Michele Aboro Explained

Michele Aboro
Birth Date:17 July 1967
Birth Place:London, England
Height:5 ft 4+1/2 in
Reach:67 in
Style:Muay Thai, Kickboxing, Boxing
Stance:Orthodox
Box Win:21
Box Kowin:12
Box Loss:0
Kickbox Win:32
Kickbox Kowin:23
Kickbox Loss:3
Kickbox Koloss:2
Kickbox Draw:1
Mma Subloss:1
Boxrec:6186
Sherdog:19312

Michele Aboro (born 17 July 1967) is a British former professional boxer who competed from 1995 to 2001. She retired an undefeated world champion, having held the WIBF super-bantamweight title from 2000 to 2001.

Michele Aboro, along with her countrywoman Michelle Sutcliffe and German Regina Halmich, became an important figure in European women's boxing, helping raise awareness about female participation in a traditionally male sport.[1] [2]

Professional career

On 4 March 1995 she debuted as a professional boxer, with a first round knockout win over Marleen Lambert in Belgium. As a matter of a fact, her first three professional fights were held in different European countries (Belgium, Italy and Hungary) and they were all first-round knockout wins for Aboro. Her fourth fight, on 19 October 1996 against Severine Grandsire, was her first fight in Germany, and Aboro won by a sixth-round technical knockout.

Aboro had one more win, and then, on 29 November 1997, she met future world champion Daisy Lang, defeating Lang by a six-round decision.

On 22 August 1998 Aboro fought Brigitte Pastor for the vacant WIBF European Super Bantamweight title, knocking out Pastor in five rounds to win her first professional belt. She defended her title once, knocking out Galina Gumliiska in eight rounds on 28 November, then followed that win with four more wins in a row, before obtaining her first world title opportunity. Aboro became a world champion when she fought Eva Jones, on 5 February 2000, knocking Jones out in round ten to become the WIBF's world Super Bantamweight champion.

Then came Downtown Leona Brown's challenge. Aboro met the future world champion on 13 June that year, defeating Brown by a ten-round decision.

After two, non-title wins, she faced the highly touted contender Kelsey Jeffries, who had 10 wins and only 2 losses coming into their bout, for her second world championship defence. Aboro defended the title successfully against Jeffries on 10 February 2001, with a ten-round decision win.

After one more non-title win, Aboro made what has been, to date, her last fight. On 24 November that year she beat Nadia Debras, who she had previously beaten, by a ten-round decision, to retain her world title for the third time.

Aboro has not officially announced her retirement. However, should she decide to remain inactive and, ultimately, to retire from boxing, she would join Rocky Marciano and a handful of others in boxing's history to retire as an undefeated world champion.[3] [4] [5]

As of 2019, Aboro is a resident of Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
21Win21–0Nadia DebrasUD1024 Nov 2001
20Win20–0Krisztina StefulaTKO3 (6)16 Jun 2001
19Win19–0Kelsey JeffriesUD1010 Feb 2001
18Win18–0Krisztina HorvaiPTS65 Dec 2000
17Win17–0Marina KozerodRTD2 (6)1 Oct 2000
16Win16–0Leona BrownUD1013 May 2000
15Win15–0Eva JonesUD105 Feb 2000
14Win14–0Nadia Debras PTS627 Nov 1999
13Win13–0Dorota Kosatka KO1 (6)18 Sep 1999
12Win12–0Anastasia Toktaulova PTS622 May 1999
11Win11–0Renata Fuskova KO1 (6)13 Mar 1999
10Win10–0Galina Gumliiska KO8 (10)28 Nov 1998
9Win9–0Brigitte Pastor KO5 (10)22 Aug 1998
8Win8–0Nadia Debras TKO4 (6)2 May 1998
7Win7–0Krisztina Horvai PTS67 Mar 1998
6Win6–0Daisy LangPTS629 Nov 1997
5Win5–0Krisztina Krek KO2 (4)26 Apr 1997
4Win4–0Severine Grandsire TKO6 (6)19 Oct 1996
3Win3–0Szilvia Porteleki KO1 (4)9 Mar 1996
2Win2–0Donatella Todde KO1 (4)11 May 1995
1Win1–0Marleen LambertKO1 (4)4 Mar 1995

Kickboxing record

|-|- bgcolor="CCFFCC"| 1995-09-10 || Win ||align=left|Miyuki Nojima || Dutch K-1 Tournament, Final || Amsterdam, Netherlands || TKO || 1 || || |-|- bgcolor="CCFFCC"| 1995-09-10 || Win ||align=left|Fienie Klee || Dutch K-1 Tournament, Semi Final || Amsterdam, Netherlands || Points || 3 || || |-|- bgcolor="CCFFCC"| 1995-06-11 || Win ||align=left|Stephanie Curtiss || ISKA World Championships, Finals || Moscow, Russia || Points || 3 || || |-! style=background:white colspan=9 ||- bgcolor="CCFFCC"| 1995-06-11 || Win ||align=left|Natasha Larionova || ISKA World Championships, Semi Finals || Moscow, Russia || Points || 3 || || |-|- bgcolor="CCFFCC"| 1995-06-11 || Win ||align=left|Mary Shariyk || ISKA World Championships, Quarters Finals || Moscow, Russia || TKO || || || |-|- bgcolor="CCFFCC"| 1995-04-02 || Win ||align=left|Severine Grandsire || || Amsterdam, Netherlands || TKO || 3 || || |-|- bgcolor="CCFFCC"| 1994-00-00 || Win ||align=left|Fienie Klee || || || TKO || 5 || || |-|- bgcolor="FFBBBB"| 1992-05-17 || Loss ||align=left|Lucia Rijker || || Hamburg, Germany || TKO || || || |- bgcolor="FFBBBB"| 1992-00-00 || Loss ||align=left|Nancy Joseph || || || || || || |-|- bgcolor="CCFFCC"| 1991-09-00 || Win ||align=left| || || Paris, France || KO || 1 || || |-! style=background:white colspan=9 ||- bgcolor="FFBBBB"| 1991-06-09 || Loss ||align=left|Lucia Rijker || || Oldham, England || TKO || 1 || || |-! style=background:white colspan=9 ||-|- bgcolor="c5d2ea"| 1991-04-21 || Draw ||align=left|Lisa Howarth || || London, England || Draw || || || |-|- bgcolor="CCFFCC"| 1990-00-00 || Win ||align=left|Ann Holmes || || London, England || Points || 5 || || |-! style=background:white colspan=9 ||-| colspan=9 | Legend:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: An interview with pioneer Michele Aboro – Part One - Awakening Fighters. 1 November 2015. 3 November 2017.
  2. Web site: An interview with pioneer Michele Aboro – Part Two - Awakening Fighters. 1 November 2015. 3 November 2017.
  3. Web site: A New Era of Boxing in China - Neocha – Culture & Creativity in Asia. Neocha.com. 27 October 2017.
  4. Web site: Michele Aboro: Boxing world champ talks punches, prostitutes and poodles. Thatsmag.com. 27 October 2017.
  5. Web site: Michele Aboro: From Peckham to Shanghai. 19 May 2015. 3 November 2017.