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:''This article is about John Duddy, the |
:''This article is about John Duddy, the British boxer. For the Scottish murderer, see [[Massacre of Braybrook Street]].'' |
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{{Infobox Boxer |
{{Infobox Boxer |
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|name= John Duddy |
|name= John Duddy |
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|realname= John Francis Duddy |
|realname= John Francis Duddy |
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|nickname= |
|nickname= Ulster's John Duddy |
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|weight= [[Middleweight]] |
|weight= [[Middleweight]] |
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|nationality= |
|nationality= [[Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg|25px]] [[United Kingdom]] |
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|birth_date= [[June 19]], [[1979]] |
|birth_date= [[June 19]], [[1979]] |
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|birth_place= [[Londonderry]], [[Northern Ireland|N. Ireland]] |
|birth_place= [[Londonderry]], [[Northern Ireland|N. Ireland]] |
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'''John Francis Duddy''' (born [[June 19]], [[1979]] in [[Londonderry]], [[Northern Ireland]]) is a [[middleweight]] [[boxing|boxer]]. He fights with the nickname ''' |
'''John Francis Duddy''' (born [[June 19]], [[1979]] in [[Londonderry]], [[Northern Ireland]]) is a [[middleweight]] [[boxing|boxer]]. He fights with the nickname '''Ulster's John Duddy'''. |
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John Duddy has won all eighteen of his professional bouts, fifteen by [[knockout]], and nine of them in the first round. He has been featured in undercard and headlining bouts on [[ESPN]] and [[Top Rank]] [[Pay-Per-View]], among other [[television]] channels. |
John Duddy has won all eighteen of his professional bouts, fifteen by [[knockout]], and nine of them in the first round. He has been featured in undercard and headlining bouts on [[ESPN]] and [[Top Rank]] [[Pay-Per-View]], among other [[television]] channels. |
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As an amateur Duddy fought 130 times, winning 100 of his bouts. Duddy won his first [[Irish]] national title at the age of 15 as a [[light middleweight]] in the Junior Division, later obtaining the Irish title at both Intermediate and Senior Levels. He also represented [[Ireland]] at [[Europe|European]] level and during Olympic qualifiers. |
As an amateur Duddy fought 130 times, winning 100 of his bouts. Duddy won his first [[Irish Republican]] national title at the age of 15 as a [[light middleweight]] in the Junior Division, later obtaining the Irish title at both Intermediate and Senior Levels. He also represented [[Republic of Ireland]] at [[Europe|European]] level and during Olympic qualifiers. |
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Duddy moved to [[Dublin]] before leaving Ireland to settle in [[New York, New York|New York City]], [[United States]], after failing to get signed as a professional boxer in either Ireland or [[Britain]], due to the fact that some boxing trainers and promoters thought that Duddy was not good enough to make it as a professional boxer. |
Duddy moved to [[Dublin]] before leaving the Republic of Ireland to settle in [[New York, New York|New York City]], [[United States]], after failing to get signed as a professional boxer in either the Republic of Ireland or [[Britain]], due to the fact that some boxing trainers and promoters thought that Duddy was not good enough to make it as a professional boxer. |
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Duddy is the current holder of the [[International Boxing Association|IBA]] World Middleweight Title and the [[World Boxing Council|WBC]] Continental Americas Middleweight Title. He is ranked at number 9 amongst [[World Boxing Association|WBA]] middleweights<ref>{{cite web |
Duddy is the current holder of the [[International Boxing Association|IBA]] World Middleweight Title and the [[World Boxing Council|WBC]] Continental Americas Middleweight Title. He is ranked at number 9 amongst [[World Boxing Association|WBA]] middleweights<ref>{{cite web |
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Duddy's first professional fight was on [[September 19]], [[2003]], against Tarek Rashed in [[Bronx, New York|The Bronx]]. He won via first round knockout. On [[November 22]], he stopped Jesse Gomez at the [[Crowne Plaza|Crowne Plaza hotel]]. His next bout was also at the [[Crowne Plaza]], where he beat Leo Laudat on [[December 21]] but suffered his first knockdown. |
Duddy's first professional fight was on [[September 19]], [[2003]], against Tarek Rashed in [[Bronx, New York|The Bronx]]. He won via first round knockout. On [[November 22]], he stopped Jesse Gomez at the [[Crowne Plaza|Crowne Plaza hotel]]. His next bout was also at the [[Crowne Plaza]], where he beat Leo Laudat on [[December 21]] but suffered his first knockdown. |
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Duddy began [[2004]] by stepping up his opponent quality a notch, when he met Ken Hock on [[January 9]] at [[Uncasville, Connecticut]]. Hock had ten victories against four losses and one draw (tie) coming into his bout with Duddy. Hock became the first boxer to go more than one round against Duddy, but still lost by knockout to the |
Duddy began [[2004]] by stepping up his opponent quality a notch, when he met Ken Hock on [[January 9]] at [[Uncasville, Connecticut]]. Hock had ten victories against four losses and one draw (tie) coming into his bout with Duddy. Hock became the first boxer to go more than one round against Duddy, but still lost by knockout to the British prospect in the fourth round. |
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Duddy then experienced his career's longest lay-off, waiting over nine months before his next bout. When he returned, he once again won by first round knockout, defeating [[Victor Paz]] on [[October 30]] at [[Middletown, New York]]. Duddy quickly returned to action after that fight, beating [[William Johnson]] on [[November 18]] in [[Manhattan]]. |
