Magomed Abdusalamov Explained

Magomed Abdusalamov
Nickname:Mago
Weight:Heavyweight
Height:1.85 m
Nationality:Lezgin
Birth Place:Makhachkala,
Dagestan ASSR,
Soviet Union
Birth Date:1981 3, df=yes
Style:Southpaw
Total:19
Wins:18
Ko:18
Losses:1

Magomed Abdusalamov (Russian: Магомед Абдусаламов; born 25 March 1981) is a Russian former professional boxer who competed from 2008 to 2013.[1] As an amateur he won the 2005 and 2006 Russian national championships in the super-heavyweight division. He turned professional in 2008, fighting nineteen times at heavyweight and winning his first eighteen by knockout. In 2013, Abdusalamov was forced to retire from the sport due to severe brain injuries sustained during his only career defeat.

Early life

Magomed Abdusalamov was born in Dagestan's capital city of Makhachkala on 25 March 1981. He grew up in a strict Muslim household and was his parents' first male child. Growing up in a large family, from an early age his disciplinarian father pushed his son into sports as a way to shelter him from the growing violence and crime in the city.[2]

Amateur career

In spite of his success at the nationals 2005 and 2006, hard-punching southpaw Abdusalamov stood in the shadows of Islam Timurziev, who was regularly sent to international competitions ahead of him.

He did not qualify for the 2008 Olympics after losing to eventual bronze medalist David Price in a qualifier.

Professional career

Abdusalamov turned pro in 2008 and won his first four bouts for Warriors boxing.

Of his nineteen professional fights he got eighteen wins, all by KO or TKO.

In September 2012, he was dropped hard by Jameel McCline in the first round, but won by TKO in the second round to win the vacant World Boxing Council United States Heavyweight title at Olympiyskiy in Moscow, Russia. He defended the USNBC title twice with stoppage wins in 2013, against Victor Bisbal in Atlantic City, New Jersey in March 2013, and Sebastian Ceballos in Buenos Aires, Argentina in April 2013.

On 2 November 2013, Abdusalamov took on Mike Perez in a 10-round fight for his title at Madison Square Garden in New York City as part of an HBO event featuring Gennady Golovkin in the main event. In a largely one-sided fight, which was scored seven rounds to three on two scorecards, Abdusalamov lost his title as Perez landed a bevy of power punches that the champion managed to withstand despite being cut late in the fight.

Brain injury

Abdusalamov was cleared of brain injury by Barry Jordan, Chief Medical Officer of the New York State Athletic Commission.[3] Immediately afterwards, Abdusalamov took a taxi from Madison Square Garden to Roosevelt Hospital on the Upper West Side.[4] The doctors who examined Abdusalamov found that he had sustained a large blood clot on his brain, in addition to the wear and tear he suffered during the course of the fight. Doctors put Abdusalamov into medically induced coma as a way to give the swelling in his brain time to subside. Shortly after being put into a coma, he had a stroke, leading doctors to fear he was going to die.[5] On 6 November 2013, his condition was described as critical but stable.[1]

Abdusalamov's wife, Bakanay Abdusalamova, and their three daughters were with him in hospital.

Doctors briefly awakened Abdusalamov from his medically induced coma and removed his respirator on the morning of 22 November.[6] He was brought back into medically induced coma later that day as a precautionary measure after his temperature rose to 103 degrees.[7]

On Monday, 9 December, it was reported that the 32-year-old heavyweight was again out of coma, awake and aware of his surroundings, and that his condition had improved sufficiently to allow him to be moved to a regular room. "They said this is different than last time, because this time he's showing more improvement. He's awake. He's not able to speak, but he's awake and aware of his surroundings even if he can't speak. His eyes are open," said his promoter, Sampson Lewkowicz.[8]

On 19 December 2013, the neurosurgeon attending to Abdusalamov said in his opinion, Abdusalamov's career was over, despite his condition improving. "He's going to get better, I'm confident", Dr. Rupendra Swarup said, "but he will not be the same. He's going to have neurological deficits."[9]

In late May 2014, his wife Bakanay Abdusalamov told BoxingScene.com that Magomed was showing signs of improvement – he could recognize relatives, understand everything they were telling him, and was able to speak in short sentences with a low voice.[10]

Medical bills

With Abdusalamov's family facing "staggering" medical bills from the very start, promoters Lewkowicz, Lou DiBella, Leon Margules, and others called for donations and set up a trust fund. The Abdusalamov family is also accepting donations directly[11] and boxing charity Ring 10 has similarly called for donations.

