Odlanier Solís

This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Solís and the second or maternal family name is Fonte.
Odlanier Solís
Statistics
Real name Odlanier Solís Fonte
Nickname(s) La Sombra ("The Shadow")
Rated at Heavyweight
Height 6 ft 1.5 in (1.87 m)
Reach 79 in (201 cm)
Nationality Cuban
Born (1980-04-05) April 5, 1980
Havana, Cuba
Stance Orthodox
Boxing record
Total fights 23
Wins 20
Wins by KO 13
Losses 3

Odlanier Solís Fonte (born April 5, 1980) is a Cuban professional boxer and world heavyweight title challenger. As an amateur he won a gold medal at the 2004 Olympics and three consecutive golds at the World Amateur Boxing Championships.

Amateur career

His first international success was in 1998, winning the title at the Pan American Juniors championship in Toluca and the Juniors World championship in Buenos Aires.

In 1999 he won the Cuban championship beating Félix Savón. Until 2004 he defended his title five times consecutively.

In 2005 he switched from heavyweight to super heavyweight and lost in the finale to Michel López Núñez. In 2006 he won the title again for a seventh time.

He was part of the Cuban team that won the 2006 Boxing World Cup.[1]

His record was 227 victories, 14 losses. He never lost at a major event (world championships, Olympics) and beat fellow Cuban Félix Savón in two of their three fights. One of those fights was in the Cuban Olympic boxing trial finals in 2000, and the win normally would have allowed Solis to fight in Sydney. Savon, however, was the two-time defending Olympic champion and a gold medal would have equaled the record that László Papp of Hungary and countryman Teófilo Stevenson set with three consecutive boxing gold medals. Thus, Savon was given the spot over Solis, who did not participate in the Olympics at all.

World Championships

Solís became world champion in 2001 in Belfast and in 2003 in Bangkok at heavyweight (201 lbs/91 kg limit), in 2005 in Mianyang at super heavyweight.

In 2001 he beat Russian Olympic silver medalist of 2000 Sultan Ibragimov in the semifinals on points and in the final British David Haye by TKO. Haye gave Solis a standing eight count in the first round and was up by 7 points, but Solis came back strong, turned the score around in the second round and won the fight by stoppage in the third. At the time of stoppage, score was 31-17 in favour of Solis.

In 2003 he won on points in the final against Russian archrival Alexander Alekseev who would win the next world championship. Also, Solis defeated Sultan Ibragimov once more (13-7) in four rounds in the XXXIII Chemistry Cup in Halle, Germany on March 10, 2002.

Olympic Games

Solis earned a spot on the Cuban Olympic boxing team for the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens and succeeded the three time champion Savon as the heavyweight gold medalist.

Amateur highlights

Olympic Games

World Cup

Pan American Games

World Junior Championships

Others

Notable defeated fighters

Defection

He defected from the national Cuban boxing team in December 2006, during training in Venezuela for the Pan-American Games in Rio de Janeiro. With him, came two fellow amateurs and reigning Olympic champions, Yan Barthelemí Varela and Yuriorkis Gamboa Toledano. After escaping to Colombia, they arrived in Miami. Solís, who plans to reside in Germany, signed a professional promotional contract with German-based First Artist.

Professional career

Heavyweight

Solís made his professional debut on April 27, 2007, weighing in at a much higher weight at 250+ lbs than as an amateur (where he weighed at a solid 200 lbs) but knocked out 32-7 veteran Andreas Sidon 47 seconds into the first round. In the next 18 months he racked up an 11-0 record against creditable opposition at this stage of a professional career, and in October 2008 he defeated Chauncy Welliver for the WBC international heavyweight title.

For his professional debut and his next four fights was trained exclusively by Technical Specialist Manny Masson.

In his most recent fight, he weighed 260 pounds.

Monte Barrett

Solis fighting out of Miami, Florida, made his third successful defense of the WBC International Heavyweight title with a second round stoppage of Monte Barrett of Queens, New York. Solis, now 15-0 with 11 KOs, a Cuban defector with an extensive amateur career, fought a very cautious first as a careful counterpuncher, preferring to feel out the experienced Barrett, age 38, 34-8, 20 KOs, to see if he had anything left. In the second, Solis opened up with a long left to Barrett's chin that decked him. Barrett just beat the count. In the barrage from Solis that followed, Barrett went down from a slip under pressure, got up, then got knocked out.

Carl Drumond

On March 20, 2010, Solis fought and defeated Carl Davis Drumond by fourth round TKO to retain his WBC International Heavyweight title and to win the WBA Fedelatin Heavyweight title. After toying with Drumond for the first three rounds Solis unleashed a barrage of punches during the last 20 second of round three and would have knocked Drumond down had he not been saved by the ropes, making Drumond not want to come out for the fourth round.

Vitali Klitschko

Solis defeated Ray Austin in a WBC title eliminator when Austin was disqualified in the 10th round. Solis connected with combinations to the head in the 10th, with Austin seemingly out on his feet and repeatedly holding Solis to avoid additional shots. The win set up Solis to fight Vitali Klitschko, becoming the mandatory challenger.[2][3] On 11 January, it was official confirmed that the fight between Vitali Klitschko and Solís was going to take place in Cologne, Germany on 19 March 2011. Both fighters promised a victory by knockout.

