Stephane Jamoye

Stephane Jamoye
Statistics
Real name Stephane Jamoye
Nickname(s) Survivor
Rated at Super flyweight (115 lb)
Bantamweight (118 lb)
Super bantamweight (122 lb)
Height 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m)
Reach 67.5 in (171 cm)
Nationality Belgian
Born (1989-10-05) October 5, 1989
Visé, Belgium
Stance Orthodox
Boxing record
Total fights 35
Wins 28
Wins by KO 16
Losses 7
Draws 0
No contests 0

Stephane Jamoye (born October 5, 1989) is an Belgian professional boxer. He currently competes in the super bantamweight division, and is a former EBU bantamweight champion.

Amateur career

Jamoye started boxing at the age of 14, and was a national champion by 16. Overall, Jamoye compiled a 56-4 record in the amateur ranks.[1]

Professional career

Jamoye turned pro 20 days after his 18th birthday. After an impressive 12-0 start to his career, he received a shot at the WBC Youth World bantamweight title. He defeated fellow undefeated fighter Pungluang Sor Singyu on May 9, 2009 by split decision for the belt.[1]

After five straight wins, Jamoye lost the title to another 19-year-old, Tomoki Kameda, via a controversial split decision on August 28, 2010 in Mazatlán.[1] The fight was initially declared a draw, but the victory was then awarded to Kameda after a judge found an error on his scorecard. The WBC ordered a rematch to resolve the issue, but Kameda refused.[2] It was also his first fight outside of Europe.

Jamoye fought Jamie McDonnell on January 22, 2011 in Doncaster, England for his EBU bantamweight belt, but lost the entertaining fight by majority decision.[3] After a win by TKO over Tanzanian boxer Anthony Mathias, Jamoye fought American Léo Santa Cruz in Xalapa, Mexico on March 26, 2011. The fast-paced battle ended in the sixth round, when Santa Cruz hit Jamoye with a right hook to the body. The fight was also for the interim WBC Youth World bantamweight title.[4]

Three consecutive wins later, he faced Lee Haskins on December 14, 2012 for the EBU bantamweight title. Jamoye was knocked down in the second round, but responded by opening a cut above Haskins' right eye in the third. Cheered on by his hometown crowd, he sent Haskins to the canvas with an array of punches in the sixth. Haskins then went down three times in the eighth, each the result of a brutal body shot. The referee finally stopped the bout in the Belgian fighter's favor after the third time. The commentators called it a "late candidate for fight of the year."[5]

Jamoye retained against Ashley Sexton three months later in Herstal with another eighth-round TKO.[6] Now ranked as the #1 bantamweight by the WBC, Jamoye was shocked by Frenchman Karim Guerfi by majority decision on September 28, 2013 for the title. Guerfi had lost three of his previous four fights.[7]

His next fight was against Shinsuke Yamanaka for his WBC World bantamweight title. Jamoye went down four times before the bout was stopped in the ninth round.[8] After a first-round TKO against Hungarian journeyman Richard Voros, Jamoye faced Scott Quigg in Manchester on September 13, 2014 for his WBA World super bantamweight title. Quigg's original opponent, Paulus Ambunda, pulled out with a hamstring injury.[9] During the fight, Quigg hit Jamoye with a devastating body blow in the third round to end the lopsided bout and retain his title.[10]

