Vitali Klitschko
(Ukrainian: ??????? ??????, Vitaliy Klychko
; born 19 July 1971 in Belovodsk, Kirghiz SSR, Soviet Union) is a Ukrainian professional heavyweight boxer and the current WBC heavyweight champion. He has the highest knockout percentage (92%) of any heavyweight champion in overall fights. His younger brother, Wladimir Klitschko, is the current IBF, WBO, IBO and Ring Magazine
world heavyweight champion. Vitali is the first professional boxing world champion to hold a PhD (in sports medicine and philosophy).
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VITALI KLITSCHKO TICKETS
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Boxing career
Originally a professional
kickboxer, Vitali won the super heavyweight championship at the first
World Military Games in
Italy in 1995. In that same year, he won the silver medal at the
1995 World Amateur Boxing Championships in
Berlin Germany, where he was defeated by
Russia's
Alexei Lezin in the final. His amateur record was 195-15 with 80 knockouts.
He began his professional boxing career in 1996, winning his first twenty-four fights by either early
knockout or technical knockout (TKO). He and Wladimir signed with the German athlete-promotion company
Universum. With both brothers holding Ph.D.s and being multilingual, their refined and articulate personalities made for mainstream marketability when they moved to Germany and Universum. In time, they became national celebrities in their adopted home country. In his 25th pro fight, on 26 June 1999, Klitschko won the
WBO heavyweight title from
Herbie Hide of the
United Kingdom by a 2nd round knockout.
He successfully defended the title twice before an April 1, 2000 match against American
Chris Byrd. Complaining of shoulder pain, Vitali and his corner
threw in the towel after the ninth round despite carrying a lead on all three judges' scorecards (89-82, and 88-83 twice). Klitschko, who was later diagnosed with a torn
rotator cuff, received much criticism for quitting the fight.
Klitschko rebounded from his loss to Byrd by reeling off five victories in a row, earning himself a shot at
WBC heavyweight champion
Lennox Lewis on June 21, 2003 in
Los Angeles, California. Klitschko, a 4-1 underdog, dominated the early going and stunned Lewis in the second round with two hard rights.
[1] In the third, Lewis landed a big right hand of his own that opened a deep cut above Klitschko's left eye.
Klitschko was able to rally and regain control of the fight, but the cut continued to worsen. Before the seventh round, the ringside doctor inspected the wound and deemed it severe enough to threaten eye damage if struck again, stopping the fight despite Klitschko's pleas to continue. Klitschko was ahead on all three scorecards 58-56 (4 rounds to 2) at the time of the stoppage, but because the wound was a result of punches from Lewis and not a headbutt, Lewis won by
technical knockout.
Lewis was booed lustily when he was announced the winner.
Klitschko, despite the loss, gained international respect for fighting so well against the heavyweight champion for 6 rounds. Negotiations for a December 6 rematch began
[2], but Lewis retired before the match could take place.
Around this time, the Klitschko brothers moved from
Hamburg,
Germany to
Los Angeles, California.
In January 2004, they notified Universum that they would not re-sign when their contracts expired in April. Universum sued the brothers, arguing that their recent injuries had triggered a clause binding them beyond April. The suit was resolved in late 2004.
[3]
Klitschko earned an 8th-round TKO victory over South African
Corrie Sanders on 24 April 2004, to capture the
World Boxing Council heavyweight championship which had been vacated by Lewis. Sanders had knocked out (2nd Round TKO) younger brother Wladimir on 8 March 2003. This fight was also for The
Ring Magazine
belt. Klitschko was rocked early by Sanders, but by using movement and strong punching he broke down Sanders and forced the referee to stop the bout.
Vitali Klitschko's first world title defense was against British boxer
Danny Williams. Williams had become suddenly marketable from a KO over
Mike Tyson in round 4. Klitschko scored a technical knockout against Williams in 8 rounds on 11 December 2004, while wearing an orange cloth to show support for the Ukrainian presidential opposition movement. Klitschko knocked Williams down in the 1st, 3rd, 7th, and 8th rounds before the fight was stopped. Immediately afterward, Klitschko dedicated his victory to
democracy in his native
Ukraine, and also to the Ukrainian presidential candidate
Viktor Yushchenko, whom he supported in the 26 December 2004,
election revote.
[4]
On 9 November 2005, Vitali Klitschko announced his retirement from professional boxing and vacated his title. He cited regrets about his suddenly-mounting injuries, a desire to leave the sport while still on top, and political aspirations in his home country of Ukraine.
