Maïva Hamadouche Explained

Nickname:El Veneno (The Poison)
Maïva Hamadouche
Weight Class:
Height:1.62 m
Reach:1.63 m
Nationality:French
Birth Place:Albi, France
Birth Date:1989 11, df=y
Total:24
Wins:22
Ko:18
Losses:2
Show-Medals:yes

Maïva Hamadouche (born 4 November 1989) is a French professional boxer and police officer who held the IBF female super-featherweight title from November 2016 to November 2021. At regional level, she held the French female lightweight title in 2014 and the European female lightweight title in 2015.[1]

Life and career

Hamadouche was born in Albi, in the Tarn department. She was raised by a single mother in a family of 6 children.[2] With a baccalauréat economique et social she first planned to study law but abandoned this idea because of family and economic difficulties. Also interested in the army and more precisely in demining, she was received in the contest of the National Active Non-Commissioned Officers School of Saint-Maixent. Not wishing to leave France to continue to devote herself to boxing, she finally decided, at age 19, to make a career in the police. So, in 2009, she joined the Rouen police academy.[3]

She worked for two years in Asnières-sur-Seine then joined in 2014 the Compagnie de sécurisation et d'intervention of Paris.[3] In March 2018 she received the bronze honour medal for courage and devotion from the city of Paris for having rescued in June 2017 a young Mauritanian migrant, injured by a driver, by applying a tourniquet on his leg.[4]

Sports career

After practicing football, she started to train savate at the age of 14, and also practiced boxing afterwards.[2] [3] She became a professional in 2013. She trained in Saint-Juéry at the beginning,[5] [6] then in Clichy after moving to Paris, having Sot Mezaache as her coach.

She is seven-time vice-champion of France in savate and English boxing, eventually opting for the second discipline despite her debut in French boxing.[3]

In March 2015, in Milan, she became European lightweight champion, while the title was vacant, beating Italy's Anita Torti by throw of the towel in the 5th round[7] then she retained his title in May in Clichy, winning on points in ten rounds against the same competitor.[8]

In November 2016, Maïva Hamadouche won her first IBF World Super featherweight title,[9] still vacant, winning by points in 10 rounds in Paris against the American Jennifer Salinas.[6] She became the third Frenchwoman to win that title after Myriam Lamare and Anne-Sophie Mathis. She retained the title in January 2017 against Milena Koleva, from Bulgaria, in May 2017 against Anahí Ester Sánchez, from Argentina, then in 2018 against the French Myriam Dellal.[10] In 4 December 2018, Maïva Hamadouche kept her IBF world champion title, for the fifth time, against Brazil's Viviane Obenauf.[11]

Taking advantage of a rule change which allowed professional boxers to compete in the Olympics, Hamadouche qualified for the delayed 2020 Tokyo Games only to lose in her opening contest to Finland's Mira Potkonen.[12]

On 5 November 2021, she returned to professional competition to take on WBO female super-featherweight World champion Mikaela Mayer in a contest that saw both women's titles and the inaugural Ring female super-featherweight belt on the line. Mayer prevailed by unanimous decision.[13]

Hamadouche announced her retirement from boxing in May 2023 due to an eye injury that would no longer allow her to fight.[14]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: BoxRec: Maiva Hamadouche. boxrec.com. 2019-11-15.
  2. Mathieu Blard, « Maiva Hamadouche, policière et boxeuse », sur bondyblog.fr, .
  3. Marie Slavicek, « Boxe : Maïva Hamadouche, policière à Paris, « poison » sur le ring », sur lemonde.fr, .
  4. Web site: Maïva Hamadouche : "Sauver une vie, ça marque". Martine Lecaudey. 19 January 2018. ladepeche.fr. .
  5. A. L., « La championne du monde de boxe Maiva Hamadouche sur les traces de son enfance à Saint-Juéry (Tarn) », sur france3-regions.francetvinfo.fr, .
  6. Michel Frejabise, « Maïva Hamadouche, championne du monde IBF », sur ladepeche.fr, .
  7. Web site: Maiva Hamadouche championne d'Europe. 25 March 2015. ffboxe.com. 6 August 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190806185214/http://www.ffboxe.com/news-20724-boxe-feminine-maiva-hamadouche-championne-d-europe.html. 6 August 2019. dead. .
  8. Web site: Maïva Hamadouche conserve aux points son titre européen des légers. A.-A. F.. 22 May 2015. lequipe.fr. .
  9. Marie Slavicek, « Maïva Hamadouche : « Je veux marquer l’histoire de la boxe » », sur lemonde.fr, .
  10. Web site: Maïva Hamadouche conserve son titre mondial. 22 January 2018. ladepeche.fr. .
  11. Web site: Maïva Hamadouche en mode repos. 16 December 2018. ladepeche.fr. 5 January 2019. .
  12. Web site: Mira Potkonen Ousts Maiva Hamadouche From Olympics With Split Decision Win. 27 July 2021 . Boxing Scene. 2024-05-21.
  13. Web site: Mikaela Mayer downs Maiva Hamadouche by unanimous decision to unify junior lightweight titles. 6 November 2021 . ESPN. 2024-05-21.
  14. Web site: French boxer Maiva Hamadouche ends career due to eye injury. 10 May 2023 . ESPN. 2024-05-21.