Patrick Kinigamazi

Patrick Kinigamazi (born 2 March 1983) is a Rwandan professional boxer who has held the WBF super featherweight title since 2017, and previously the African lightweight title in 2016.

Patrick Kinigamazi
Statistics
Nickname(s)King Kini[1]
Weight(s)
NationalityRwandan
Born (1983-03-02) 2 March 1983
Gisenyi, Rwanda
Boxing record[2]
Total fights34
Wins32
Wins by KO4
Losses3

Early life

Kinigamazi was born on 2 March 1983 in Gisenyi, Rwanda, and moved to Switzerland in at the age of fifteen to join family in the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide.[1][3] After beginning in combat sports when he was seventeen, he followed his brother into a boxing ring and joined Club pugilistique de Carouge.[3]

During his early years as a pro boxer he also competed in kickboxing, winning two World and four European titles.[4] On 2 May 2010, he won the WKN full-contact world featherweight title from Gary Hamilton, ending his seven-year reign as champion.[5] Kinigamazi later called it his toughest fight.[4]

Professional career

Kinigamazi made his professional boxing debut on 29 June 2006, defeating Rocco Cipriano by fifth-round technical knockout in Carouge.[1] He won his first title in his seventh fight, a split decision victory over Martino Ciano for the vacant Swiss lightweight title.[1] After a streak of 16 wins to start his pro career he lost his first bout in 2011 to future European super featherweight champion Guillaume Frenois.[4] A year later he suffered his second defeat at the hands of another Frenchman, Sebastien Cornu.[1]

On 18 November 2016, more than nine years after his last championship fight, he beat Spanish-based Congolese fighter Clark Telamanou for the vacant African lightweight title via majority decision with the scorecards reading 96–94, 96–94 and 95–95.[6] Two fights later, on 9 June 2017, a 34-year-old Kinigamazi defeated Juan José Farias unanimously (117–106, 116–107, 116–107) to win vacant WBF super featherweight title.[7][8] He had four successful defenses against young contenders before he faced veteran South African Bongani Mahlangu in Geneva in his fifth defense, defeating the 2004 Olympian by majority decision on 12 December 2019.[9][10] He was also named 2017 Fighter of the Year at the WBF Awards.[11]

He was scheduled to fight Michael Magnesi on 6 November 2020 for the vacant IBO super featherweight title, but it had to be rescheduled after Kinigamazi tested positive for COVID-19.[12]

