Julius Indongo

Last updated

Julius Indongo
Born
Julius Munyelele Indongo

(1983-02-12) 12 February 1983 (age 40)
Windhoek, Namibia
Other namesBlue Machine
Statistics
Weight(s)
Height5 ft 10+12 in (179 cm) [1]
Reach71+12 in (182 cm) [1]
Stance Southpaw
Boxing record
Total fights31
Wins24
Wins by KO13
Losses7

Julius Munyelele Indongo (born 12 February 1983) is a Namibian professional boxer. He is a former unified light-welterweight world champion, having held the WBA (Unified), IBF, and IBO titles between 2016 and 2017. As an amateur, Indongo represented Namibia at the 2008 Olympics, reaching the first round of the lightweight bracket.

Contents

Amateur career

Indongo first took up boxing at the age of 17. In 2002, he won the amateur Namibian National Championships and he appeared poised for success. However, Indongo was struck by tuberculosis, which interrupted his career for 2 years. After recovering, Indongo qualified to represent his country in the 2008 Olympics. Right before his first fight, Indongo broke his right hand. He decided to fight regardless but was easily outpointed by Anthony Little. [2]

Professional career

Early career

Indongo debuted professionally at the age of 25, on 25 July 2009, with a points decision (PTS) win over Pohamba Mandume. After winning his first six fights, he won his first regional title, the Namibian lightweight title, by defeating Samuel Kapapu, and retained it against Peter Malakia.

After improving to 14 consecutive wins, he won the WBO Africa light-welterweight title in October 2012 via victory over James Onyango. Indongo went on to make six successful defenses of that title between 2014 and 2016. Indongo was a late bloomer on the world stage, with his first world title fight taking place when he was 33. His trainer, Nestor Tobias, stated that he often needed to be more aggressive and "deliver the killer punch". [3]

Unified light-welterweight champion

In October 2016, undefeated IBF and IBO light-welterweight champion Eduard Troyanovsky (25-0, 22 KOs) stated he would make a voluntary defence on the Lebedev-Gassiev card in Russia on 3 December. [4] On 7 November, Indongo, who was ranked WBO #3, WBA #15 and IBF #10, was announced as his opponent, for the fight to take place in Moscow, in his first bout held outside of Namibia. [5] Despite being a favoured underdog, Indongo knocked out Troyanovsky after only forty seconds of the first round with a left hook, becoming Namibia's fourth world boxing champion. Troyanovsky was badly hurt from the shot and did not get up. Referee Mark Calo-Oy immediately halted the fight with Troyanovsky still down on the canvas. After some assistance, they eventually got Troyanovsky back to his feet and took him out of the ring. [6] [7]

In late December, there were talks for a potential unification fight between Indongo and WBA champion Ricky Burns. [8] [9] On 9 January, Burns' manager Tommy Morrison confirmed a deal was being put together for Burns to fight Indongo in a unification fight in April at The SSE Hydro in Glasgow. [10] [11] On 11 January, Sky Sports confirmed a deal was reached for Burns and Indongo in a unification title bout on 15 April 2017. The WBA, IBF and IBO titles would be at stake. [12] [13] This was Scotland's first ever unification fight. [14] [15] Burns failed to become Scotland's first unified world champion when he lost via a one-sided unanimous decision with wide scores of 120–108, 118-110 and 116–112. In the last two rounds, Burns hit the canvas three times, but these were ruled as a slip. Following the defeat, Burns praised Indongo, "He was so so awkward. He was a lot better than we thought he was going to be. He can hit as well." He also said that he wouldn't retire. [16] [17]

Indongo vs. Crawford

On 1 July 2017, Top Rank announced that a light welterweight unification fight between Indongo and WBC, WBO, Ring magazine, and lineal champion Terence Crawford was agreed to take place on 19 August at the Pinnacle Bank Arena in Lincoln, Nebraska live on ESPN in US and Sky Sports in the UK. [18] [19] [20] The projected unification of every major world title in boxing (WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO, The Ring, and lineal) will determine the light welterweight division's first undisputed champion since Kostya Tszyu in 2004, and the first time all the aforementioned titles have been at stake in a single fight since Bernard Hopkins vs. Jermain Taylor in 2005. Both fighters paid over US$100,000 in sanctioning fees. [21] Indongo vacated the IBO belt to avoid paying even more in sanctioning fees. [21] Crawford entered the fight as a heavy favourite to win. [22]

