John Mugabi

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John Mugabi
Statistics
Real name John Mugabi
Nickname(s) The Beast
Rated at Light-Middleweight
Height 5'10
Nationality Uganda Ugandan
Born (1960-03-04) March 4, 1960 (age 64)
Kampala, Uganda
Stance Orthodox
Boxing record
Total fights 50
Wins 42
Wins by KO 39
Losses 7
Draws 1
No contests 0
Olympic medal record
Men's Boxing
Silver medal – second place 1980 Moscow Welterweight

John "The Beast" Mugabi (born 2nd of September 1961 ) is a retired Ugandan boxer. In 1980, he won the silver medal in the welterweight category at the [1] Summer Olympics in Moscow (Russia).His silver was the only medal for Uganda at the Games. Thereafter, Mugabi took his Silver Medal and his 1-0 (1 KO) professional record to England. He was part of an exceptionally talented early 1980s' junior middleweight and middleweight division era that included Marvin Hagler, Sugar Ray Leonard, Thomas Hearns, Wilfred Benítez, Davey Moore, and Roberto Durán - a time which many boxing fans rank as one of the most exciting ever in those weight classes.

Professional career

John Mugabi started as a professional on December 5, 1980 by knocking out Oemer Karadenis in round one in Kampala. Soon after that win, Mugabi moved to London where he became acquainted with boxing promoter Mickey Duff, an expert in boxer marketing who landed Mugabi various fights in England and built his reputation there. Mugabi won eight fights in Europe. Searching for more formidable foes, John moved to Florida where he became a favourite of American TV networks with his sensational knockouts of contenders such as Curtis Ramsey, Gary Guiden, former world champion Eddie Gazo, Curtis Parker, Frank The Animal Fletcher, Nino Gonzalez and Earl Hargrove through a display of tenacity and ferociousness.'The Beast’ as he would become known (for his ferocious attacks and untamable style—bashing his prey with overhand rights and wild left hooks) was able to fluctuate his weight between middleweight and junior middleweight. Some people lose effectiveness by changing weight classes, but not Mugabi. He was able to knockout every opponent he faced to that point of his career. Mugabi was truly becoming a force to be reckoned with.

Mugabi’s first victory of note came on May 2, 1982, when he took on veteran Curtis Ramsey. It was Mugabi’s 11th bout and he took care of the American in two rounds in Atlantic City, New Jersey. 1983 was a busy calendar year for the Beast. In that year he took on Gary Guiden, who had just come off of a Championship fight against Davey Moore—Mugabi stopped him in three. Many started speculating about Mugabi’s role in the future of the Junior Middleweight and Middleweight divisions. The fact Mugabi easily made the weight at both divisions made him more intriguing than most prospects. Nicaraguan, Eddie Gazo, a former WBA Junior Middleweight Champion provided Mugabi with his first real test. Gazo went rounds with Mugabi, but ‘The Beast’ ended things the way he always did. Mugabi was simply stronger and faster tactically overwhelming the busier Gazo. In the same year, Mugabi took on Curtis Parker a former Pennsylvania Golden Gloves amateur champion )The ‘meeting’ with Curtis Parker was on national television. Parker was an established fighter and no wimp, but Mugabi’s destruction of Parker was savage. In less than three minutes, John Mugabi had put on one of the fiercest beatings ever given in boxing history. It was the first time that Parker had lost a bout by knockout. It makes Mike Tyson’s destruction of Mitch ‘The Blood’ Green look civilised. From that point on Mugabi was not just a boxing media star but a major ‘honey pot’ for world boxing bodies, promoters and their ilk.

In February 1984 Mugabi’s ability to take adversity was tested by James ‘Hard Rock’ Green. Green fought at a pace that no boxing fan expected anyone to put up against ‘The Beast.’ Undaunted, Mugabi slowly took control of the fight until it was stopped in the 10th round, with Mugabi declared the winner by technical knockout. Green never asked for a rematch. Mugabi had succeeded, without winning a major belt, in transforming from a star into a boxing sensation. The bout between ‘The Beast’ and Frank ‘The Animal’ Fletcher marked a quiet maturity that marked Mugabi’s transformation from being what had been dubbed a ‘banger’ with raw power to a refined tactical boxer. The Beast hurt his prey, gently testing with his jabs and then in the 4th round a couple of round house punches and a haymaker travelling all the way from his waist caught Fletcher asleep—the fight ended with Fletcher’s body between the ropes.

On his way to becoming the number one contender for the middleweight title of each of the three major sanctioning bodies (WBA, WBC, and IBF),[2] Mugabi ran roughshod over the division and finished each of his opponents inside the distance. Mugabi's ferocity is captured by Phil Berger. Writing in the New York Times in 1986, Berger, commenting on Mugabi’s preparation for the Hagler fight noted the intensity of preparation that left his sparring partners in a 'woebegone condition' and further that some did not last long enough to draw their second paycheck and left Mugabi’s training camp ‘looking like extras from 'Night of the Living Dead'.

