Matt Skelton
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Matt Skelton | |
Statistics | |
---|---|
Real name | Matthew Skelton |
Nickname | The Bedford Banger |
Weight | Heavyweight |
Nationality | English |
Birth date | January 23, 1967 |
Birth place | Bedford, England, UK |
Style | Unorthodox |
Boxing record | |
Total fights | 21 |
Wins | 20 |
Wins by KO | 18 |
Losses | 1 |
Draws | 0 |
No contests | 0 |
Matthew Skelton (born 23 January 1967 in Bedford) is an English boxer who changed sports from kickboxing. He is a former English, British and Commonwealth Heavyweight champion, and has also held the lightly regarded WBU "World" title.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
[edit] Kickboxing era
Skelton did not become a professional boxer until fairly late in life, his first fight being at the age of 35. Prior to this he had been a professional kickboxer.
Skelton has a kickboxing record of 63-8/57. He won his IKF World Title when he stopped Jeff Ford (USA) at 1:51 of the second round in Northampton, England on November 26th, 2000.
In his first defense of the Title on November 18th, 2001 in Northampton, England he defeated Peter Varga(Hungary) by TKO at 53 seconds of round 3.
Skelton, in a K-1 primary tournament K-1 WORLD GP 2001 in Melbourne in Australia, June 16, 2001, knocked out Paris Vasilikos (Greece) at 2:05 of the first round in the quarter final match. And he also beat Michael McDonald (Canada) by third round decision (3-0) in the semi-final match. He was beaten , however, by Ernesto Hoost (Netherlands) by a third round decision (2-0) in the tournament final[1].
Skelton's record in K-1 is ten wins and seven losses.
[edit] MMA
Matt Skleton has had one mixed martial arts fight. On the 3rd of November 2001 at a Pride FC event named PRIDE 17. He lost via choke to wrestler Tom Erikson at 1:11 of the first round.
[edit] Boxing era
As a professional boxer he was initially dismissed by purists as an unrefined slugger lacking the required skill to achieve at the very top, but his powerful style has proved extremely successful under the tutelage of renowned trainer Frank Maloney.
He turned pro aged 35 in September 2002 with a two round kayo of Gifford Shillingford. From this point he was moved along quickly, in 2003 scoring stoppages of respected veterans Jacklord Jacobs, Antoine Palatis, and ex-British champ Michael Holden, among others.
In 2004 he took his first serious step up, at 11-0 taking on ex-British and Commonwealth champion Julius Francis, who he outpointed over 10 rounds. He won the British and Commonwealth titles in his next fight, stopping Michael Sprott in 12 rounds, and defending the titles against the durable Keith Long, who he stopped in 11.
In 2005 Skelton won the lowly regarded WBU belt with a 6th round kayo of Fabio Moli. Skelton soon vacated the belt, and began to enjoy a higher profile when his promoter Frank Warren took all his fighters to ITV for exposure on terrestrial free-to-air television.
Skelton was due to defend his British title against his main rival Danny Williams in July 2005, but Williams pulled out at the last minute citing a case of the flu, a decision that prompted scorn from Williams' promoter Frank Warren. Skelton stopped late sub Mark Krence in 7 rounds, and scored a 1st round knockout of John McDermott to finish the year, where upon he vacated his British title, having defended it three times.
In February 2006 Skelton finally fought Williams, however lost on a controversial 12 round decision in a dirty fight.
In July he regained his Commonwealth title by easily outboxing a plodding, grossly overweight Williams.
Skelton was due to defend his title against Audley Harrison in December 2006, however he withdrew a week before the fight with a broken hand. Instead, his next fight will be on May 26th, 2007, against Michael Sprott for the second time. His Commonwealth belt will be on the line.