On fight night, Crawford dominated Indongo, knocking him down in the second round before finishing him with a vicious body shot in just three rounds. [23] The fight took place in front of a raucous home crowd for Crawford. Crawford landed 27 total punches to Indongo's 13 and 17 power punches to Indongo's 10. According to CompuBox stats, Crawford landed 26 of his 75 punches thrown (35%), while Indongo landed 13 of 74 thrown (18%). Both boxers earned an undisclosed 7-figure purse. [24] Following the fight, Indongo stated "When he hit me like that, my mind was gone" about Crawford's body shot. [25] The card averaged 965,000 viewers on ESPN. [26]

Career from 2018

On 5 January 2018, Lou DiBella of DiBella Entertainment announced that he had signed Indongo on a long-term promotional contract. [27] A few hours later, Nestor Tobias, Indongo's manager and promoter from Namibia claimed that Indongo and DiBella had breached contract. Tobias stated that Indongo was under contract with his MTC Nestor Sunshine Boxing & Fitness Academy until 2020. [28]

The WBC super lightweight title became vacant after Terence Crawford decided to move up to welterweight. It was announced that number 1 ranked Amir Imam would fight number 3 ranked Jose Ramirez for the vacant title. WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman then announced that Viktor Postol, who was ranked number 4, would fight number 2 ranked Regis Prograis (20-0, 17 KOs) for the interim WBC title. The winner of both fights would then meet to become the full titleholder. [29] In January 2018, a deal was finally reached for the fight between Postol and Prograis to take place on 9 March at the Buffalo Run Casino in Miami, Florida. [30] On 12 February, ESPN reported that Postol suffered a fractured thumb and forced to drop out of the bout. Indongo was announced as his replacement, with the bout still taking place on 9 March, however the venue was changed to Deadwood Mountain Grand, a casino and resort in Deadwood, South Dakota, with Showtime televising the bout live. [31] Prograis knocked Indongo down four times in the fight, dropping him once in round 1 and three more times in round 2 before referee Ian John Lewis stopped the fight at 2:54 of round 2. Indongo started the fight well before being hit with a hard jab that dropped him. Indongo was hurt with this shot. Indongo fought close to Prograis, which seemed to benefit Prograis. After the fight, Prograis told Showtime's Steve Farhood, "After the first round, I felt his punches. He couldn't punch. He couldn’t hurt me. I got a little reckless. But I got the job done, so I can’t complain." Prograis landed 46 of 94 punches thrown (49%) and Indongo connected on 32 of his 120 thrown (27%). [32]

Indongo came back with a win against Carltavius Jones Johnson in his next fight. Indongo was controlling the action in round one. In round two, Jones Johnson fought more aggressively, but a counter right hook from Indongo dropped him on the canvas. Johnons managed to beat the count, but the referee decided he was not fit to continue, awarding Indongo with the TKO win. [33]

On 27 November 2020, Indongo faced Daniyar Yeleussinov. Yeleussinov looked dominant and dropped Indongo in the opening round. It looked like the fight would end in the opening round, but Indongo managed to survive to the round. In the second round, Indongo was dropped again, and again managed to beat the count. He did not look fit to continue however, and the referee waved the fight off right after the knockdown. [34]

