Ngozika Ekwelum

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Ngozika Ekwelum
Born (1948-03-15) 15 March 1948 (age 76)
NationalityNigerian
Statistics
Weight(s)Heavyweight
Boxing record[1]
Total fights31
Wins17
Wins by KO14
Losses9
Draws5

Ngozika Ekwelum (born 15 March 1948) is a Nigerian former heavyweight boxer, who held the Nigerian and African Boxing Union heavyweight titles in the 1970s and 1980s.

Career[edit]

From Anambra State, as an amateur, Ekwelum competed in the 1970 Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh, losing in the quarter-final to Irishman John McKinty.[2][3]

Ekwelum spent much of his professional career based in Germany. He made his professional debut in September 1973, knocking out Ireno Werleman in the second round. Two months later, in his third fight, he drew with former Italian champion Armando Zanini in Brescia. In his next fight, in February 1974, he suffered his first professional defeat, to the vastly experienced Argentine Avenamar Peralta. He followed this the next month with a drawn fight with another Argentine, Santiago Alberto Lovell. A seventh-round knockout of Richard Dunn followed in April 1974.[4] In January 1975 he knocked Eddie Neilson down four times before winning by a send-round stoppage, and a month later lost a narrow points decision to Billy Aird, both of these fights taking place in England.[5][6][7] Back in Germany, between March 1975 and May 1976, he won five fights and drew one. In November 1976 he travelled to Madrid to face Argentine champion Raul Gorosito, the 8-round fight judged a draw. In December 1976 he beat future world title challenger Lucien Rodriguez on points,[8] then had a run of three defeats; First, in January 1977 he was stopped in the seventh round in Johannesburg by Kallie Knoetze,[9][10] which saw him receive a lifetime ban from the Nigerian Boxing Board of Control for fighting in South Africa.[11] In May he was stopped in the sixth round by John L. Gardner at the Royal Albert Hall, in what would have been a fight for the vacant Commonwealth title, but the Nigerian authorities refused to sanction it due to Ekwelum's fight in South Africa.[12] He was then out of the ring until September 1978, when he was disqualified in the third round against Hennie Thoonen in Heerenveen for punching with the inside of the glove. He returned to winning ways in November 1978 with a fifth-round stoppage of German (BDB) champion Bernd August, and then in 1979 became based back in is home country, the ban evidently lifted. He had immediate success, knocking Eddie Cooper out in March to win the Nigerian heavyweight title. In October that year he knocked out Joe Kalala in the third round to take the African Boxing Union (ABU) title. In December 1979 he travelled to Canada to face Trevor Berbick, losing via a fifth-round stoppage. In March 1980 he stopped Paul Sykes in the first round, in what would prove to be his final win. He lost his ABU title in December 1983 to Proud Kilimanjaro, the Zimbabwean knocking him out in the twelfth and final round. In November 1984 he lost to Malian Mary Konate, and in his final fight in August 1986, at the age of 38, he was beaten on points by Charles Udalor in a Nigerian heavyweight title clash.[13]

In 2015, he was reportedly planning to open a boxing academy in Awka, Anambra State.[14]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Boxing record for Ngozika Ekwelum". BoxRec.
  2. ^ "'Gift' Medal for Boxer". Coventry Evening Telegraph. 17 July 1970. Retrieved 14 September 2019 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. ^ "Plumber Has 'Mate' He Did Not Want". Belfast telegraph. 17 July 1970. Retrieved 14 September 2019 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  4. ^ Ryan, Joe (2012) Heavyweight Boxing in the 1970s: The Great Fighters and Rivalries, McFarland & Co., ISBN 9780786470747, p. 210
  5. ^ "Neilson's Hopes are Shattered". Belfast telegraph. 7 January 1975. Retrieved 14 September 2019 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  6. ^ "Vital Date for Aird". Liverpool Echo. 4 February 1975. Retrieved 14 September 2019 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  7. ^ "Now for Bunny Says 'New' Aird". Daily Mirror. 5 February 1975. Retrieved 14 September 2019 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  8. ^ Holmes, Larry (1999) Larry Holmes: Against the Odds, St. Martin's Press, ISBN 978-0312187361, p. 220
  9. ^ "Kallie Wins in Seven", South African Digest, Department of Information, 1977, p. 21
  10. ^ "South Africa: South African Kallie Knoetze Beats Nigerian Champion Ngozika Ekwelum - Fight Stopped In Seventh Round.", British Pathé, 1977. Retrieved 14 September 2019
  11. ^ Africa, Africa Journal Limited, Issues 65-76, p. 146
  12. ^ "Title Fight KO". Aberdeen Evening Express. 31 May 1977. Retrieved 14 September 2019 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  13. ^ Thisweek, Nigeria, 1986, p. 43
  14. ^ "Ex-African Boxing Champion, Ekwelum Plans Sports Academy", Elombah News, 20 October 2015. Retrieved 14 September 2019