[5] Following his retirement, the WBC conferred "champion emeritus" status on Klitschko, and assured him he would become the mandatory challenger if and when he decided to return.
[6] Klitschko retired with a career knockout ratio of 92 percent (34 knockouts in 37 bouts). He has never been knocked down or received a standing count.
He still occasionally calls out
Lennox Lewis, who has been retired since early 2004, for a rematch.
[7] In the German
Bild-Zeitung
, he announced on 24 January 2007 his comeback and requested to fight again.
[8] But because of a number of health problems, Klitschko backed out from a number of bouts scheduled for him.
On 3 August 2008, the
WBC awarded Klitschko a chance to regain his WBC heavyweight title. A fight was arranged with
Samuel Peter and on 11 October 2008, he regained his title when Peter retired on his stool in the eighth round.
On 21 March 2009, Klitschko successfully defended the WBC heavyweight title against
Juan Carlos Gomez which he won by TKO in the ninth round.
He will defend his WBC Title against
Chris Arreola on September 26, 2009 at the
Staples Center in
Los Angeles, California.
Outside the ring
Klitschko began campaigning for
mayor of
Kiev shortly after his retirement. He lost the 2006 mayoral election to
Leonid Chernovetsky but placed second with 26% of the vote, ahead of the incumbent
Oleksandr Omelchenko. Klitschko campaigned on an anti-corruption platform associated with
Pora party. Analysts stated his relatively late entry into the campaign might have cost him votes. Still, he was elected as a people's deputy to the
Kiev City Council.
[9] In the
May 2008 Kiev local election he ran again and won 18% of the vote. His party,
Vitaliy Klychko Bloc, won 10.61% of the votes and 15 seats and again he was elected into the Kiev City Council.
[10] His campaign hired Rudy Giuliani to consult the campaign.
[11] In 2008 he was also appointed to the Ukrainian delegation of the
Congress of the Council of Europe.
Both Vitali and his brother are avid chess players. Vitali is a friend of former world chess champion
Vladimir Kramnik and the two have played, with Kramnik always winning. Vitali has commented that "chess is similar to boxing. You need to develop a strategy, and you need to think two or three steps ahead about what your opponent is doing. You have to be smart. But what's the difference between chess and boxing? In chess, nobody is an expert, but everybody plays. In boxing everybody is an expert, but nobody fights."
[12]
Vitali and his brother also have been involved in charitable activities dedicated to support the needs of schools, churches and children. In 2002, the Klitschko brothers announced that they had agreed to work specifically for the UNESCO (the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) which supports more than 180 projects in 87 countries.
Personal
Their father, Vladimir Rodionovich, was a
Soviet Air Force Colonel. Their mother is Nadezhda Ulyanovna.
He is married to
Natalia Egorova, a former athlete and model. They met in Kiev and got married in April 1996. He has three children, Egor-Daniel, Elizabeth-Victoria and Max (named after the former World Heavyweight Champion Max Schmeling).
In 1996, he graduated from the Pereyaslav-Khmelnitsky Pedagogical Institute (Ukraine) and was accepted into the postgraduate study program at Kiev University. On 29 February 2000, he presented his doctoral thesis on "talent and sponsorship in sports"
[13] at the Kiev University of Physical Science and Sports, and his Ph.D in Philosophy in Sports Science was conferred.
Professional boxing record
|-
|align="center" colspan=8|
37 Wins
(36 knockouts),
2 Losses
(2 knockouts),
0 Draws
[14]
|-
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Res.
