounds.  Fenech said reflecting on his career.

 

After 12 rounds, the consensus was that Fenech had done enough to unseat the Professor’.  However, the bout was declared a draw, much to Fenech’s dismay.

 

I honestly believe, in my first fight with Nelson, I did what I did with every other fighter, explained Fenech.  ‘Of course, Azumah was a little better.  I knew that, was prepared for that.  I did what I did to most other opponents.

 

He fought a little harder and he was a much, much better conditioned guy than any of the rest I fought because most of them faded as the rounds went on.  Azumah faded but I think his corner did a great job when they hid the mouth guard.  Him being Azumah Nelson and being under the Don King banner helped him because I believe the referee (Joe Cortes) didn’t let me do what I wanted to do, breaking up the fight, let Azumah hit me after the bell.  People want to say I’m a dirty fighter but I only retaliate when someone does something to me.  I’ve got no need to do something dirty at the start because I’m busy trying to cut the ring off and put pressure on.  Like I said, although I won the fight, nobody tried to help me like that. The judging, the referring, everything was against me.

 

Although Fenech secured a rematch with Nelson, he had to wait nine months.  In March of 92, Nelson traveled to Australia, where a crowd of 35,000 turned up in expectation of watching their hero’s coronation.   However, not for the first time, the brilliant Nelson turned the tables on the oddsmakers, stopping Fenech in the eighth round.  Nelson’s win was voted The Ring magazine Upset of the Year.

 

He fought a great fight, acknowledged Fenech.  ‘I’d never been hurt before in my life before the rematch.  In the first fight, Azumah never hurt me a bit.  Callejas, Samart Payakaroon hit me with a good punch; none of them slightly hurt me.

 

After that fight, I went home and I was never the same.  He could say he fought and beat Jeff Fenech but that wasn’t the Jeff Fenech that fought Victor Callejas.  The Jeff Fenech that fought (Nelson) in the Mirage, I’d been sick for weeks here in Las Vegas.  I never made excuses; I never would but I’m just saying, if he fought me at the time I fought (Marcos) Villasana, Callejas, I would have stopped him no problem and it was 15 rounds in those days.  In the 12th round, he couldn’t stand up; I had to hold him up in the fight.

 

It’s all history.  I didn’t get (the decision).  He comes to Australia and knocks me out.  It just speaks volumes for the man’s character, tenacity and everything else he’s got.  He’s one of the greatest in history for (winning rematches).

 

Fenech fought sparingly over the next couple of years and was able to tempt IBF lightweight boss Philip Holiday to travel from South Africa and put his title on the line in May of ’96.  Fenech was stopped in the second round and walked away from boxing.

 

After 12 years, with both men shadows of their former selves, Fenech met Nelson in a rubber match.  Fenech was able to exercise a few demons by winning a majority decision.

 

One of Fenech’s wishes was that he would have liked more people in America to have seen him fight.

 

That’s one of the things that’s upsetting in my career; people in America didn’t see my fights, he said.  ‘If they saw me against Marcos Villasana or a guy who was world champion and me beat him every round.

 

In 91, when I was rated the number one junior lightweight, the featherweight champion (Marcos Villasana), the junior featherweight champion (Daniel Zaragoza) and bantamweight of the world (Greg Richardson).  I’d beaten the three of them.  I don’t know if that’s ever been done.

 

Fenech considers his third world title as his greatest achievement.

 

People don’t realize, had I won that fourth world title (v Azumah Nelson), I’d have been the first boxer in history to win four world titles (at different weight classes) undefeated.

 

Unsurprisingly, the biggest disappointment of Fenech’s career was not being able to do just that.

 

My fourth title, explained Fenech, who retired with a mark of 29-3-1 (21 knockouts).  ‘That’s why I made those stupid comebacks but I’m a realist.  Once I started to get hurt, it was never the same again.

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