[edit] Record
- Professional kickboxing: 63 Fights 57 Wins 8 Loses
Number | Date | Result | Round | Method | Opponent | Nationality | Note |
? | April 29, 1998 | Win | 3R 0:47 | TKO | Jan Nortje | South Africa | K-1 KINGS' 98 |
? | May 24, 1998 | Win | 2R 3:00 | TKO | Ray Sefo | New Zealand | K-1BRAVES' 98 |
? | July 18, 1998 | Win | 1R 2:06 | TKO | Masaaki Satake | Japan | K-1 DEARMS' 98 |
? | September 27, 1998 | Lose | 5R | Decision | Sam Greco | Australia | K-1 GRAND PRIX' 98 |
? | April 25, 1999 | Lose | 4R 3:00 | TKO | Peter Aerts | Netherlands | K-1 REVENGE' 99 |
? | June 20, 1999 | Win | 3R | Decision 3-0 | Jan Nortje | South Africa | K-1 BRAVES' 99 Road to Grand Prix (Quarter-final) |
? | June 20, 1999 | Lose | Extra 1R | Decision 3-0 | Lloyd Van Dams | Netherlands | K-1 BRAVES' 99 Road to Grand Prix (Semi-final) |
? | October 5, 1999 | Lose | 1R 1:59 | KO | Jérôme Le Banner | France | K-1 GRAND PRIX' 99 Opening |
? | April 16, 2000 | Win | 3R | Decision | Gary Turner | UK | K-1 UK BATTLE OF BRITAIN (Quarter-final) |
? | April 16, 2000 | Win | 3R | Decision | Mark Russell | UK | K-1 UK BATTLE OF BRITAIN (Semi-final) |
? | April 16, 2000 | Win | 3R 1:10 | KO | Ricky Nicklson | UK | K-1 UK BATTLE OF BRITAIN (Final) |
? | August 20, 2000 | Win | 3R | Decision 3-0 | Alexei Ignashov | Belarus | K-1 WORLD GRAND PRIX 2000 in Yokohama (Quarter-final) |
? | August 20, 2000 | Lose | 2R 2:36 | KO | Francisco Filho | Brazil | K-1 WORLD GRAND PRIX 2000 in Yokohama (Semi-final) |
? | November 26, 2000 | Win | 2R 1:51 | KO | Jeff Ford | USA | IKF-PRO Muay Thai World Super heavyweight championship |
? | June 16, 2001 | Win | 2R 2:05 | KO | Paris Vasilikos | Greece | K-1 WORLD GP 2001 in Melbourne Quarter-final |
? | June 16, 2001 | Win | 3R | Decision 3-0 | Michael McDonald | Canada | K-1 WORLD GP 2001 in MelbourneSemi-final |
? | June 16, 2001 | Lose | 3R | Decision 2-1 | Ernesto Hoost | Netherlands | K-1 WORLD GP 2001 in Melbourne Final |
? | August 8, 2001 | Lose | Ex 1R | Decision | Lloyd Van Dams | Netherlands | K-1 WORLD GRAND PRIX 2001 in Fukuoka (Quarter-final) |
? | November 18, 2001 | Win | 3R0:53 | TKO | Peter Varga | Hungary | Defending IKF-PRO Muay Thai World Super heavyweight championship |
? | August 10, 2002 | Win | 3R | Decision | Geroge Arias | Brazil | Ichigelki (promoted by Kyokushin karate) |
- Professional MMA: 1 Fight 1 Lose
Number | Date | Result | Round | Method | Opponent | Nationality | Note |
1 | November 3, 2001 | Lose | 1R 1:11 | Submission (choke) | Tom Erikson | USA | PRIDE 17 |
- Professional boxing: 21 Fights 20 Wins 18 KOs 1 Lose
[edit] Career
- Kickboxing
- IAMTF World championship Super Heavyweight winner
- IKF-PRO World Super Heavyweight Champion
- WKO Muay Thai World Super Heavyweight Champion
- IKO World Heavyweight Champion
- K-1 WORLD GP 2001 Primary U.K. tournament winner
- Boxing
- British Heavyweight champion
- Commonwealth (British Empire) Heavyweight champion
- WBU World Heavyweight champion