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Record
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Opponent
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Type
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Rd., Time
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Date
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Location
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|Notes
|-
|-align=center
|
|
|align=left|
Chris Arreola,
|
|
(12)
|
2009-09-26
| align=left|
Los Angeles, CA, United States
|align=left|
WBC heavyweight title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|37-2
|align=left|
Juan Carlos Gomez,
|TKO
|9
(12) 1.48
|
2009-03-21
| align=left|
Stuttgart, Germany
|align=left|
WBC heavyweight title. Gomez received a cut to the right eye in the fifth round. Klitschko rocked Gomez with a series of power punches in the seventh round causing Gomez to go down. Another barrage of power punches in the ninth round stunned Gomez and caused the referee to stop the fight.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|36-2
|align=left|
Samuel Peter,
|RTD
| 9
(12), 3:00
|
2008-10-11
| align=left|
Berlin, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|35-2
|align=left|
Danny Williams,
|TKO
| 8
(12), 1:26
|
2004-12-11
| align=left|
Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
|align=left|
WBC heavyweight title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|34-2
|align=left|
Corrie Sanders,
|TKO
| 8
(12), 2:46
|
2004-04-24
| align=left|
Los Angeles, CA, United States
|align=left|
Vacant WBC heavyweight title. Sanders took a serious pounding in the 8th round but refused to go down so the referee stopped the fight to save Sanders from taking any more punishment. Klitschko won the vacant Ring Magazine
heavyweight championship of the world.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|33-2
|align=left|
Kirk Johnson,
|TKO
| 2
(12), 2:54
|
2003-12-06
| align=left|
New York, United States
|align=left|
WBC Heavyweight Title Eliminator. Klitschko was able to control the range of the fight, and landed often with right hands. Johnson tried to work behind his jab and set up some winging power shots, but was unable to connect on his taller opponent. In round 2, Johnson was wobbled by right hand behind the ear, and was down to his knees after a barrage of punches from Klitschko. Johnson would rise at the count of two, but was on the canvas seconds later after another barrage of punches from Klitschko. Referee Arthur Mercante Jr. did not pick up a count and stopped the fight as Johnson attempted to make his way up.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ffdddd; color: black;" class="table-no2" |Loss
|32-2
|align=left|
Lennox Lewis,
|TKO
| 6
(12), 3:00
|
2003-06-21
| align=left|
Los Angeles, CA, United States
|align=left|
WBC, IBO heavyweight title. Lewis was stunned by a barrage of power punches in the second round. The fight was stopped after the 6th round, on the advice of ringside doctor, Dr. Paul Wallace, due to a large cut over Klitschko's left eye. Klitschko was leading 58-56 on all three judges scorecards, when the fight was stopped.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|32-1
|align=left|
Larry Donald,
|TKO
| 10
(12), 2:35
|
2002-11-23
| align=left|
Dortmund, Germany
|align=left|
WBA Inter-Continental heavyweight title. WBA Heavyweight Title Eliminator.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|31-1
|align=left|
Vaughn Bean,
|TKO
| 11
(12), 1:40
|
2002-02-08
| align=left|
Braunschweig, Germany
|align=left|
WBA Inter-Continental heavyweight title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|30-1
|align=left|
Ross Puritty,
|TKO
| 11
(12), 1:16
|
2001-12-08
| align=left|
Oberhausen, Germany
|align=left|
WBA Inter-Continental heavyweight title. Fight stopped due to bad cut.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|29-1
|align=left|
Orlin Norris,
|KO
| 1
(12), 1:09
|
2001-01-27
| align=left|
Munich, Germany
|align=left|
Vacant WBA Inter-Continental heavyweight title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|28-1
|align=left|
Timo Hoffmann,
|UD
| 12
(12),
|
2000-11-25
| align=left|
Hannover, Germany
|align=left|
Vacant EBU (European) heavyweight title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ffdddd; color: black;" class="table-no2" |Loss
|27-1
|align=left|
Chris Byrd,
|RTD
| 9
(12), 3:00
|
2000-04-01
| align=left|
Berlin, Germany
|align=left|
WBO heavyweight title. After the ninth round Klitschko claimed an injured shoulder and the bout was stopped. He was later diagnosed with a torn rotator cuff.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|27-0
|align=left|
Obed Sullivan,
|TKO
| 9
(12), 3:00
|
1999-12-11
| align=left|
Hamburg, Germany
|align=left|
WBO heavyweight title. Sullivan fails to answer the bell for Round 10. Ruled as a TKO after the 9th round.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|26-0
