György Mizsei
György Mizsei (born November 30, 1971 in Kiskunfélegyháza) was a Hungarian boxer, who won a bronze medal in the light middleweight division at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
Personal information | |||||||||||||||||
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Full name | Mizsei György | ||||||||||||||||
Nationality | |||||||||||||||||
Born | Kiskunfélegyháza, Bács-Kiskun | September 30, 1971||||||||||||||||
Height | 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in) | ||||||||||||||||
Weight | 71 kg (157 lb) | ||||||||||||||||
Sport | |||||||||||||||||
Sport | Boxing | ||||||||||||||||
Weight class | Light Middleweight | ||||||||||||||||
Club | Kiskunfélegyházi H. Sportegyesület | ||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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He gained the bronze medal at the 1996 European Amateur Boxing Championships in Vejle, Denmark. His son (György Jr.) also professional boxer who won EBU European Union lightweight title in 2014.[1]
Amateur Highlights
- 1991 bronze medalist in European Amateur Boxing Championships in Göteborg, Sweden
- 1996 bronze medalist in European Amateur Boxing Championships in Vejle, Denmark
- Representing Hungary, won the Light Middleweight bronze medal at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona
- Member of the Hungarian Olympic Team of Atlanta in Light Middleweights
- 1992 Olympic Results - Boxed as a Light Middleweight (71 kg)
- 1st Round - Defeated Fabrizio de Chiara of Italy, 13:4
- Round of 16 - Defeated Hendrik Simangunsong of Indonesia, 17:5
- Quarterfinals - Defeated Maselino Masoe of American Samoa, 17:3
- Semifinals - Lost to Juan Carlos Lemus of Cuba, 2:10
- 1996 Olympic Results - Boxed as a Light Middleweight (71 kg)
- 1st Round - Defeated Richard Rowles of Australia, 10:2
- Round of 16 - Lost to Markus Beyer of Germany, 6:14
Pro career
In 1997 Mizsei began his professional career, and he had limited success as a pro. After two fights, including a loss to future titlist Armand Krajnc, Mizsei retired with a record of 1-1-0. After more than nine years layoff, Mizsei reactivated his pro career.
gollark: Yes. It's still a bad fire extinguisher regardless of how good the designers thought/claimed they were being.
gollark: Systems have no intentions. People in them might, and the designers probably did, and the designers also likely claimed some intention, and people also probably ascribe some to them. But that doesn't mean that the system itself "wants" to do any of those.
gollark: I think you could reasonably argue that it's better to respect institutions than ignore them because it's better for social cohesion/stability, but I don't agree that you should respect them because they're meant to be fair and because you can always get them to fix problems you experience if this isn't actually true.
gollark: If the fire extinguisher actually explodes when used to put out fires, it would be a bad fire extinguisher even if the designers talk about how good it is and how many fires it can remove.
gollark: We should be evaluating it on how well it does what we want it to, not how well the designers *claim it does*.
References
- "Mizsei profi Európa-bajnok lett". Blikk. 26 April 2014. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
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