sport.wikisort.org - AthletePatrick Gallagher (born 9 April 1989) is a professional boxer who challenged once for the British, and Commonwealth welterweight titles in 2019. As an amateur he won gold at the 2010 Commonwealth Games.
Irish boxer
| Paddy Gallagher |
|---|
|
| Real name | Patrick Gallagher |
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| Nickname(s) | 'Pat-Man' |
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| Weight(s) |
- Welterweight
- Light-middleweight
|
|---|
| Born | (1989-04-09) 9 April 1989 (age 33) Belfast, Northern Ireland |
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| Stance | Orthodox |
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|
| Total fights | 22 |
|---|
| Wins | 16 |
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| Wins by KO | 10 |
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| Losses | 6 |
|---|
|
Amateur awards
- 2009 Irish Amateur Boxing Association Best U21[1]
- Irish under 21 light welterweight champion[1]
- Irish Intermediate champ[1]
- Ulster Elite runner up[1]
Amateur career
2010 Commonwealth Games
Gallagher represented Northern Ireland in the Delhi Commonwealth Games in the welterweight division.[2] He won the gold medal, defeating England's Callum Smith 11–6 in the final.
- 6 October 2010 Qualification Bout 56 – defeated Joseph Mulema
Cameroon 3–0
- 8 Oct 2010 1/8 Eliminations Bout 107 – defeated Suruz Bangali
Bangladesh9–0
- 10 Oct 2010 Quarterfinals Bout 168 – defeated Mujandjae Kasuto
Namibia 7–5
- 11 Oct 2010 Semifinals Bout 197 – defeated Dilbag Singh
India 5–4
- 13 Oct 2010 Finals Gold Medal Bout 213 – defeated Callum Smith
England 11–6
2011–2012 World Series of Boxing
Gallagher boxed for the Mumbai Fighters during the 2011 WSB season. He finished up with a record of 1–1.[3]
- Week 1 – defeated by Sergiy Derevyanchenko
Ukraine TKO
- Week 4 – defeated Russell Lamour
Haiti (48:47, 48:47, 47:48)
Professional career
Professional contract
On 22 May 2012 Gallagher signed his professional contract with John Rooney, deciding to keep his base in Belfast.[1]
Professional boxing record
Professional record summary
| 22 fights |
16 wins |
6 losses |
| By knockout |
10 |
0 |
| By decision |
6 |
6 |
| No. |
Result |
Record |
Opponent |
Type |
Round, time |
Date |
Location |
Notes |
| 7 |
Loss |
5–2 |
Johnny Coyle |
UD |
3 |
5 Apr 2014 |
York Hall, London, England |
Prizefighter: The Welterweights IV – Final |
| 6 |
Win |
5–1 |
Mark Douglas |
TKO |
1 (3) |
5 Apr 2014 |
York Hall, London, England |
Prizefighter: The Welterweights IV – Semi-final |
| 5 |
Loss |
4–1 |
Erick Ochieng |
UD |
3 |
5 Apr 2014 |
York Hall, London, England |
Prizefighter: The Welterweights IV – Quarter-final |
| 4 |
Win |
4–0 |
Aleksas Vaseris |
TKO |
1 (4) |
18 Nov 2013 |
Park Plaza Hotel, London, England |
|
| 3 |
Win |
3–0 |
Jozsef Garai |
TKO |
1 (4) |
14 Sep 2013 |
The Devenish, North Finaghy Roady, Belfast, Northern Ireland |
|
| 2 |
Win |
2–0 |
Andrew Patterson |
TKO |
1 (4) |
26 Nov 2012 |
Royal Lancaster Hotel, London, England |
|
| 1 |
Win |
1–0 |
William Warburton |
UD |
4 |
22 Sep 2012 |
Odyssey Arena, Belfast, Northern Ireland |
|
References
External links
Commonwealth Games Boxing Champions in Men's Welterweight |
|---|
- 1930 – 2002: up to 67 kg
- 2006 – 2018: up to 69 kg
- 2022 – present: up to 67 kg
|
- 1930: Leonard Hall (SAF)
- 1934: Dave McCleave (ENG)
- 1938: Bill Smith (AUS)
- 1950: Terry Ratcliffe (ENG)
- 1954: Nicholas Gargano (ENG)
- 1958: Joseph Greyling (SAF)
- 1962: Wallace Coe (NZL)
- 1966: Eddie Blay (GHA)
- 1970: Emma Ankudey (GHA)
- 1974: Mohamed Muruli (UGA)
- 1978: Mike McCallum (JAM)
- 1982: Chris Pyatt (ENG)
- 1986: Darren Dyer (ENG)
- 1990: David Defiagbon (NGR)
- 1994: Neil Sinclair (NIR)
- 1998: Jeremy Molitor (CAN)
- 2002: Daniel Geale (AUS)
- 2006: Bongani Mwelase (RSA)
- 2010: Paddy Gallagher (NIR)
- 2014: Scott Fitzgerald (ENG)
- 2018: Pat McCormack (ENG)
- 2022:
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