|align=left|
Ed Mahone,
|TKO
| 3
(12), 1:45
|
1999-10-09
| align=left|
Oberhausen, Germany
|align=left|
WBO heavyweight title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|25-0
|align=left|
Herbie Hide,
|KO
| 2
(12), 1:14
|
1999-06-26
| align=left|
London, United Kingdom
|align=left|
WBO heavyweight title. Hide down twice in 2nd round.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|24-0
|align=left|
Ismael Youla,
|TKO
| 2
(12), 1:30
|
1999-02-20
| align=left|
Hamburg, Germany
|align=left|
EBU (European) heavyweight title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|23-0
|align=left|
Francesco Spinelli,
|TKO
| 1
(12), 1:49
|
1998-12-05
| align=left|
Kiev, Ukraine
|align=left|
EBU (European) heavyweight title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|22-0
|align=left|
Mario Schiesser,
|TKO
| 2
(12), 2:00
|
1998-10-24
| align=left|
Hamburg, Germany
|align=left|
Vacant EBU (European) heavyweight title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|21-0
|align=left|
Ricardo Kennedy,
|TKO
| 1
(8), 1:31
|
1998-08-11
| align=left|
Miami, FL, United States
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|20-0
|align=left|
Jose Ribalta,
|TKO
| 2
(12),
|
1998-06-05
| align=left|
Hamburg, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|19-0
|align=left|
Dicky Ryan,
|TKO
| 5
(12),
|
1998-05-02
| align=left|
Lübeck, Germany
|align=left|
Vacant WBO Inter-Continental heavyweight title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|18-0
|align=left|
Julius Francis,
|TKO
| 2
(12),
|
1998-04-18
| align=left|
Aachen, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|17-0
|align=left|
Levi Billups,
|KO
| 2
(10),
|
1998-03-20
| align=left|
Frankfurt, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|16-0
|align=left|
Louis Monaco,
|KO
| 3
(10),
|
1998-03-07
| align=left|
Cologne, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|15-0
|align=left|
Alben Belinski,
|KO
| 2
(8),
|
1998-01-30
| align=left|
Munich, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|14-0
|align=left|
Marcus Rhode,
|TKO
| 2
(8),
|
1998-01-17
| align=left|
Berlin, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|13-0
|align=left|
Anthony Willis,
|KO
| 5
(8),
|
1997-12-20
| align=left|
Berlin, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|12-0
|align=left|
Herman Delgado,
|TKO
| 3
(8),
|
1997-11-29
| align=left|
Karlsruhe, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|11-0
|align=left|
Gilberto Williamson,
|KO
| 6
(6),
|
1997-11-08
| align=left|
Frankfurt, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|10-0
|align=left|
Will Hinton,
|KO
| 2
(6),
|
1997-10-04
| align=left|
Hannover, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|9-0
|align=left|
Jimmy Haynes,
|KO
| 2
(6),
|
1997-06-14
| align=left|
Aachen, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|8-0
|align=left|
Cleveland Woods,
|KO
| 2
(6), 2:16
|
1997-05-10
| align=left|
Frankfurt, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|7-0
|align=left|
Derrick Roddy,
|TKO
| 2
(6), 2:14
|
1997-04-12
| align=left|
Aachen, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|6-0
|align=left|
Calvin Jones,
|KO
| 1
(6), 2:58
|
1997-03-08
| align=left|
Cologne, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|5-0
|align=left|
Troy Roberts,
|KO
| 2
(6),
|
1997-02-22
| align=left|
Hamburg, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|4-0
|align=left|
Mike Acklie,
|KO
| 1
(6), 0:32
|
1997-01-25
| align=left|
Stuttgart, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|3-0
|align=left|
Brian Sargent,
|TKO
| 2
(6), 1:08
|
1996-12-21
| align=left|
Frankfurt, Germany
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|2-0
|align=left|
Frantisek Sumina,
|TKO
| 1
(4), 1:12
|
1996-11-30
| align=left|
Wiener Neustadt, Austria
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
|1-0
|align=left|
Tony Bradham,
|KO
| 2
(4), 1:14
|
1996-11-16
| align=left|
Hamburg, Germany
|align=left|
Bradham down once in both rounds. Pro debut for Klitschko.
See also
- List of heavyweight boxing champions
References
- Lewis Cuts the Deepest and Retains His Title
- Boxing: Lewis set to retire after re-match with Klitschko
- In Latest Ruling, Court Favors Klitschkos Over Universum
- Klitschko Remains a Champion In a Dominating Show of Force
- Rahman: If not Vitali, bring on Wlad
- David Haye confident he can take down both Klitschko brothers
- Vitali Klitschko Only Interested in Lennox Lewis, Valuev - Boxing News
- Sensations-Comeback: Vitali Klitschko will wieder boxen! - Bild.de
- Kyiv gets first new mayor in decade
- Biography Vitaliy Klychko, official party website
- http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/05/07/giuliani-weighs-in-on-race-for-mayor-in-ukraine/
- HBO: Boxing: Fighters: Bio: VITALI KLITSCHKO
- CyberBoxingZone News, 29-02-2000 "Calling Dr. Klitschko" retrieved 07-11-2008
- Vitali Klitschko's career boxing record