Syed Hussain Alam Shah | |
Realname: | Syed Hussain Shah |
Weight: | Middleweight |
Nationality: | Pakistani |
Birth Date: | 14 August 1964 |
Birth Place: | Lyari, Karachi, Pakistan |
Total: | 4 |
Wins: | 3 |
Losses: | 1 |
Show-Medals: | yes |
Syed Hussain Shah (Urdu: {{Nastaliq|سيد حسين شاه) (born August 14, 1964) is a retired Pakistani boxer from Lyari, Karachi Pakistan, who won the bronze medal in the Middleweight division (71–75 kg) at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. This was the country's first ever Olympic boxing medal.[1] He was the first Pakistani boxer to win an individual medal at the Olympic Games.[2] The only other Pakistanis to ever win individual Olympic medals are the wrestler Muhammad Bashir, who won a bronze medal at the 1960 Summer Olympics, and Arshad Nadeem, who won gold medal in the Javelin at the 2024 Summer Olympics.
Shah was born in Lyari, Karachi. As a child Shah used to live on streets due to being homeless, he used to work as a labourer to earn money. Shah trained himself for boxing on the streets using garbage bags as a replacement for punching bags.[3]
Shah won his first gold medal at 1984 South Asian Games in Dhaka, along with Asghar Ali, Ilyas Ahmed and Muhammad Yousaf.[4] At the 1987 edition of the Games in Kolkata, he was adjudged the 'best boxer'.[5]
At the 1988 Olympics he shared the podium with Kenya's Chris Sande. He was Pakistan's first boxer to win any medal in olympic boxing. In 1989, Lyari born boxer received Sitara-i-Imtiaz medal from Government of Pakistan.
Shah, who has also to his credit five gold in the South Asian Games history, remained the best boxer of Asia from 1980 to 1988, a rare prominence achieved by any Pakistani pugilist so far.
He later moved to Japan, where his son Shah Hussain Shah learned judo and went on to represent Pakistan at the international level.[6] [7]
See main article: Shah (film). A biopic called Shah was released in Pakistan on 14 August 2015. The film chronicles Hussain Shah's poverty stricken childhood, his rise to fame as the Asian Boxing Champion and Olympic Bronze Medalist, his subsequent return to poverty and finally his migration to Japan to coach Japanese boxers. The movie is directed and written by Adnan Sarwar with music by Adnan Sarwar and Farhan Albert.