Jamel Herring Explained

Jamel Herring
Realname:Jamel William Herring
Nickname:Semper Fi
Weight:
Height:5 ft 10 in
Reach:70 in
Birth Date:October 30, 1985
Birth Place:Rockville Centre, New York, U.S.
Style:Southpaw
Total:29
Wins:24
Ko:12
Losses:5
Show-Medals:yes
Boxrec:634455

Jamel William Herring (born October 30, 1985) is an American professional boxer who held the WBO junior lightweight title from 2019 to 2021.

Early life

Herring was born in Rockville Centre, New York, to Michael Mitchell and Jeanine Herring. His mother remarried to Harry Elliby. He was raised in Coram, New York, in its Gordon Heights neighborhood. While a sophomore at Longwood High School, Jamel began boxing in 2001 when his soon to become trainer Austin Hendrickson invited him to the boxing gym for workouts. Herring enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in October 2003 at Parris Island, South Carolina. He has served two tours of duty in Iraq and was based in Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, where he earned the rank of Sergeant.

Amateur career

Herring began training in 2001. He suffered his first amateur loss to Daniel Jacobs on July 20, 2002, during the New York Junior Olympics Finals.

Herring had to balance training as a boxer with his duties as an active United States Marine. He was deployed to Fallujah, Iraq in 2005. After he returned he immediately tried out for the All Marine Corps boxing team in January 2006. While on the team, Herring competed all over the national scene and even fought against former world champion Jesse Vargas at the 2006 National PAL tournament. He was deployed again in 2007 to Al Taqaddum. Shortly after his return, he went back to the All Marine Corps boxing team in Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. From early 2008, he would be trained under Ron Simms, Reuben Woodruff, and Narcisco Aleman. Simms would eventually be replaced by former All Army coach and 1996 USA Olympic Assistant coach Jesse Ravelo. Herring won a silver medal at the 2010 World Military Games and took a gold medal at the 2011 and 2012 Armed Forces Championships while a Sergeant in the United States Marine Corps.

Trained under Ravelo, Woodruff, and Aleman, Jamel would win gold in the 2012 Olympic Trials defeating multiple nationals champions. In the first round of the tournament he defeated Tommy Duquette, Mike Reed in the second round, Pedro Sosa in the semi-finals, and in the finals he defeated Pedro Sosa again. He would eventually move on to the 2011 AIBA World Championships but lost in a close contest in the first round, forcing him to fight for his spot again at the 2012 USA Boxing Nationals. After winning the Nationals, he went on to compete in the Americas Qualifiers where he would win a bronze medal and earn a slot at the 2012 games. Herring qualified for the 2012 Olympics. Jamel, along with the entire US boxing team, only had two weeks prior to the games to train together as a complete team.[1] He was the only United States Marine to compete at the London Olympics and the first active duty marine to qualify for the US boxing team since 1992.

Professional career

After returning from the London games, Herring made the decision to finish out his service with the United States Marine Corps and become a professional boxer. He relocated from Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, to Cincinnati, Ohio, to work with Mike Stafford.

In May 2019, he became a world champion by defeating Masayuki Ito to win the WBO junior lightweight title.[2] Herring outboxed Ito in front of the sold-out crowd, winning almost every round of the fight on two judges' scorecards, and 66 percent of the rounds on the third judge's.[3] Scorecards were 118-110, 118-110 and 116-112 in favor of Herring.[4]

In his first title defense, Herring faced Lamont Roach Jr. Herring boxed well through most of the fight, but Roach Jr was far from an easy opponent. Herring was almost dropped by Roach Jr in the ninth round, but managed to recover just before the bell. In the end, he had done enough to earn the unanimous decision win, 117-111 twice and 115-113 on the scorecards.[5]

His second title defense came against Jonathan Oquendo, on September 5, 2020, after two previously canceled dates, both because Herring tested positive for COVID-19. Herring was in control during the fight, and was landing the more effective shots. Herring managed to drop Oquendo in the third round. The aggressive Oquendo was going head first in multiple occasions during the fight, which ultimately resulted in a cut above Herring's eye. Herring was not able to continue after the eighth round and his corner decided he is unable to continue.[6]

In September 2020, it was announced that Herring had signed a contract with management and promotions company MTK Global, with the company taking an advisory role. Herring said of the decision, "I'm very excited about this next step in my career. I know that by adding MTK Global as an advisor along with Brian McIntyre as my manager, I have the strongest team in the game."[7]

On April 3, 2021, Herring defeated former two-division champion Carl Frampton in Dubai, United Arab Emirates via sixth-round technical knockout to retain his WBO title.[8] Herring's victory over Frampton would ultimately be the last fight of the latter's career, who retired soon after.[9]