On 19 March 2011, the two boxers took to the ring in front of a sell-out crowd of over 19,000. In the first round of the fight, after the ten-second warning bell rang, Solis threw a left and right which didn't connect, to Klitschko's chin. Vitali Klitschko returned the favor with a short right to Solis's left temple. What followed has been extensively debated by fans and pundits. Some claim that as he was already falling to the ground, Solis injured his right knee while making an effort to prevent himself from hitting the ground. Others maintain that he simply injured his knee, while backpedalling, and was unable to continue. Some believe he was injured prior to the bout but didn't disclose it for fear of not getting paid. The slow motion shows that he was momentarily stunned by the almost grazing temple punch, and his foot froze to the canvas, whilst his leg and body continued backwards, causing an injury to his ankle. He was not able to continue and the fight was ruled a 1st rd KO.

Professional boxing record

20 Wins (13 knockouts), 3 Losses, 0 Draws
Result Record Opponent Type Rd., Time Date Location Notes
Loss 20–3 United States Tony Thompson RTD 9 (12), 3:00 27/02/2015 Turkey Gloria Sports Arena, Antalya For vacant WBC Continental Americas Heavyweight title.
Loss 20–2 United States Tony Thompson SD 12 22/03/2014 Turkey Atatürk Spor Salonu, Tekirdağ For vacant WBC International Heavyweight title.
Win 20–1 Germany Yakup Saglam TKO 7 (12), 2:30 27/07/2013 Germany Kugelbake-Halle, Cuxhaven, Niedersachsen Retained IBF Inter-Continental Heavyweight title.
Win 19–1 Norway Leif Larsen UD 12 22/03/2013 Germany Universal Hall, Berlin Retained IBF Inter-Continental Heavyweight title.
Win 18–1 Kazakhstan Konstantin Airich UD 12 19/05/2012 United States Convention Center, Pharr, Texas Won vacant IBF Inter-Continental Heavyweight title.
Loss 17–1 Ukraine Vitali Klitschko KO 1 (12), 2:59 19/03/2011 Germany Lanxess-Arena, Cologne, Nordrhein-Westfalen For WBC Heavyweight title.
Win 17–0 United States Ray Austin DQ 10 (12), 2:59 17/12/2010 United States American Airlines Arena, Miami, Florida WBC Heavyweight title eliminator.
Win 16–0 Costa Rica Carl Davis Drumond RTD 3 (10), 3:00 20/03/2010 United States Mallory Square, Key West, Florida Retained WBC International and WBA Fedelatin Heavyweight titles.
Win 15–0 United States Monte Barrett TKO 2 (10), 1:54 10/10/2009 United States Madison Square Garden, New York, New York Retained WBC International Heavyweight title.
Win 14–0 United States Dominique Alexander TKO 1 (8), 2:55 12/06/2009 United States Miccosukee Indian Gaming Resort, Miami, Florida
Win 13–0 United States Kevin Burnett TKO 8 (10), 2:00 09/01/2009 United States Buffalo Bill's Star Arena, Primm, Nevada Retained WBC International Heavyweight title.
Won vacant WBA Fedelatin Heavyweight title.
Win 12–0 New Zealand Chauncy Welliver TKO 9 (12), 1:23 11/10/2008 Germany O2 World Arena, Kreuzberg, Berlin Won vacant WBC International Heavyweight title.
Win 11–0 United States Chad Van Sickle TKO 1 (8), 1:32 12/09/2008 Germany Kugelbake Halle, Cuxhaven, Niedersachsen
Win 10–0 Netherlands Harry Duiven Jr UD 8 07/06/2008 Germany Karl Eckel Halle, Hattersheim am Main, Hessen
Win 9–0 Georgia (country) Mamuka Jikurashvili KO 2 (8), 1:34 26/04/2008 Turkey Spor Salonu, Trabzon
Win 8–0 Mali Cisse Salif UD 8 14/03/2008 Germany Zenith - Die Kulturhalle, Munich, Bayern
Win 7–0 Hungary Adrian Rajkai KO 3 (8) 29/02/2008 Italy PalaLido, Milan, Lombardia
Win 6–0 United States Julius Long UD 8 23/12/2007 Germany Maritim Hotel, Halle an der Saale, Sachsen-Anhalt Won vacant WBC Latino Heavyweight title.
Win 5–0 United States Jeremy Bates TKO 2 (8), 0:18 19/10/2007 Germany Estrel Convention Center, Neukoelln, Berlin
Win 4–0 United States Marcus McGee KO 2 (6), 2:14 21/09/2007 Germany Hansehalle, Luebeck, Schleswig-Holstein
Win 3–0 Sweden Aldo Colliander UD 4 06/07/2007 Germany Arena Gym, Hamburg
Win 2–0 Ukraine Aleksey Masikin KO 1 (4), 0:43 06/07/2007 Turkey Ataturk Sport Salonu, Ankara
Win 1–0 Germany Andreas Sidon KO 1 (4), 0:47 27/04/2007 Germany Arena Gym, Hamburg Professional debut.

See also

References

External links

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