Duddy then experienced his career's longest lay-off, waiting over nine months before his next bout. When he returned, he once again won by first round knockout, defeating [[Victor Paz]] on [[October 30]] at [[Middletown, New York]]. Duddy quickly returned to action after that fight, beating [[William Johnson]] on [[November 18]] in [[Manhattan]]. |
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Duddy's final fight of 2004 came on [[December 12]] at [[Brighton Beach, New York|Brighton Beach]] against the then undefeated Glen Dunnings. Dunnings became only the second boxer to go more than one round against Duddy, when he was knocked out in the fifth round. |
Duddy's final fight of 2004 came on [[December 12]] at [[Brighton Beach, New York|Brighton Beach]] against the then undefeated Glen Dunnings. Dunnings became only the second boxer to go more than one round against Duddy, when he was knocked out in the fifth round. |
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Duddy's first fight of [[2005]] came on [[February 4]], when he beat Chuck Orso in [[White Plains, New York|White Plains]]. On [[March 18]], Duddy fought the undefeated prospect Leonard Pierre as part of |
Duddy's first fight of [[2005]] came on [[February 4]], when he beat Chuck Orso in [[White Plains, New York|White Plains]]. On [[March 18]], Duddy fought the undefeated prospect Leonard Pierre as part of a Republic of Ireland themed "day after [[Saint Patrick's Day]] card". This undercard was televised in the United States on ESPN, with Duddy and Pierre fighting the semi-main event of the card, which was headlined by [[heavyweight]] [[Kevin McBride]], who later defeated [[Mike Tyson]]. Both the live crowd and the television announcers expected an early knockout in this fight, given that Pierre also had six first round knockout wins. Duddy proceeded to drop Pierre twice before experienced referee Frank Cappuccino stopped the fight, giving Duddy his seventh first round knockout, and his ninth consecutive knockout victory. The famous former boxer [[Micky Ward]], who is also Irish Republican and who provided commentary from the ESPN studio for that fight, expressed pleasure with Duddy's performance that night. |
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On [[June 11]], 2005 Duddy boxed against [[Patrick Thompson]] in [[Madison Square Garden]]. Thompson became the third boxer to last the first round, and both fighters boxed to a judge's decision. The score on all three cards was 80-72 in favor of John Duddy, who extended his win streak to ten, while his knockout streak ended at nine. |
On [[June 11]], 2005 Duddy boxed against [[Patrick Thompson]] in [[Madison Square Garden]]. Thompson became the third boxer to last the first round, and both fighters boxed to a judge's decision. The score on all three cards was 80-72 in favor of John Duddy, who extended his win streak to ten, while his knockout streak ended at nine. |
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==Trivia== |
==Trivia== |
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Duddy has proven to be a crowd favorite and quite a ticket selling attraction. Duddy's management, [[Irish Ropes]], turned down a lucrative $75,000 contract to fight Cuevas for $10,000 and a 50% share of tickets Duddy sold himself. Duddy's devoted fan base, made up of both the large Irish immigrant community in New York and fans of his aggressive in your face style, turned out in force for the Cuevas fight, greeting Duddy with [[Flag of Ireland|Irish tricolours]] |
Duddy has proven to be a crowd favorite and quite a ticket selling attraction. Duddy's management, [[Irish Ropes]], turned down a lucrative $75,000 contract to fight Cuevas for $10,000 and a 50% share of tickets Duddy sold himself. Duddy's devoted fan base, made up of both the large Irish Republican immigrant community in New York and fans of his aggressive in your face style, turned out in force for the Cuevas fight, greeting the British citizen Duddy with the flag of a foreign nation [[Flag of Ireland|Irish tricolours]]. Due to his great ability to sell tickets Duddy's reported purse for the fight was more than $135,000. |
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Duddy has displayed interest in taking on [[Dublin|Dubliner]] and current Irish middleweight champ "The Pink Panther" [[Jim Rock]]. Duddy's management attended Rock's [[June 3]], [[2006]] fight against Kevin Phelan in [[Dublin]], a seventh round TKO victory for Rock. The fight was initially scheduled for September 29 at Madison Square Garden, but has since been postponed, possibly for a November bout in [[Dublin]], Ireland. |
Duddy has displayed interest in taking on [[Dublin|Dubliner]] and current Irish middleweight champ "The Pink Panther" [[Jim Rock]]. Duddy's management attended Rock's [[June 3]], [[2006]] fight against Kevin Phelan in [[Dublin]], a seventh round TKO victory for Rock. The fight was initially scheduled for September 29 at Madison Square Garden, but has since been postponed, possibly for a November bout in [[Dublin]], Republic of Ireland. |
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Also of note is Duddy's commitment to the |
Also of note is Duddy's commitment to the Republic of Ireland community in [[New York City]] as he has become involved with the [[Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform]]. Duddy has attended many of the group's meetings and met with [[Arizona]] [[Senator]] [[John McCain]] at a group rally. [[Senator McCain]], a former [[Navy]] boxer himself, took great interest in Duddy and wished him well in his future bouts. Duddy entered the ring in his [[March 16]], [[2006]] fight wearing an ILIR t-shirt, to the crowd's great pleasure. A raucous cheer arose throughout [[Madison Square Garden]] when Duddy stripped his robes to reveal the t-shirt. |
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== References == |
== References == |
Revision as of 12:41, 15 December 2006
- This article is about John Duddy, the British boxer. For the Scottish murderer, see Massacre of Braybrook Street.
