Jerzy Kulej | |
Birth Date: | 19 October 1940 |
Birth Place: | Częstochowa, Śląskie, Poland |
Death Place: | Warsaw, Poland |
Height: | 1.67m (05.48feet) |
Weight: | 66kg (146lb) |
Weight Class: | Light welterweight |
Club: | Start Częstochowa Gwardia Warszawa |
Show-Medals: | yes |
Jerzy Zdzisław Kulej (born 19 October 1940 in Częstochowa – dead 13 July 2012 in Warszawa) was a Polish boxer, politician and sports commentator.[1] [2] He was a two-time Olympic and two-time European Champion.
He was born in 1940 in Częstochowa, Poland. He started his boxing career in 1955 in the Start Częstochowa club. In 1958, he joined Poland's national team coached by Feliks Stamm. At the 1964 Summer Olympics, he won a gold medal in the light welterweight division (<63.5 kg) defeating Yevgeny Frolov.In 1968,[3] he defended his title in a close match against a Cuban boxer Enrique Regüeiferos becoming the only Polish boxer to ever win two Olympic gold medals.He also twice won a gold medal at the European Amateur Championships in 1963 and 1965, and won a silver medal in 1967.[4] He had a record of 317 wins, 6 draws and 25 losses.
In 1976, he made an appearance in a movie Przepraszam, czy tu biją? directed by Marek Piwowski.[5] In 1995, he received the Aleksander Reksza Boxing Award.[6]
In 1998, he was awarded the Commander's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta by President Aleksander Kwaśniewski for his "outstanding contributions to the Olympic movement, the development and popularization of physical culture as well as sporting achievements".[7]
In his later years, he became a politician representing various parties over the time. In 2001, as a member of Democratic Left Alliance for electoral district of Warsaw he became a member of the Polish parliament (the Sejm) and served to 2005.He was a boxing commentator for Polish TV station Polsat Sport.
In December 2011, he suffered a massive heart attack. While in recovery, he learned that he suffered from an eye melanoma that was, in the end, the direct cause of his death in Warsaw on 13 July 2012 at the age of 71. He was buried on 20 July at the Powązki Military Cemetery in Warsaw.
1964 - Tokyo
1968 - Mexico City