Chris Edwards (boxer) explained

Chris Edwards
Realname:Chris Edwards
Weight:
Nationality:British
Birth Date:6 May 1976
Birth Place:Stoke-on-Trent, England
Death Place:Stoke-On-Trent
Style:Orthodox
Total:36
Wins:17
Losses:15
Draws:4
No Contests:0
Ko:4

Chris Edwards (6 May 1976 – 30 March 2018) was a British professional boxer who competed from 1998 to 2012. He held the British super flyweight title in 2007, the British flyweight title twice between 2009 and 2012, and the Commonwealth flyweight title from 2009 to 2010.

Career

The journeyman

Edwards made his professional debut in the Welsh town of Ebbw Vale in April 1998, beating Chris Thomas via a technical knockout in the second round. The victory was to be his last for the next two years. Fighting a further six times between September 1998 and September 2000 Edwards went on to lose on all six occasions.[1] Despite his long run of defeats Edwards managed to stem the tide of defeat with two victories coming in October and November 2000 allowing him to end the year with a pro record of won three, lost six. The next year saw Edwards revert to the journeyman type with four fights resulting in a further two defeats against one draw and one win against Neil Read.[2] [3]

Read was also to prove Edwards solitary opponent throughout the whole of 2002 when in October of that year the two men met one more. Edwards picked up his fifth pro win (2nd against Read) with a points victory over six rounds at the Kings Hall in Stoke-on-Trent. Only one fight followed in 2003 with Edwards this time losing to future British and Commonwealth champion Lee Haskins in June again over six rounds.[2]

In 2004, Edwards fought three times and scored a third victory over Neil Read to this time pick up the vacant Midlands Area super bantamweight title, the first professional title of his career. At the time of the contest for the belt Read had a combined record of 3-20-1 against Edwards 5-9-2. The contest which took place during September at the Kings Hall saw Edwards claim victory via technical knockout in the second round. Further results during the year saw a draw against old foe Delroy Spencer in April and a defeat to future British title challenger Colin Moffett in October.[2]

After the Moffett fight another period of inactivity followed for Edwards and he would not fight again until November 2005, meeting Delroy Spencer for the third time, this time scoring a points victory over four rounds. In February 2006 he lost to Gary Ford and then travelled to Italy in March 2006 to meet Andrea Sarritzu the reigning European champion in a non-title fight. It was the first time Edwards had travelled abroad to fight professionally and the fight ended with the champion knocking Edwards out in the fourth round.[2]

The English champion

Edwards rebounded from his Italian adventure by scoring victories later in the year over novice fighters Gary Shiel and Usman Ahmed. The wins set Edwards up for a shot at the vacant English flyweight title against Huddersfield's former Commonwealth champion, Dale Robinson who entered the contest with a professional record of 19-2-1 making him a strong favourite to win considering Edwards' record of 9-12-1. The fight, at the Kings Hall, Stoke-on-Trent in November 2006 resulted in one of the upsets of the year with Edwards scoring a TKO in the eighth round to lift his second professional title and the English championship.[4]

A rematch between the two fighters in April 2007 saw both fighters meet in Altrincham for the vacant British and Commonwealth flyweight titles. In one of the fights of the year, Edwards and Robinson battled to a draw over 12 rounds meaning that neither would leave with the belts. After the fight Robinson announced his retirement from the sport.[5]

British and Commonwealth champion

Following the introduction of the super-flyweight division to British boxing, Edwards was mandated to fight for the inaugural British title against Doncaster's undefeated Jamie McDonnell. The fight, in December 2007, saw Edwards claim the title in another close fight-of-the-year contender with a split-decision victory.[6] His reign as champion was short-lived, however, as he lost the title in his first defence, against Andy Bell, in a 12-round fight.[7]

Edwards fought once more for a title in January 2009, this time moving back down to flyweight to challenge once more for the still-vacant British and Commonwealth flyweight titles. The fight in Edwards' home town of Stoke against fellow challenger Wayne Bloy saw Edwards pick up both belts when Bloy retired hurt in the fourth round.[8] On 29 May 2009, Edwards made the first defence of his new title with a 12-round decision over a man he had defeated previously, Derby's Usman Ahmed.[9] Edwards lost the title, fighting in Bolton to Shinny Bayaar, a Mongolian fighter who had recently gained British nationality, making him eligible to the fight for the belt.[2]

The loss against Bayaar had also meant the loss of Edwards' Commonwealth title, which, despite not being on the line, had to be given up following the defeat to another Commonwealth fighter. On 19 February 2010, he returned to Stoke-on-Trent to fight for the now-vacant belt, beating Namibian Abmerk Shindjuu in 12 rounds, winning 115-114 on each of the judges' scorecards.[10] Edwards was victorious over Francis Croes in four rounds on 4 December 2010, and then regained the British title with a victory in a closely fought contest against Paul Edwards at the Olympia in Liverpool on 11 June 2011.[2] [11] Edwards made a successful defence on 10 December 2011 over the man who had previously beaten him, Shinny Bayaar.[12]