Lawsuit

In February 2014 it was reported that the family would sue the New York State Athletic Commission seeking $100 million in damages.[12]

On 8 September 2017, New York State agreed to pay $22 million to Abdusalamov and his family following a lawsuit where the issue of assumed risk came to play.[13] This was the largest personal injury award issued by New York State.[14]

Speaking through his wife as his interpreter, Abdusalamov and his attorney, Paul Edelstein, are pushing for federal legislation to improve boxing safety.[15] Currently, boxing regulations are mandated by the particular state in which a fight takes place. Edelstein has called for one set of rules to protect sport fighters across the United States.[16]

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
19Loss18–1 Mike Perez102 Nov 2013
18Win18–0 Sebastian Ignacio CeballosTKO1 (10), 27 Apr 2013
17Win17–0 Victor BisbalTKO5 (10), 8 Mar 2013
16Win16–0 Jameel McClineTKO2 (10), 8 Sep 2012
15Win15–0 Maurice ByarmTKO2 (10), 7 Jun 2012
14Win14–0 Jason PettawayTKO4 (10), 17 Mar 2012
13Win13–0 Pedro RodriguezTKO2 (4), 3 Feb 2012
12Win12–0 Rich PowerTKO3 (8), 20 Nov 2011
11Win11–0 Kotatsu TakeharaKO1 (6), 28 Oct 2011
10Win10–0 Kevin BurnettTKO1 (6), 1 Oct 2011
9Win9–0 Jerry ButlerTKO2 (6), 7 Dec 2010
8Win8–0 Keon GrahamKO1 (4), 22 Oct 2010
7Win7–0 Raymond OchiengTKO1 (6), 6 Feb 2010
6Win6–0 Ryan ShayTKO1 (4), 31 Oct 2009
5Win5–0 Sherzod MamadjanovKO1 (6), 2 Jul 2009
4Win4–0 Larry WhiteTKO1 (4), 27 Mar 2009
3Win3–0 Maurice WinslowTKO1 (4), 27 Feb 2009
2Win2–0 Bernard Mwakasanga1 (4), 21 Nov 2008
1Win1–0 Epiphanie Pipi1 (4), 6 Sep 2008

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Magomed Abdusalamov suffered stroke while in coma after Mike Perez fight | Boxing News | ESPN.co.uk. espn.co.uk. 2014-01-23.
  2. Web site: Jay. Chris. From Russia with gloves. Ventura County Star. 2013-08-18. 28 February 2013.
  3. News: Dan . Berry . The New York Times . 8 January 2016 . A Fighter's Hour of Need . 2019-03-03.
  4. News: Greg . Bishop . Reconciling a Sport's Violent Appeal as a Fighter Lies in a Coma . The New York Times. 20 November 2013. 2019-03-03.
  5. Web site: Heavyweight Magomed Abdusalamov placed back on life support | Boxing News | ESPN.co.uk. espn.co.uk. 2014-01-23.
  6. according to Nathan Lewkowicz of Sampson Boxing, Abdusalamov's promoter
  7. Web site: Magomed back on life support after being awakened from coma – Ring TV. ringtv.craveonline.com. 2014-01-23.
  8. Web site: Lem's latest: Magomed Abdusalamov out of coma . Ring TV. CraveOnline. 2014-01-23.
  9. Web site: Magomed Abdusalamov won't fight again, will have deficits -- neurosurgeon – ESPN New York. 19 December 2013 . ESPN. 2014-01-23.
  10. Web site: Magomed Abdusalamov Shows Signs of Improvement – Boxing News. 29 May 2014 . boxingscene.com. 2014-07-14.
  11. Web site: Boxer Magomed Abdusalamov on life support after suffering stroke while in coma – NY Daily News. 7 November 2013 . nydailynews.com. 2014-01-23.
  12. News: Mitch . Abramson . Family of brain-damaged boxer Magomed Abdusalamov will seek $100 million . NY Daily News . 22 February 2014 . 2019-03-03.
  13. News: Barry. Dan. Brain-Damaged Boxer Will Receive $22 Million in Settlement With State of New York. The New York Times. New York Times. 11 September 2017.
  14. News: Perlman. Matthew. New York Pays $22M To Boxer's Family in Brain Injury Suit - Law360. law360.com. Law360. Portfolio Media. 12 September 2017.
  15. News: Weinbaum. William. 'Mago's Law' advocated by ex-boxer's lawyer. ESPN.com. ESPN. 18 September 2017.
  16. News: BoxingScene. Magomed's Legal Team Want More Safety Measures For Fighters - Boxing News. boxingscene.com. BoxingScene LLC. 18 September 2011.