John Duddy | |
---|---|
File:John Duddy.jpg | |
Born | John Francis Duddy June 19, 1979 |
Nationality | United Kingdom |
Other names | Ulster's John Duddy |
Statistics | |
Weight(s) | Middleweight |
Stance | Orthodox |
Boxing record | |
Total fights | 18 |
Wins | 18 |
Wins by KO | 15 |
Losses | 0 |
Draws | 0 |
No contests | 0 |
John Francis Duddy (born June 19, 1979 in Londonderry, Northern Ireland) is a middleweight boxer. He fights with the nickname Ulster's John Duddy.
John Duddy has won all eighteen of his professional bouts, fifteen by knockout, and nine of them in the first round. He has been featured in undercard and headlining bouts on ESPN and Top Rank Pay-Per-View, among other television channels.
As an amateur Duddy fought 130 times, winning 100 of his bouts. Duddy won his first Irish Republican national title at the age of 15 as a light middleweight in the Junior Division, later obtaining the Irish title at both Intermediate and Senior Levels. He also represented Republic of Ireland at European level and during Olympic qualifiers.
Duddy moved to Dublin before leaving the Republic of Ireland to settle in New York City, United States, after failing to get signed as a professional boxer in either the Republic of Ireland or Britain, due to the fact that some boxing trainers and promoters thought that Duddy was not good enough to make it as a professional boxer.
Duddy is the current holder of the IBA World Middleweight Title and the WBC Continental Americas Middleweight Title. He is ranked at number 9 amongst WBA middleweights[1]. Furthermore, boxrec.com ranks Duddy at number 15 out of all middleweights.
His most recent fight taking place at Madison Square Garden on September 9, 2006 against Luis Ramon 'Yory Boy' Campas is a possible candidate for the 2006 Fight of the Year.
Fights
Duddy's first professional fight was on September 19, 2003, against Tarek Rashed in The Bronx. He won via first round knockout. On November 22, he stopped Jesse Gomez at the Crowne Plaza hotel. His next bout was also at the Crowne Plaza, where he beat Leo Laudat on December 21 but suffered his first knockdown.
Duddy began 2004 by stepping up his opponent quality a notch, when he met Ken Hock on January 9 at Uncasville, Connecticut. Hock had ten victories against four losses and one draw (tie) coming into his bout with Duddy. Hock became the first boxer to go more than one round against Duddy, but still lost by knockout to the British prospect in the fourth round.
Duddy then experienced his career's longest lay-off, waiting over nine months before his next bout. When he returned, he once again won by first round knockout, defeating Victor Paz on October 30 at Middletown, New York. Duddy quickly returned to action after that fight, beating William Johnson on November 18 in Manhattan.
Duddy's final fight of 2004 came on December 12 at Brighton Beach against the then undefeated Glen Dunnings. Dunnings became only the second boxer to go more than one round against Duddy, when he was knocked out in the fifth round.
Duddy's first fight of 2005 came on February 4, when he beat Chuck Orso in White Plains. On March 18, Duddy fought the undefeated prospect Leonard Pierre as part of a Republic of Ireland themed "day after Saint Patrick's Day card". This undercard was televised in the United States on ESPN, with Duddy and Pierre fighting the semi-main event of the card, which was headlined by heavyweight Kevin McBride, who later defeated Mike Tyson. Both the live crowd and the television announcers expected an early knockout in this fight, given that Pierre also had six first round knockout wins. Duddy proceeded to drop Pierre twice before experienced referee Frank Cappuccino stopped the fight, giving Duddy his seventh first round knockout, and his ninth consecutive knockout victory. The famous former boxer Micky Ward, who is also Irish Republican and who provided commentary from the ESPN studio for that fight, expressed pleasure with Duddy's performance that night.