Because of his ability to fight both at junior middleweight and middleweight, fans began to talk of the possibility of him challenging either world light middleweight champion Hearns or world middleweight champion Hagler. Despite Mugabi being a mandatory contender for some time, a Hearns - Mugabi title match never materialised, as Hearns elected to move to Middleweight to challenge Marvelous Marvin Hagler.Considering his streak and Hagler's tough battle with Hearns on April 15, 1985, some felt Mugabi had a shot at doing what eleven men before him could not: wresting Hagler's undisputed world middleweight title from him. On March 10, 1986 Marvin ‘Marvelous’ Hagler rose to a very stiff challenge. A young, undefeated power house was destroying every opponent in his path. John ‘The Beast’ Mugabi had won all of his contests by knockout—many spectacular; many in the first few rounds of the fight. He possessed incredible knockout power and provided the boxing world with an epic encounter. The fight was the first televised by Showtime. Mugabi landed his share of blows to Hagler's head during the early rounds. The turning point came in the sixth round, when Hagler landed many heavy blows and staggered Mugabi. Mugabi fought back gamely but his early knockout wins left him ill-prepared for a long, tough fight. In the end it was Hagler who came out the victor, with a knockout in the eleventh round. Many boxing fans consider this to have been the toughest contest of Hagler's career. Sugar Ray Leonard's decision to come out of retirement and challenge Hagler for the Middleweight Championship was heavily influenced by Hagler's performance in the Mugabi fight.

After his first loss, Mugabi retired to Uganda and ballooned in weight to 190 lbs. In September 1986 he contacted Mickey Duff, stating that he was ready to fight again. Mugabi went down in weight and was given an opportunity by the WBC to win their world light middleweight title, vacated by Hearns. Once again many fans favored him, this time against Duane Thomas, on December 5 of '86. However, Mugabi suffered a broken eye socket, the consequence of a punch in round three and the fight had to be stopped. Mugabi underwent optical surgery the next day to repair his injury.

Discouraged by two consecutive losses, Mugabi gained weight and did not fight for nearly fourteen months. In January 1988, he came back to fight Bryan Grant on the undercard of Mike Tyson's title defence against Larry Holmes. Mugabi won by quick knockout and set off on another knockout winning streak. He became number one contender for the WBC 154 lb title in August 1988 but could not land a fight with then champion Donald Curry. After Curry lost his title in an upset in early 1989, Mugabi was given another opportunity to become world champion by the WBC. On July 8 of that year, Mugabi finally made his dream come true, knocking out Curry's successor Rene Jacquot in round one in Grenoble to become the WBC light middleweight champion.After two first round knockout wins against Ricky Stackhouse and Carlos Antunes, Mugabi, who by this time was having difficulty making the weight limit of 154 lbs, put his title on the line against Terry Norris. When Norris downed the champion for the count with a right to the jaw, Mugabi received the dubious distinction as the second fighter, after Al Singer, to both win and lose a world title by first round knockout when he was defeated by Norris.Showing resilience, Mugabi resurfaced with two more wins and once again found himself fighting for a world title, facing Gerald McClellan on November 20, 1991 in London for the vacant WBO middleweight championship. Mugabi looked a shadow of his former self by this time, and once again came out on the losing end, again by a first round knockout.

Mugabi took a five-year layoff in which he moved to Australia.In 1996, he came back for the first of an eight fight comeback. He went on to claim the Australian middleweight championship by way of a 12th round decision. It only took John two fights before he was in line for a world title again. In his third fight back from the loss to Norris, Mugabi would challenge Gerald McClellan for his WBO Junior Middleweight strap. That November night in 1999, marked the decline of Mugabi’s illustrious boxing career as he was again knocked out in the first round. Mugabi resides in Australia where among other functions he trains fighters.

When Mugabi finally retired, he had a record of 42 wins, 7 losses and 1 draw, 39 wins by knockout.His 26 fight knockout win streak stands as one of the longest knockout streaks ever in boxing.

Was John simply a ‘banger’? Many consider him to have been more than just that. ‘The Beast’ was a seasoned fighter he knew how to go behind the jab and let loose power punches. He was half a boxer and half a banger mixed in with finesse.

In 2012, Mugabi was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

LIFE AFTER BOXING

Currently, Mugabi is working on his biography as well as a documentary. The themes of the project revolve around three spectrums: his journey, his glory and his determination to advocate the welfare of elite boxers. His biggest single concern is the need for emerging boxing talent to have a training program that goes beyond the gym to encompass learning a trade/profession as they pursue their dreams of boxing glory. After all a boxer at any time can lose their livelihood through a single punch or training accident with no fall back—no pension, no savings, no nothing. He has started his advocacy with himself. Mugabi is currently a student determined to gain what he may have lost in an illustrious boxing career-fulfilment outside the ring. His ongoing biography and documentary project brings to mind, the panorama offered in James Joyce’s . Ulysses.

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Preceded by WBC Light Middleweight Champion
8 July 1989– 31 March 1990
Succeeded by
Terry Norris

Mugabi has a 20-year-old daughter, Mildred Prudence Mugabi who lives in Tampa, Florida and he has another daughter who still resides in Kampala, Uganda named Mourine Kabasemera Mugabi.

Amateur career

Representing Uganda, Mugabi was the Silver medalist at the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow, boxing in the Welterweight (67 kg) class. Mugabi lost to Andrés Aldama of Cuba in the final. . His results were:

He was also a silver medallist at the 1976 Junior World Championships, losing to Herol Graham.

See also

References

External links