Professional boxing record

31 fights24 wins7 losses
By knockout135
By decision112
No.ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
31Loss24–7 Khariton Agrba KO3 (8) 1:5019 Nov 2022RCC Boxing Academy, Ekaterinburg, Russia
30Loss24–6Mirzakamol NematovUD815 July 2022Hotel Renaissance, Tashkent, Uzbekistan
29Win24–5Sherif KasongoRTD4 (8)26 Feb 2022Government Complex, Lusaka, Zambia
28Loss23–5 Chris Jenkins PTS85 Feb 2022 Motorpoint Arena, Cardiff, Wales
27Loss23–4Hassan MwakinyoTKO4 (12)3 Sep 2021Kilimanjaro Hall, Dar es Salaam, TanzaniaFor African light-middleweight title
26Loss23–3 Daniyar Yeleussinov TKO2 (10), 0:3027 Nov 2020 Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Hollywood, Florida, USFor vacant IBF Inter-Continental welterweight title
25Win23–2Tay JonesTKO2 (10), 1:123 Aug 2019Bobby Miller Center, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, US
24Loss22–2 Regis Prograis TKO2 (12), 2:549 Mar 2018Mountain Grand, Deadwood, South Dakota, USFor vacant WBC interim light-welterweight title
23Loss22–1 Terence Crawford KO3 (12), 1:38 19 Aug 2017 Pinnacle Bank Arena, Lincoln, Nebraska, USLost WBA (Unified) and IBF light-welterweight titles;
For WBC, WBO, and The Ring light-welterweight titles
22Win22–0 Ricky Burns UD1215 Apr 2017 The SSE Hydro, Glasgow, ScotlandRetained IBF and IBO light-welterweight titles;
Won WBA (Unified) light-welterweight title
21Win21–0 Eduard Troyanovsky KO1 (12), 0:403 Dec 2016 Megasport Arena, Moscow, RussiaWon IBF and IBO light-welterweight titles
20Win20–0Fabian LyimoTKO1 (12)6 Aug 2016Country Club Resort, Windhoek, NamibiaRetained WBO Africa light-welterweight title
19Win19–0Allan KamoteTKO9 (12)26 Mar 2016Country Club Resort, Windhoek, NamibiaRetained WBO Africa light-welterweight title
18Win18–0 Zolani Marali UD123 Oct 2015Country Club Resort, Windhoek, NamibiaRetained WBO Africa light-welterweight title
17Win17–0Ibrahim ClassUD1220 Mar 2015Ramatex Factory, Windhoek, NamibiaRetained WBO Africa light-welterweight title
16Win16–0 Kaizer Mabuza UD126 Dec 2014Country Club Resort, Windhoek, NamibiaRetained WBO Africa light-welterweight title
15Win15–0Ishmael Takudzwa KuchochaTKO3 (12), 0:4526 Jul 2014Club Resort, Windhoek, NamibiaRetained WBO Africa light-welterweight title
14Win14–0Joel MwewaKO1 (12), 2:171 Mar 2014Olufuko Centre, Outapi, Namibia
13Win13–0Nelson BandaPTS1011 May 2013Kuisebmond Community Hall, Walvis Bay, Namibia
12Win12–0Abias SilipumbweKO1 (6), 1:2520 Mar 2013Country Club Resort, Windhoek, Namibia
11Win11–0James OnyangoTKO2 (12), 0:2912 Oct 2012Country Club Resort, Windhoek, NamibiaWon vacant WBO Africa light-welterweight title
10Win10–0Meshack KondwaniTKO4 (8), 2:0220 Mar 2012Country Club Resort, Windhoek, Namibia
9Win9–0Silas MandeyaUD65 Nov 2011Country Club Resort, Windhoek, Namibia
8Win8–0Peter MalakiaTKO10 (10)11 Jun 2011Country Club Resort, Windhoek, NamibiaRetained Namibian lightweight title
7Win7–0Samuel KapapuUD1019 Mar 2011Country Club Resort, Windhoek, NamibiaWon vacant Namibian lightweight title
6Win6–0Lawrence MoyoTKO1 (4)7 Aug 2010Kuisebmond Community Hall, Walvis Bay, Namibia
5Win5–0Samuel KapapuUD429 May 2010Kalahari Sands Hotel, Windhoek, Namibia
4Win4–0Festus NghidinwaMD420 Mar 2010Country Club Resort, Windhoek, Namibia
3Win3–0Daniel HoseaTKO2 (4), 1:5631 Oct 2009Kuisebmond Community Hall, Walvis Bay, Namibia
2Win2–0Pohamba MandumeUD412 Sep 2009Country Club Resort, Windhoek, Namibia
1Win1–0Pohamba MandumePTS425 Jul 2009 Country Club Resort, Windhoek, Namibia

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References

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  27. "Julius Indongo Inks Promotional Pact With Lou DiBella". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 6 January 2018.
  28. "Indongo's Promoter is Furious, Says Boxer is Still Under Contract". BoxingScene.com. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
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Sporting positions
Regional boxing titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Martin Haikali
Namibian lightweight champion
19 March 2011 January 2012
Vacated
Vacant
Title next held by
Samuel Kapapu
Vacant
Title last held by
Ebenezer Lantei Lamptey
WBO Africa
light-welterweight champion

12 October 2012 3 December 2016
Vacated
Vacant
Title next held by
Marios Matamba
Minor world boxing titles
Preceded by IBO light-welterweight champion
3 December 2016 – 7 August 2017
Stripped
Vacant
Title next held by
Mohamed Mimoune
Major world boxing titles
Preceded by
Eduard Troyanovsky
IBF light-welterweight champion
3 December 2016 – 19 August 2017
Succeeded by
Preceded byas champion WBA light-welterweight champion
Unified title

15 April 2017 – 19 August 2017
Succeeded by
Terence Crawford
as Super champion