Chris Sanigar

Chris Sanigar (born 7 July 1955) is a boxing manager, promoter, and trainer, and former boxer. In his career as a boxer he won the BBBofC Southern Area light welterweight title, and in his managerial career he has worked with several British and World champions.

Chris Sanigar
Statistics
Weight(s)Light welterweight, welterweight
Height5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
NationalityBritish
Born (1955-07-07) 7 July 1955
StanceSouthpaw
Boxing record
Total fights31
Wins18
Wins by KO10
Losses11
Draws2

Career

Sanigar grew up in Devizes, and started his amateur career in 1974, reaching the ABA finals in 1977 and representing England three times.[1][2]

He moved to London, where he was managed by George Francis, and turned professional in 1978,[1] starting his pro career with a points win over Eric Purkis. After winning his first seven fights, he suffered successive defeats in 1979 to George McGurk and future Zambian champion Payson Choolwe. In June 1981 he challenged for his first professional title when he faced Sid Smith for the vacant BBBofC Southern Area light welterweight title; Sanigar was stopped with a cut in the third round.[2] The two met again in November that year, this time with Sanigar knocking Smith out in the fourth round to take the title.[2] In April 1982, Sanigar defended the title against Sylvester Mittee in a fight that was also an eliminator for the British title. Mittee stopped him in the ninth round. In October 1982, Sanigar faced Terry Marsh, losing via disqualification in the seventh round for hitting Marsh while he was down. Sanigar moved up a division in 1984 to face Rocky Kelly for the vacant Southern Area welterweight title, losing a narrow points decision.[3] Sanigar subsequently retired from boxing.

He returned to Bristol and moved into training and management at Bristol Boxing Gym, home of his former club, Empire ABC.[4][5][6] He received his manager and trainer's licence in 1989.[2] Boxers he has managed (latterly along with his son Jamie) include Ross Hale, Dean Francis, Adrian Stone, Scott Dann, Glenn Catley, Jamie Arthur, Lee Haskins, Lee Selby, Andrew Selby, and Olympic silver medallist Fred Evans.[7][8][9][10]

In October 2016, Sanigar received the Joe Bromley Award for Outstanding Services to Boxing at the Boxing Writers Club dinner.[1]

gollark: `youtube-dl`
gollark: We must delete this person and everything they stood for.
gollark: Hi.
gollark: *What* under UV?
gollark: Although I guess being imprisoned is an arbitrary human construct too.

References

  1. "Chris Sanigar honoured at Boxing Writers Awards", World Boxing News, 11 October 2016. Retrieved 4 March 2018
  2. Harrison, Andrew (2015) "The life and times of Chris Sanigar", Boxing Monthly, 23 September 2015. Retrieved 4 March 2018
  3. Worsell, Elliot (2017) Dog Rounds: Death and Life in the Boxing Ring (Kindle edition), ASIN B06Y27Q4R3
  4. "BOXING: Sanigar wins ring honour", Gazette & Herald, 19 October 2016. Retrieved 4 March 2018
  5. McMillan, Jim (2011) The Alternative View of a Boxers Record, Authorhouse, ISBN 978-1456779191, p. 260
  6. "Bruno gives backing to Bristol club's mental health campaign", England Boxing. Retrieved 4 March 2018
  7. Watters, Andy (2017) "Lee Selby coach Chris Sanigar says Carl Frampton rumble will 'definitely happen' this year", The Irish News, 14 February 2017. Retrieved 4 March 2018
  8. Williams, David (2017) "Hard work and determination have paid off for Lee, says proud Selby manager Chris Sanigar", South Wales Argus, 19 January 2017. Retrieved 4 March 2018
  9. Bond, Nick (2015) "Fred Evans inks professional deal with Chris Sanigar Archived 2018-03-04 at the Wayback Machine", Boxing News, 17 December 2015. Retrieved 4 March 2018
  10. Lewis, Mike (2002) "Francis tap-dances back on to the streets", Daily Telegraph, 9 March 2002. Retrieved 4 March 2018
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