Death

On 30 March 2018, Edwards died of sudden arrhythmic death syndrome.[13] [14]

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
36Loss17-15-4 Kevin SatchellTKO6 (12)13 Oct 2012
35Draw17-14-4 Anwar Alfadli PTS629 Jun 2012
34Win17-14-3 Shinny Bayaar UD1210 Dec 2011
33Win16-14-3 Paul EdwardsSD1211 Jun 2011
32Win15-14-3 Francis CroesPTS44 Dec 2010
31Win14-14-3 Abmerk ShindjuuUD1219 Feb 2010
30Loss13-14-3 Shinny BayaarSD1223 Oct 2009
29Win13-13-3 Usman AhmedUD1229 May 2009
28Win12-13-3 Wayne BloyRTD4 (12)23 Jan 2009
27Loss11-13-3 Andy BellUD1228 Mar 2008
26Win11-12-3 Jamie McDonnellSD128 Dec 2007
25Draw10-12-3 Dale RobinsonPTS1213 Apr 2007
24Win10-12-2 Dale RobinsonTKO8 (10)24 Nov 2006
23Win9-12-2 Usman AhmedPTS630 Sep 2006
22Win8-12-2 Gary Sheil PTS66 May 2006
21Loss7-12-2 Andrea Sarritzu KO4 (6)10 Mar 2006
20Loss7-11-2 Gary FordPTS418 Feb 2006
19Win7-10-2 Delroy SpencerPTS412 Nov 2005
18Loss6-10-2 Colin MoffettPTS4 28 Oct 2004
17Win6-9-2 Neil ReadTKO2 (10)26 Sep 2004
16Draw5-9-2 Delroy SpencerPTS623 Apr 2004
15Loss5-9-1 Lee HaskinsPTS613 Jun 2003
14Win5-8-1 Neil ReadPTS610 Oct 2002
13Win4-8-1 Neil ReadPTS86 Dec 2001
12Loss3-8-1 Levi PattisonPTS48 Oct 2001
11Draw3-7-1 Darren TaylorPTS63 Jun 2001
10Loss3-7 Jamie EvansPTS616 Mar 2001
9Win3-6 Levi PattisonPTS427 Nov 2000
8Win2-6 Andy RobertsPTS47 Oct 2000
7Loss1-6 Paddy FolanPTS615 May 2000
6Loss1-5 Daniel RingPTS43 Dec 1999
5Loss1-4 Lee Georgiou TKO2 (4)19 Oct 1999
4Loss1-3 Stevie QuinnTKO4 (6)17 Apr 1999
3Loss1-2 Delroy SpencerPTS626 Feb 1999
2Loss1-1 Russel LaingPTS621 Sep 1998
1Win1-0 Chris ThomasTKO2 (6)3 Apr 1998

Titles

Information from the British Boxing Board of Control.[15]

Notes and References

  1. News: Chris Edwards was our answer to Rocky - a tribute to the city's first British champion in 85 years. 31 March 2018. Stoke Sentinel. 31 March 2018.
  2. http://www.boxrec.com/list_bouts.php?human_id=15404&cat=boxer Boxrec | Chris Edwards professional boxing record
  3. Web site: Chris Edwards - Statistics. FightStats. 31 March 2018.
  4. http://www.eastsideboxing.com/news.php?p=9024&more=1 Eastside boxing | Chris Edwards lifts English title
  5. http://www.britishboxing.net/news_2243-Moore-dominates-Lujan.html Britishboxing.net | Moore dominates Lujan (with undercard report Edwards vs Robinson
  6. http://www.britishboxing.net/news_2975-Super-fly-Edwards-pays-team-tribute.html Britishboxing.net | Super fly Edwards pays tribute to team
  7. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/boxing/7320078.stm BBC Sport | Bell outscores Edwards for title
  8. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/boxing/7848642.stm BBC Sport | Edwards reigns again at Flyweight
  9. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/boxing/8069128.stm BBC Sport | Edwards too strong for Ahmed
  10. http://www.thisisstaffordshire.co.uk/sport/Boxing-Potteries-boxer-Edwards-feeds-Fenton-roar-lift-Flyweight-belt/article-1851761-detail/article.html This is Staffordshire | Potteries boxer Edwards feeds off Fenton roar to lift Flyweight belt
  11. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/boxing/9510875.stm BBC Sport | Chris Edwards reclaims British flyweight title
  12. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/boxing/16129025.stm BBC Sport | Theophane and Edwards retain titles
  13. News: Chris Edwards: Former British and Commonwealth champion dies aged 41. 31 March 2018. BBC News. 31 March 2018.
  14. News: Jay. Phil. Ex-opponents Paul Edwards, Kevin Satchell react with sadness to Chris Edwards' premature death. 31 March 2018. World Boxing News. 31 March 2018.
  15. Web site: National Titles. British Boxing Board of Control. 31 March 2018. 2 February 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200202174319/http://bbbofc.com/content/national-titles. dead.