Lennox Blackmoore | |
---|---|
Statistics | |
Real name | Lennox Blackmoore |
Weight(s) | light/light welter/welter/light middle/middleweight |
Height | 5 ft 9+1⁄2 in (1.77 m) |
Reach | 75 in (191 cm) |
Nationality | Guyanese |
Born | Guyana | 10 July 1950
Stance | Orthodox |
Boxing record | |
Total fights | 30 |
Wins | 25 |
Wins by KO | 14 |
Losses | 5 |
Lennox Blackmoore (born July 10, 1950) is a Guyanese professional light/light welter/welter/light middle/middleweight boxer of the 1970s and 80s.
His professional fighting weight varied from 132 lb (60 kg; 9 st 6 lb), i.e. lightweight to 156 lb (71 kg; 11 st 2 lb), i.e. middleweight. [1] Lennox Blackmoore is the uncle of the boxer Shaun George.
Growing up in East La Penitence, his main interest was football. His first and only amateur bout was in 1971, and he began his professional career at 23 in 1974. [2] He went on to win the Guyanese lightweight title and Guyanese light middleweight title. At 27, he won the 1977 Commonwealth lightweight title in Lagos, and upon his return to Guyana he was celebrated by the Forbes Burnham government. [3] He was a challenger for the World Boxing Association (WBA) World light welterweight title against Aaron Pryor, and World Boxing Council (WBC) FECARBOX light welterweight title against Antonio Cervantes. [4] Blackmoore also fought, and lost to, Steve Hearon.
He retired from boxing in 1986, [3] and went on to train other boxers, including Julio César Green, Jill Matthews, and Åsa Sandell. [2] He works as a private boxing trainer in New York city. [5]
The Guyana Boxing Association (GBA) inaugurated the Lennox Blackmoore Intermediate Championships in 2015. [6] GBA honors notable local boxers by naming tournaments after them. [7]
Andrew "The Eagle" Murray born in Georgetown was a Guyanese professional welter/light middle/middleweight boxer of the 1990s and 2000s who won the World Boxing Council (WBC) FECARBOX welterweight title, World Boxing Association (WBA) Fedelatin welterweight title, and Commonwealth welterweight title, and was a challenger for the World Boxing Association (WBA) World welterweight title against Ike Quartey, World Boxing Union (WBU) welterweight title against Michele Piccirillo, and World Boxing Organization (WBO) North American Boxing Organization (NABO) light middleweight title against Fathi Missaoui, his professional fighting weight varied from 145 lb, i.e. welterweight to 156 lb, i.e. middleweight. Andrew Murray was trained by Emanuel Steward, and was the Vice-President of the Guyana Amateur Boxing Board and was training several young boxers, and he had coached Hugo Lewis to the Guyanese super featherweight title on 26 December 2001. Andrew Murray died in a traffic collision on the Soesdyke-Linden Highway early in the morning of Sunday 27 January 2002, he had been in Linden promoting a fight card and was on his way back to Georgetown.
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