Baek In-chul explained

Baek In-chul
Realname:In Chul Baek
Weight:
Height:5 ft 9+1/2 in
Reach:72 in
Nationality:South Korean
Birth Date:December 20, 1961
Birth Place:Cheonan, South Korea
Style:Orthodox
Total:50
Wins:47
Ko:43
Losses:3

In-Chul Baek (born December 20, 1961) is a South Korean former professional boxer who competed from 1980 to 1990. He held the WBA super-middleweight title from 1989 to 1990.

Boxing career

Baek became a professional boxer in 1980. He won the Oriental and Pacific Boxing Federation (OPBF) light middleweight title in 1981. His first defeat came in 1983 when Sean Mannion defeated him over ten rounds in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Baek returned to Korea and continued his winning ways. His second defeat came in his next trip to the United States, when he challenged Julian Jackson for the WBA light middleweight title in 1987. Jackson knocked him out in three rounds. Baek then moved up to the middleweight division and in his next fight won the OPBF middleweight title.

On May 28, 1988, Baek won the WBA and lineal super middleweight titles by defeating Fulgencio Obelmejias by an eleventh-round knockout.[1] He defended the title twice before losing it to Christophe Tiozzo on March 30, 1990.[2] Baek retired after that fight.

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
50Loss47–3Christophe TiozzoTKO6 (12), 1990-03-30
49Win47–2Yoshiaki TajimaRTD7 (12), 1990-01-13
48Win46–2Ron EssettTKO11 (12), 1989-10-08
47Win45–2Fulgencio ObelmejiasTKO11 (12), 1989-05-28
46Win44–2Park Chong-palKO9 (10), 1988-12-22
45Win43–2Kim Jae-OkKO6 (12), 1988-07-30
44Win42–2Ketut UdianaKO2 (12), 1988-04-17
43Loss41–2Julian JacksonTKO3 (12), 1987-11–21
42Win41–1Hideo KawamotoKO2 (10), 1987-07-12
41Win40–1Paul JamesUD101987-03-15
40Win39–1Hwang Jun-SukUD121986-10–18
39Win38–1Chang-Hwan NohKO5 (10), 1986-07-27
38Win37–1Jung Sang-DoSD121986-06-28
37Win36–1Troy WatersSD121986-03-15
36Win35–1Fred HutchingsKO9 (10), 1985-10-27
35Win34–1Alberto BapaimoKO3 (12), 1985-07-13
34Win33–1Yuh Jae-HyungKO5 (12), 1985-04-20
33Win32–1Hendris SalmonKO2 (12), 1985-01-12
32Win31–1Alberto BapaimoKO4 (12), 1984-07-23
31Win30–1Mike DeGuzmanKO3 (12), 1984-03-24
30Win29–1Sakaraia VeKO6 (10), 1984-01-07
29Win28–1Satanfa PratipKO3 (10), 1983-11-13
28Win27–1Yohi AraiKO5 (12), 1983-07-10
27Loss26–1Sean MannionPTS101983-05-19
26Win26–0Kim Jong-HoKO7 (12), 1983-03-27
25Win25–0Jesus GonzalezKO3 (10), 1983-02-27
24Win24–0Romy AngelesKO3 (12), 1983-01-02
23Win23–0Kngrag VorchareenratKO3 (10), 1982-12-11
22Win22–0Yohi AraiKO10 (12), 1982-10-23
21Win21–0Fred GalangKO3 (10), 1982-09-26
20Win20–0Antonio LeyvaKO2 (10), 1982-07-04
19Win19–0Michihiro HorihataKO2 (12), 1982-06-13
18Win18–0Ibrahim MohammedKO3 (10), 1982-04-24
17Win17–0Kenji MiyataKO9 (10), 1982-03-21
16Win16–0Alberto CruzKO2 (12), 1982-02-14
15Win15–0Lee Sang-HoKO12 (12), 1981-12-27
14Win14–0Joe WilliscoKO3 (10), 1981-11-28
13Win13–0Aquilino NicolasKO2 (10), 1981-10-31
12Win12–0Kim Jin-NamKO3 (10), 1981-10-11
11Win11–0Alberto CruzKO3 (10), 1981-08-21
10Win10–0Conrado SalinasKO2 (10), 1981-06-23
9Win9–0Hiroshi IzumiyaKO3 (6), 1981-04-19
8Win8–0Jung Young-SilKO4 (8), 1981-02-14
7Win7–0Lim Bok-KyuKO3 (6), 1980-12-07
6Win6–0Choi Jang-HoKO3 (4), 1980-11-29
5Win5–0Choi Sun-KapKO4 (4), 1908-11-22
4Win4–0Choi Byung-ChunKO3 (4), 1980-11–21
3Win3–0Park Jong-HyunKO1 (4), 1980-09-25
2Win2–0Yang Young-ChilKO2 (4), 1980-06-08
1Win1–0Park Joong-JungKO2 (4), 1980-05-09

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Baek defends title. United Press International. 2023-07-24.
  2. Web site: Tiozzo knocks out Beak for WBA championship. Tampa Bay Times. 2023-07-24.