Kennedy McKinney
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Olympic medal record | |||
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Men's Boxing | |||
Gold | Seoul 1988 | Bantamweight |
Kennedy McKinney (born January 10, 1966 in Hernando, Mississippi) was a professional boxer. McKinney won a Bantamweight Gold Medal at the 1988 Olympic Games, and turned pro in the following year and was immediately dubbed as a future star in the sport.
[edit] Profesional Career
Known as "King", McKinney was a cautious yet exciting super bantamweight fighter who captured the by beating Welcome Ncita in 1992. After five defenses, he lost his belt to future star Vuyani Bungu, a fight which was deemed 1994 Upset of the Year by Ring Magazine. Two years later he challenged undefeated Marco Antonio Barrera for the WBO Super Bantamweight Title, a vicious battle in which he dropped Barrera in the 11th, but lost via TKO in the 12th. McKinney later took a rematch against Bungu, but lost a narrow split decision. Later that year, he did battle with Junior Jones in an exciting war, one which McKinney won via TKO. McKinney then moved up a weight class to challenge Luisito Espinosa for the WBC Featherweight Title in 1998. Espinosa made quick work of McKinney, winning via a 2nd round TKO. After the loss to Espinosa, McKinney quickly lost steam. He would fight only five more times against scattered and limited opposition, three of which too place during a short lived comeback run in 2002-03. Kennedy now resides in Larose, LA. He is the head trainer of the Bayou Side Boxing Gym, featuring boxing prospects: Zane Marks, Martin Verdin, and Gary Bergeron.
Preceded by Welcome Ncita |
IBF Super Bantamweight Champion 2 December 1992 – 20 August 1994 |
Succeeded by Vuyani Bungu |
Preceded by Junior Jones |
WBO Super Bantamweight Champion 19 December 1997 – 1998 (vacates) |
Succeeded by Marco Antonio Barrera |
[edit] Amateur Career
- 1985 2nd place at United States Amateur Championships as a Flyweight, was stopped by Arthur Johnson
- 1986 2nd place at United States Amateur Championships as a Flyweight, losing by decision to Arthur Johnson
- 1987 3rd place at United States Amateur Championships as a Bantamweight, losing by decision to Michael Collins
- 1988 2nd place at United States Amateur Championships as a Bantamweight, losing by decision to Jemal Hinton
- 1988 qualified as a Bantamweight for the United States Olympic Team, avenging previous defeats versus Michael Collins, whom he beat three times and Jemal Hinton, all by decision.
- Won the Bantamweight Olympic Gold Medal at the Seoul Olympic Games. Results were:
- Defeated Giovanni Perez (Guatemala) TKO 1
- Defeated Birajdar (India) forfeit
- Defeated Steve Mwema (Kenya) points
- Defeated Phajol Moolsan (Thailand) TKO 1
- Defeated Alexandar Hristov (Bulgaria) points
[edit] External link
Olympic Boxing Champions (Bantamweight) |
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1904: Oliver Kirk (USA) • 1908: Henry Thomas (GBR) • 1920: Clarence Walker (RSA) • 1924: William Smith (RSA) • 1928: Vittorio Tamagnini (ITA) • 1932: Horace Gwynne (CAN) • 1936: Ulderico Sergo (ITA) • 1948: Tibor Csík (HUN) • 1952: Pentti Hämäläinen (FIN) • 1956: Wolfgang Behrendt (GER) • 1960: Oleg Grigoryev (URS) • 1964: Takao Sakurai (JPN) • 1968: Valerian Sokolov (URS) • 1972: Orlando Martínez (CUB) • 1976: Gu Yong-Ju (PRK) • 1980: Juan Hernández (CUB) • 1984: Maurizio Stecca (ITA) • 1988: Kennedy McKinney (USA) • 1992: Joel Casamayor (CUB) • 1996: István Kovács (HUN) • 2000: Guillermo Rigondeaux (CUB) • 2004: Guillermo Rigondeaux (CUB) |