Brian Nielsen

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Brian Nielsen
Statistics
Real name Brian Nielsen
Nickname(s) Super Brian
Rated at Heavyweight
Nationality Flag of Denmark Danish
Birth date April 1, 1965 (1965-04-01) (age 43)
Birth place Korsør, Denmark
Stance Orthodox
Boxing record
Total fights 66
Wins 64
Wins by KO 53
Losses 2
Draws 0
No contests 0
Medal record
Competitor for Flag of Denmark Denmark
Men’s Boxing
Olympic Games
Bronze 1992 Barcelona Super Heavyweight
European Amateur Championships
Bronze 1991 Gothenburg Super Heavyweight

Brian Nielsen (born April 1, 1965 in Korsør) is a former boxer from Denmark, who won bronze medals in the super heavyweight division at the 1991 European Championships and the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, and turned pro shortly after the Olympics.

Contents

[edit] Amateur Career

He won 102 of his 111 amateur fights.

[edit] Olympic results

  • 1st round bye
  • Defeated Jung Seung-Won (South Korea) 16-2
  • Defeated Peter Hrivňák (Czechoslovakia) 14-4
  • Lost to Roberto Balado (Cuba) 1-15

[edit] Pro Career

Nielsen's pro career looked obscure at first, but things started to change after his fifth-round stoppage of former World Boxing Association champion James 'Bonecrusher' Smith in October, 1994. That win seemed to boost Nielsen's confidence, and through better performances combined with skillful matchmaking, he began to climb the rankings. Nielsen earned a reputation of a man who could take a punch and did not mind trading them with his opponents. A chubby fighter who always looked somewhat out of shape, he won many of his fights by simply wearing out the opposition. During his career, he defeated a number of former world champions, including Jeff Lampkin, Tony Tubbs, Carlos De León, Larry Holmes, Tim Witherspoon, Orlin Norris and Uriah Grant, all of whom were past their prime when they faced Nielsen.

Nielsen's record won him a shot at a world title with one of boxing's minor sanctioning organizations. In January of 1996, he became the International Boxing Organization's heavyweight champion of the world when he KO´d Tony LaRosa in the first round. He would defend the IBO title five times, most notably by a unanimous decision against Larry Holmes in January, 1997.

He was attempting to surpass Marciano's record, but in his 50th fight he failed, as he lost against Dicky Ryan in June, 1999. Nielsen was TKO´d in the 10th and final round. He was hospitalized and found to be suffering from massive dehydration. The bout had not been classified as a title fight, but the IBO still stripped Nielsen of their title as a consequence of his defeat.

He quickly came back and continued his string of victories, leading to an International Boxing Council world championship fight against Troy Weida, whom Nielsen knocked out in the eighth round in January, 2000. He defended his second minor championship twice before facing Tyson.

Nielsen faced Tyson in the Parken Stadium of Copenhagen , on October 13, 2001. It is Nielsen's hometown. He put on a courageous performance but was outclassed and did not come out to the sixth round. After Tyson, Nielsen had two more fights before deciding to call it quits. He announced his retirement in October, 2003, citing a knee injury as the cause. He won his last fight by decision against Uriah Grant on April 19, 2002.

Nielsen always entered the ring to the tune of Monty Python's Always Look on the Bright Side of Life. This streak of humour was typical of Nielsen, who wasn't afraid of putting on a show, often clowning about or jeering his opponent. His cheerful attitude, snappy interview remarks and courageous displays in the ring won the hearts of Danish boxing fans and made him a household name in his home country. He is in all likelihood the most popular prizefighter ever to have fought out of Denmark.

[edit] Controversy

At a press conference prior to the Mike Tyson fight, Nielsen called Tyson an "abekat" which was erroneously translated as "monkey man". The Tyson camp took great offense at this supposed racist slur, and Tyson himself declared "This will make me punish him even more than I had planned."[1] The controversy over the remark calmed down when the expression was clarified to the media by Danish linguists as having no racial connotations and simply meaning "brat"[2].

Only a month after his official retirement, Nielsen again hit the headlines when he became involved in a drunken brawl in Slagelse on the night of November 16, 2003. The situation escalated when the police tried to arrest one of Nielsen's friends for drunk and disorderly conduct, albeit after they used their truncheons inflicting, as it turned out, chronic injuries.

More controversy arose in early 2004, when journeyman heavyweight Thomas Williams revealed that he had been bribed to throw his fight against Nielsen in March, 2000. Along with promoter Robert Mitchell, Williams was indicted by the United States District Court for the District of Nevada for match fixing in order to promote the career of white heavyweight hope Richie Melito, and it was during the FBI's investigation of that case that Williams admitted to intentionally losing to Nielsen. The fix was arranged by promoter Robert Mittleman, a frequent associate of Nielsen's promoter Mogens Palle, who later confessed that he had been paid $1,000, while Williams had received "up to $40,000" from Palle in order to lose the fight. Williams, Mitchell and Mittleman were all found guilty of sports bribery by the court in November and December, 2004.[3][4]

The Nielsen vs. Williams fight was the 57th of Nielsen's career and was one of the fights leading to his meeting with Tyson. Both Nielsen and Mogens Palle denied any knowledge of match fixing in media statements, and the findings of the American case did not lead to criminal proceedings in Denmark.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "Tyson angered by alleged remark by Nielsen", ESPN, 2001-10-12. Retrieved on 2007-07-12. 
  2. ^ James Lawton. "Boxing: Trapped Tyson must satisfy the paymasters" (Reprint), The Independent, 2001-10-13. Retrieved on 2007-07-12. 
  3. ^ "FIGHTER, BOXING PROMOTER CONVICTED OF SPORTS BRIBERY", U.S. Department of Justice, 2004-11-04. Retrieved on 2007-07-12. 
  4. ^ "BOXING PROMOTER SENTENCED FOR FIXING FIGHTS", U.S. Department of Justice, 2004-11-04. Retrieved on 2007-07-12. 

[edit] External links