On June 11, 2005 Duddy boxed against Patrick Thompson in Madison Square Garden. Thompson became the third boxer to last the first round, and both fighters boxed to a judge's decision. The score on all three cards was 80-72 in favor of John Duddy, who extended his win streak to ten, while his knockout streak ended at nine.
Since then Duddy has fought eight times, knocking out six of the opponents, including first round knock outs of both Joseph Brady (September 17, 2005) and Shelby Pudwill (March 16, 2006). On the undercard of the June 10, 2006 Miguel Cotto-Paul Malignaggi Top Rank Pay-Per-View fight, Duddy took on the experienced fighter Alfredo Cuevas, who in 2004 went the 12 round distance with current middleweight champion Jermain Taylor. It was Duddy's eighth fight in less than a year and his third at Madison Square Garden, but he showed no signs of fatigue, fighting Cuevas for 7 rounds before Cuevas retired on his stool with a broken nose and several deep cuts. Former world heavyweight champion, well known personality, and respected boxing analyst George Foreman provided commentary for the fight, remarking after the fight that Duddy's sharp left jab, "could take him to the top, with a jab like that a world middleweight championship might be on the horizon". Duddy's next fight came against Yuri Boy Campas, again at Madison Square Garden. Against an opponent with ten times more professional experience, Duddy went the distance, winning in a unanimous decision after 12 rounds.
Ratings
Organization | Rank |
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WBO | 6 |
WBA | 9 |
WBC | 20 |
IBO | 9/41* |
IBF | Not Rated |
IBA | Champ |
Ring | Not Rated |
Boxrec | 11* |
*Indicates computerized ranking
Trivia
Duddy has proven to be a crowd favorite and quite a ticket selling attraction. Duddy's management, Irish Ropes, turned down a lucrative $75,000 contract to fight Cuevas for $10,000 and a 50% share of tickets Duddy sold himself. Duddy's devoted fan base, made up of both the large Irish Republican immigrant community in New York and fans of his aggressive in your face style, turned out in force for the Cuevas fight, greeting the British citizen Duddy with the flag of a foreign nation Irish tricolours. Due to his great ability to sell tickets Duddy's reported purse for the fight was more than $135,000.
Duddy has displayed interest in taking on Dubliner and current Irish middleweight champ "The Pink Panther" Jim Rock. Duddy's management attended Rock's June 3, 2006 fight against Kevin Phelan in Dublin, a seventh round TKO victory for Rock. The fight was initially scheduled for September 29 at Madison Square Garden, but has since been postponed, possibly for a November bout in Dublin, Republic of Ireland.
Also of note is Duddy's commitment to the Republic of Ireland community in New York City as he has become involved with the Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform. Duddy has attended many of the group's meetings and met with Arizona Senator John McCain at a group rally. Senator McCain, a former Navy boxer himself, took great interest in Duddy and wished him well in his future bouts. Duddy entered the ring in his March 16, 2006 fight wearing an ILIR t-shirt, to the crowd's great pleasure. A raucous cheer arose throughout Madison Square Garden when Duddy stripped his robes to reveal the t-shirt.
References
- Shane Murray. "Ireland take Gold". RTE News. Retrieved 20 April.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - Jerry Glick. "Talks to John Duddy". Seconds Out. Retrieved August.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - Benny Henderson Jr. "Prospect Watch: The Fighting Irishman John Duddy". Doghouse Boxing. Retrieved 10 January.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - Marilyn Cole Lownes. "The Boxer". Irish Abroad. Retrieved 1 March.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - Steve Farhood. "Phenomenon". Boxing Monthly. Retrieved May.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - Matthew Hurley. "Ireland's Warrior - John Duddy". Boxing Scene. Retrieved 1 February.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - Brian Doogan. "Who is John Duddy?". The Times on Line. Retrieved 12 March.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) - Gilberto Mendoza. "Official Ratings as of July 2006" (PDF). WBA Ratings. Retrieved 22 September.
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ignored (|access-date=
suggested) (help) July 2006 WBA Rankings
External links
- Duddy's boxrec page
- FightBeat.com Interview with Duddy
- Irish Ropes John's Irish Ropes Profile
- Irish Amateur Boxing Associaton Duddy Profile
- ^ "Official Ratings as of October 2006" (PDF). Official Ratings as of October 2006. World Boxing Association. 2005-02-03. Retrieved 2006-11-14.
{{cite web}}
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