Hughroy Currie

Trevor "Hughroy Currie" Currie (born 9 February 1959) is a Jamaican-born British former heavyweight boxer who was British champion between 1985 and 1986.

Hughroy Currie
Statistics
Real nameTrevor Currie
Nickname(s)hughroy
Weight(s)Heavyweight
NationalityBritish
Born (1959-02-09) 9 February 1959
Jamaica (Kingston)
Boxing record
Total fights29
Wins17
Wins by KO7
Losses11
Draws1

Career

Based in London, Currie had his first professional fight in February 1981, a win over Mick Chmilowskyi. After an undistinguished start to his professional career in which he won only three of his first eight fights, a run of five straight wins led to a challenge for the Southern Area title against Funso Banjo; Banjo won on points over ten rounds.

Currie then travelled to the United States where he won both his fights, and in September 1985 he fought Banjo once again, this time for the vacant British heavyweight title; Currie won an 11-round points decision to become British champion. His next fight was an eliminator for the Commonwealth title against Proud Kilimanjaro, which he won over 10 rounds.[1] He lost his British title at the first defence to Horace Notice in April 1986, Notice winning by a 6th-round TKO. Currie won four of his next 5 fights, including a 2nd-round knockout of Glenn McCrory, leading to another shot at the then vacant British title against Gary Mason; Mason won by a fourth-round knockout.[2]

Currie then fought Derek Williams in December 1989 for both the Commonwealth title and the vacant EBU European title; Williams won by a first-round TKO. That proved to be Currie's final fight and he retired from boxing.

gollark: You are not automated.
gollark: You're not either, though.
gollark: Hey, mæybe I could provide a "web API" for AutoBotRobot allowing it to Potatointerface™ with other bots.
gollark: Are you now BEES?
gollark: You said earlier that the rules did not currently exist.

References

  1. African Concord, 1986, Concord Press of Nigeria, p.28
  2. Davies, Gary A. (2011) "Gary Mason: former British boxing champion killed in cycling accident", Daily Telegraph, 7 January 2011. Retrieved 28 September 2014


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.