Professional boxing record

Professional record summary
35 fights 32 wins 3 losses
By knockout 4 1
By decision 27 2
By disqualification 1 0
No. Result Record Opponent Type Round, time Date Location Notes
35 Loss 32–3 Michael Magnesi TKO 5 (12) 27 Nov 2020 Palasport, Fondi, Italy For vacant IBO super featherweight title
34 Win 32–2 Bongani Mahlangu MD 12 12 Dec 2019 Cirque de Noel, Geneva, Switzerland Retained WBF super featherweight title
33 Win 31–2 Martin Parlagi UD 10 28 Jun 2019 Théâtre du Léman, Geneva, Switzerland Retained WBF super featherweight title
32 Win 30–2 Jordan McCorry UD 12 13 Dec 2018 Cirque de Noel, Geneva, Switzerland Retained WBF super featherweight title
31 Win 29–2 Ramiro Blanco UD 12 1 Jun 2018 Salle bout du Monde, Geneva, Switzerland Retained WBF super featherweight title
30 Win 28–2 Robert Laki TKO 5 (12) 24 Nov 2017 Salle bout du Monde, Geneva, Switzerland Retained WBF super featherweight title
29 Win 27–2 Juan José Farias UD 12 9 Jun 2017 Thônex, Switzerland Won vacant WBF super featherweight title
28 Win 26–2 Ruben Gouveia PTS 8 18 Feb 2017 Maison des sports, Annemasse, France
27 Win 25–2 Clark Telamanou MD 10 18 Nov 2016 Salle des Fêtes, Carouge, Switzerland Won vacant African lightweight title
26 Win 24–2 Miguel González UD 8 22 Apr 2016 Citroën Acacias, Geneva, Switzerland
25 Win 23–2 Sylvain Chapelle UD 8 3 Jul 2015 Hotel Novotel, Monte Carlo, Monaco
24 Win 22–2 King Daluz UD 8 21 Nov 2014 Salle des Fêtes, Carouge, Switzerland
23 Win 21–2 Ryan Peleguer PTS 6 1 Nov 2014 Pabellón Central, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain
22 Win 20–2 Francisco Urena UD 6 25 May 2013 Salle Louis-Bertrand, Geneva, Switzerland
21 Win 19–2 Zsolt Nagy UD 8 15 Feb 2013 Salle des Fêtes, Carouge, Switzerland
20 Loss 18–2 Sebastien Cornu UD 6 1 Dec 2012 Salle de Gymnastique du Bourg, Martigny, Switzerland
19 Win 18–1 Janos Vass TKO 2 (6), 1:22 6 Oct 2012 Villars-sur-Ollon, Switzerland
18 Win 17–1 Andrei Staliarchuk UD 8 10 Feb 2012 Salle des Fêtes, Carouge, Switzerland
17 Loss 16–1 Guillaume Frenois UD 12 26 Nov 2011 Arena de Genève, Geneva, Switzerland
16 Win 16–0 Youness Laribi DQ 6 (8), 2:20 7 May 2011 Salle Louis-Bertrand, Geneva, Switzerland
15 Win 15–0 Zsolt Nagy UD 6 6 Nov 2010 Salle bout du Monde, Geneva, Switzerland
14 Win 14–0 Argel Salinas UD 10 3 Jun 2010 Salle Communale de Carouge, Carouge, Switzerland
13 Win 13–0 Danys Díaz UD 10 27 Nov 2009 Salle des Fêtes, Carouge, Switzerland
12 Win 12–0 Mario Hayes UD 8 13 Nov 2009 Casino de Deauville, Deauville, France
11 Win 11–0 Samir Boukrara UD 6 14 Feb 2009 Salle des Fêtes, Carouge, Switzerland
10 Win 10–0 Roman Rafael TKO 2 (8), 1:40 1 Jun 2008 Ecole de Charmettes, Geneva, Switzerland
9 Win 9–0 Ruddy Encarnación UD 6 8 Feb 2008 Salle des Fêtes, Carouge, Switzerland
8 Win 8–0 Omar Krim UD 6 15 Nov 2007 Salle Palladium, Geneva, Switzerland
7 Win 7–0 Martino Ciano SD 10 30 Sep 2007 Salle bout du Monde, Geneva, Switzerland Won vacant Swiss lightweight title
6 Win 6–0 Mickaël Gomard UD 6 15 Mar 2007 Salle Palladium, Geneva, Switzerland
5 Win 5–0 Nicolas Fargette UD 6 2 Mar 2007 Salle des Fêtes de Perdtemps, Nyon, Switzerland
4 Win 4–0 Frederic Gosset UD 6 16 Feb 2007 Salle des Fêtes, Carouge, Switzerland
3 Win 3–0 Nicolas Fargette UD 6 26 Oct 2006 Salle Palladium, Geneva, Switzerland
2 Win 2–0 Franck Aiello UD 6 16 Sep 2006 Casino Lucien Barrière, Montreux, Switzerland
1 Win 1–0 Rocco Cipriano TKO 5 (6), 2:25 29 Jun 2006 Salle des Fêtes, Carouge, Switzerland

References

  1. Rossini, Federico (24 November 2020). "Boxe, chi è Patrick Kinigamazi: l'avversario di Michael Magnesi sulla strada della cintura mondiale". OA Sport (in Italian). Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  2. "Boxing record for Patrick Kinigamazi". BoxRec.
  3. Wullschleger, Jacques (10 May 2016). "Patrick Kinigamazi, champion de boxe". Coopération. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  4. Calcio, Jean-Antoine (16 November 2016). "Patrick Kinigamazi, ce guerrier caché". 24 heures (in French). Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  5. "Results From Geneva - Hamilton Fight Video added". prokick.com. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  6. Calcio, Jean-Antoine (20 November 2011). "Patrick Kinigamazi: «Je suis prêt pour viser plus haut»". Tribune de Genève (in French). Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  7. Baum, Clive (10 June 2017). "Kinigamazi Outgrits Farias To Become WBF World Champion". World Boxing Federation. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  8. "Le titre mondial WBF pour Patrick Kinigamazi". La Liberté (in French). 10 June 2017. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  9. "Kinigamazi va remonter sur le ring". Le Matin (in French). 2 September 2019. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
  10. Jackson, Ron (13 December 2019). "Mahlangu loses in bid for WBF belt". Fight News. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  11. "2017 World Boxing Federation Awards (Part 3 of 3)". World Boxing Federation. 7 January 2018. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  12. Bornand, Pascal (4 November 2020). "Patrick Kinigamazi est prêt à repartir au combat". Tribune de Genève (in French). Retrieved 7 November 2020.
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