Franco Wanyama Explained

Franco Wanyama
Realname:Franco Wanyama
Nickname:Thunderbird
Weight:MiddleweightCruiserweightHeavyweight
Reach:750NaN0
Nationality:Ugandan
Birth Date:7 February 1968
Birth Place:Kampala, Uganda
Death Place:Rugby, Warwickshire
Style:Orthodox
Total:29
Wins:20
Ko:7
Losses:7
Draws:2

Franco "Thunderbird" Wanyama (7 February 1968 - 21 March 2019[1]) in Kampala, was a Ugandan amateur middleweight and professional cruiser/heavyweight boxer of the 1980s, '90s and 2000s. He was an amateur representative of Uganda at middleweight in the Boxing at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea, losing to eventual bronze medal winner Chris Sande of Kenya, and as a professional won the BeNeLux heavyweight title, BeNeLux cruiserweight title, Commonwealth cruiserweight title, and World Boxing Federation (WBF) cruiserweight title, and was a challenger for the Commonwealth cruiserweight title against Chris Okoh, his professional fighting weight varied from 181NaN, i.e. cruiserweight to 192NaN, i.e. heavyweight. Wanyama defeated notable fighters such as Jimmy Thunder, Carl Thompson and Johnny Nelson and was sparring partner to Vitali Klitschko & Wladimir Klitschko. He lived his last years in Rugby, Warwickshire, England and had 3 children, Shannon Wanyama, Nellie Wanyama and Wanga Wanyama.[2]

Early life

Franco started boxing around the age of 6 after becoming curious of what was inside a local boxing gym.

Professional career

Franco made his professional debut on 25 December 1989 against Dutch fighter John Held (7-13-2) it ended a 6-round points draw. In 1990 he beat future world title holder Carl Thompson on points. In 1993 he won a bout against another future world champion, Johnny Nelson, who was disqualified for repeated holding. In 1995 he was matched with former world champion Thomas Hearns but the fight was called off at the last minute and Hearns was replaced by ranked Heavyweight Jimmy Thunder, Wanyama and gave away a 30 pounds in weight but still came away with a points victory.


Later years

After his retirement Franco worked as a sparring partner, notably with the Klitschko brothers. From 2007 he became a youth worker and boxing coach in Rugby, taking classes for the youth service whilst also being a coach at a local amateur boxing gym. On the 21st of March 2019 Franco died at his home in Rugby.[3]

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
29Win20–7–2 Csaba OlahTKO3 (6)2000-06-16
28Win19–7–2 Daniel JerlingPTS61999-10-15
27Win18–7–2 Geert Blieck61999-04-05
26Win17–7–2 Abdul KadouPTS101997-12-25
25Loss16–7–2 Dirk WallynTKO5 (8)1996-12-25
24Loss16–6–2 Dirk WallynTKO7 (8)1996-11-01
23Loss16–5–2 Garry DelaneyPTS61996-02-06
22Loss16–4–2 Chris OkohTKO8 (12)1995-09-29
21Win16–3–2 James Thunder101995-07-16
20Draw15–3–2 Kalin StoyanovPTS81994-04-02
19Win15–3–1 Tony BoothTKO2 (12)1994-01-28
18Win14–3–1 Bobbie Joe EdwardsPTS81993-12-25
17Win13–3–1 Johnny Nelson10 (12)1993-10-01
16Win12–3–1 Daniel Krumov2 (6)1993-04-23
15Win11–3–1 John Held101993-01-29
14Win10–3–1 Tony BoothPTS61992-12-25
13Win9–3–1 Faustino GonzalezTKO3 (6)1992-11-01
12Win8–3–1 Vladimir DyukarevTKO1 (6)1992-10-02
11Loss7–3–1 John EmmenKO10 (10)1991-06-24
10Win7–2–1 Ramon VoornPTS101991-02-18
9Win6–2–1 Boubakar SanogoPTS81990-12-25
8Loss5–2–1 Norbert Ekassi2 (8)1990-10-13
7Win5–1–1 Ian BullochTKO5 (6)1990-05-12
6Win4–1–1 Carl ThompsonPTS61990-04-21
5Win3–1–1 Mohamed ZaouiTKO3 (6)1990-04-07
4Loss2–1–1 Christophe GirardPTS81990-03-16
3Win2–0–1 Serge BolivardPTS61990-02-10
2Win1–0–1 Abner Blackstock4 (6)1990-01-12
1Draw0–0–1 John Held61989-12-25

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Crowdfunding has to grant Freddy De Kerpel's former pupil a worthy burial (Google translated into English) . Nieuwsblad . 29 March 2019.
  2. Web site: Statistics at boxrec.com. boxrec.com. 31 December 2013. 1 January 2013.
  3. Web site: The life & death of Franco Wanyama: Another proud man who deserved more help than he ever received . The Independent . 10 September 2019 . 8 April 2019.