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Dariusz Michalczewski

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Dariusz Michalczewski
Career Snapshot
Born May 5, 1968
Died
Total Fights 50
Won 48
Lost 2
Drew 0
Knockouts 38
Titles Won WBO Cruiserweight, WBO, WBA, and IBF Light-heavyweight


Dariusz Michalczewski pseudonym: Tiger (born May 5, 1968 in Gdańsk, Poland) is one of the most successful light heavyweight champion of recent years. Despite going undefeated for the first 12 years of his professional career and threatening several major records, he was critisized for rarely fighting outside of Germany.

Nicknamed the "Tiger", Dariusz lives with his family in Hamburg.

Now also a citizen of Germany and a native of Gdańsk, Poland, Michalczewski came up through Poland's state-run sports program as a boy and had a successful amateur career before turning professional in 1991. Fighting mostly in neighboring Germany, he began piling up wins and was soon signed by Universum Box-Promotion, one of the leading boxing promoters in Europe. His aggressive style earned him the nickname The Tiger.

He won the German national light heavyweight (175-pound) title early in 1993 and added an IBF regional belt later that year. Finally, on September 10, 1994, Michalczewski captured the WBO world light heavyweight title with a 12-round decision over Leeonzer Barber.

Between then and March of 2003, Michalczewski made 23 successful defenses of his WBO title and picked up three other belts along the way. Three months after beating Barber, he won the WBO's cruiserweight, 190 pound (86 kg) title with a knockout of Nestor Giovannini. However, he soon gave up that title to continue campaigning as a light heavyweight.

On June 13, 1997, he won recognition by many as the world's top light heavyweight when he defeated Virgil Hill over 12 rounds to add Hill's WBA and IBF titles to his own. However, Michalczewski soon lost both titles. The WBA stripped him for displaying its belt along with that of the WBO, an organization it doesn't recognize. The IBF did so a few weeks later, when Michalczewski refused to defend his title against a mandatory challenger within 30 days.

After beating Hill, Michalczewski knocked out 14 consecutive opponents, all in defense of his WBO title. On 1998, he defeated Drake Thadziand in 2000 he went to defeat Gracciano Rocchigianni. However, he drew some criticism for never fighting outside Germany, and also for never facing Roy Jones Jr.. Shortly after Michalczewski beat Hill, Jones eventually captured the other three major belts in the division. Boxing fans began to clamor for the two men to meet one another in the ring, but it never happened. Universum was reluctant to make a fight for Michalczewski, a huge draw in Germany, anywhere else. Meanwhile, Jones still harbored bad memories of being robbed of a gold medal in the 1988 Olympic Games and prefered to fight only in his native United States.

Even without facing Jones, Michalczewski has posted some impressive victories, including those over Richard Hill, Derrick Harmon, Thadzi and former world champions Graciano Rocchigiani and Montell Griffin. Griffin and Thadzi are the only two other men, other than Roy Jones, to hold victories over James Toney.

Michalczewski had a perfect record of 48 wins and no losses when he faced Julio Cesar Gonzalez of Mexico in defense of his title on October 18, 2003. Coming into the fight, he was within one victory of tying Rocky Marciano's all-time record for an undefeated record by a world championship boxer. A win also would have put him just one victory short of Joe Louis' all-time record for successful defenses at any weight class. However, Michalczewski was unable to pull it off. He lost a split decision to Gonzalez at the Color Line Arena in Hamburg, Germany and his career record dropped to 48-1.

Despite the loss, he still holds the record for the most consecutive successful title defenses at light heavyweight.

In October of 2004, it was announced that Michalczewski would fight France's Fabrice Tiozzo for the WBA light-heavyweight title on February 26, 2005 in Hamburg.

He fought him but he lost, and then he declared the end of his career in May 2005.

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