Herring lost his title in his subsequent fight on October 23, 2021, against undefeated former WBO featherweight champion Shakur Stevenson, when he was defeated via tenth-round technical knockout. Herring was behind on all three judges' scorecards at the time of the stoppage. He retired in May 2022.[10]

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
29Loss24–5Jackson John England SD10Apr 3, 2024
28Win24–4Nicholas MolinaTKO1 (8), Nov 7, 2023
27Loss23–4Jamaine OrtizUD10May 21, 2022
26Loss23–3Shakur StevensonTKO10 (12), Oct 23, 2021
25Win23–2Carl FramptonTKO6 (12), Apr 3, 2021
24Win22–2Jonathan Oquendo8 (12), Sep 5, 2020
23Win21–2Lamont Roach Jr.UD12Nov 9, 2019
22Win20–2Masayuki ItoUD12May 25, 2019
21Win19–2Adeilson Dos SantosUD8Dec 14, 2018
20Win18–2John Vincent MoraldeUD10Sep 14, 2018
19Win17–2Juan Pablo SanchezTKO5 (8), May 12, 2018
18Loss16–2Ladarius MillerUD10Aug 22, 2017
17Win16–1Art HovhannisyanRTD3 (8), Feb 10, 2017
16Loss15–1Denis ShafikovTKO10 (10), Jul 2, 2016
15Win15–0Luis Eduardo FlorezUD10Feb 9, 2016
14Win14–0Yakubu AmiduUD10Oct 3, 2015
13Win13–0Ariel VasquezTKO3 (10), Aug 28, 2015
12Win12–0Hector VelazquezUD8Jun 26, 2015
11Win11–0Hector MarengoUD8Mar 6, 2015
10Win10–0Jose Del Valle2 (8), Dec 12, 2014
9Win9–0Luis Alberto Pelayo TKO2 (6), Sep 11, 2014
8Win8–0Rogelio Casarez TKO2 (8), May 2, 2014
7Win7–0Antonio Sanchez6Jan 25, 2014
6Win6–0Lance Williams TKO2 (6), Dec 14, 2013
5Win5–0Justin Robbins RTD3 (6), Sep 30, 2013
4Win4–0Calvin SmithUD4Jun 22, 2013
3Win3–0Victor Galindo 1 (4), May 18, 2013
2Win2–0Carlos Lopez3 (4), Feb 16, 2013
1Win1–0Jose M Valderrama4Dec 8, 2012

Personal life

Herring has six children: Kamren Herring (2004), Stephen Herring (2007), Ariyanah Herring (2009), Jamel Herring Jr. (2010), Jazmyne Herring (2013), and Justice Herring (2017). His daughter Ariyanah died July 27, 2009, from SIDS. The opening ceremony of the 2012 Olympic Games was the 3rd anniversary of her death. He married his childhood friend Jennifer Dickerson-Herring on September 26, 2015.

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Olympics: Breazale, Hunter qualify for U.S.. https://web.archive.org/web/20131202233755/http://ringtv.craveonline.com/blog/172857-olympics-breazale-hunter-qualify-for-us. dead. 2013-12-02. The Ring. 2019-05-26.
  2. Web site: Herring Achieves Dream, Shocks Masayuki Ito For WBO Title. 26 May 2019 . Boxingscene. 2019-05-26.
  3. Web site: 2019-05-25. Jamel Herring fulfills world title dream with boxing clinic over Masayuki Ito. 2020-12-04. The Ring.
  4. Web site: Ito vs Herring - News, Tape, Ringwalk, TV, Streaming & Tickets. 2020-12-04. Box.Live. en.
  5. Web site: 10 November 2019. Jamel Herring Decisions a Game Lamont Roach To Retain Title. 2020-12-04. BoxingScene.com. en-us.
  6. Web site: 2020-09-05. Jamel Herring defends 130-pound strap against Jonathan Oquendo, wins via DQ. 2020-12-04. The Ring.
  7. Web site: 12 September 2020. Jamel Herring Inks Agreement With MTK Global. 13 September 2020. BoxingScene.com. en-us.
  8. Web site: 2021-04-03. Herring rolls to TKO win; Frampton calls it career. 2021-10-24. ESPN.com. en.
  9. Web site: 2021-04-03. Carl Frampton confirms retirement after Jamel Herring ends title dream. 2021-10-24. the Guardian. en.
  10. News: Stevenson stops Herring in 10th round. en-GB. BBC Sport. 2021-10-24.