Professional boxing record

28 Wins (16 knockouts, 12 decisions), 7 Losses, 0 Draws[11]
Res. Record Opponent Type Rd., Time Date Location Notes
Loss 28–7United Kingdom Ryan Farrag KO 9 (12) 2015-10-30 Belgium Hall Omnisport de La Préalle, Herstal For vacant EBU bantamweight title.
Win 28–6Nicaragua Reynaldo Cajina UD 8 2015-01-31 Belgium Hall omnisport, Montegnee
Win 27–6Honduras Jorge Luis Munguia UD 8 2014-11-08 Belgium Hall Omnisport de La Préalle, Herstal
Loss 26–6United Kingdom Scott Quigg TKO 3 (12), 1:13 2014-09-13 United Kingdom Manchester Arena, Manchester For WBA World super bantamweight title.
Win 26–5Hungary Richard Voros TKO 1 (6), 1:15 2014-06-07 Belgium Esneux
Loss 25–5Japan Shinsuke Yamanaka TKO 9 (12), 0:11 2014-04-23 Japan Osaka-jō Hall, Osaka For WBC World bantamweight title.
Loss 25–4France Karim Guerfi MD 12 2013-09-28 Belgium Herstal Lost EBU bantamweight title.
Win 25–3United Kingdom Ashley Sexton TKO 8 (12) 2013-03-09 Belgium Herstal Retained EBU bantamweight title.
Win 24–3United Kingdom Lee Haskins TKO 8 (12) 2012-12-14 Belgium Hallo Omnisport La Préalle, Herstal Won EBU bantamweight title.
Win 23-3Nicaragua Miguel Aguilar RTD 2 (10), 1:55 2012-02-18 Belgium Hallo Omnisport La Préalle, Herstal Won vacant WBC Youth Intercontinental Super Flyweight title.
Win 22–3Nicaragua Julio Buitrago KO 4 (8) 2011-11-12 Belgium Bulle de Gerardchamps, Verviers
Win 21–3Ecuador Luis Singo KO 4 (8) 2011-06-17 Belgium Salle Omisports, Visé
Loss 20–3Mexico Léo Santa Cruz KO 6 (10) 2011-03-26 Mexico El Nido de los Halcones-Instituto de la Joventud, Xalapa For interim WBC Youth World bantamweight title.
Win 20–2Tanzania Anthony Mathias TKO 8 (8) 2011-02-19 Belgium Herstal
Loss 19–2United Kingdom Jamie McDonnell MD 12 2011-01-22 United Kingdom Doncaster Dome, Doncaster For EBU bantamweight title.
Win 19–1Colombia Giovanni Jaramillo TKO 11 (12) 2010-11-05 Spain Pabellon Municipal Deheya Boyal, San Sebastián de los Reyes Retained EBU-EU bantamweight title.
Loss 18–1Japan Tomoki Kameda SD 10 2010-08-28 Mexico Lobo Dome, Mazatlán Lost WBC Youth World bantamweight title.
Win 18–0Slovenia Peter Balaz KO 1 (6), 0:29 2010-05-14 Belgium Visé
Win 17–0France Franck Gorjux TKO 8 (12) 2010-04-10 Belgium Loncin Retained EBU-EU bantamweight title.
Win 16–0Tanzania Hamis Ajali KO 7 (10) 2010-02-20 Belgium Salle de la préhalle, Herstal Retained WBC Youth World bantamweight title.
Win 15–0France Mohamed Bouleghcha UD 12 2009-11-28 Belgium Salle Omnisport, Oupeye Won EBU-EU bantamweight title.
Win 14–0Belgium Cedric Cambier UD 4 2009-10-10 Belgium Salle Omnisport, Chératte
Win 13–0Thailand Pungluang Sor Singyu SD 10 2009-05-09 Belgium Halle Omnisport, Loncin Won WBC Youth World bantamweight title.
Win 12–0France Mohamed Nouari RTD 5 (6) 2009-03-13 France Salle Gerland, Lyon
Win 11–0Israel Eilon Kedem UD 10 2009-02-21 Belgium Hall omnisport de Herstal, Herstal Won vacant Belgian bantamweight title.
Win 10–0France Aurelien Lecoq RTD 6 (8) 2008-12-02 Belgium Verviers
Win 9–0Slovenia Ladislav Nemeth KO 1 (6) 2008-11-22 Belgium Visé
Win 8–0Slovenia Ladislav Nemeth PTS 6 2008-09-27 Belgium Colfontaine
Win 7–0Slovenia Robert Csicso TKO 1 (6) 2008-05-30 Belgium Visé
Win 6–0Poland Andrzej Ziora UD 6 2008-04-19 Belgium Verviers
Win 5–0France Aurelien Lecoq UD 4 2008-04-12 Belgium Loncin
Win 4–0Slovenia Elemir Rafael UD 4 2008-02-23 Belgium Herstal
Win 3–0France Aurelien Lecoq UD 4 2007-12-22 Belgium Amay
Win 2–0Romania Cristian Niculae PTS 4 2007-11-17 Belgium Verviers
Win 1–0Slovenia Robert Zsemberi KO 2 (4)2007-10-27 Belgium Chératte Professional boxing debut.

Personal life

Jamoye's younger brother, Steve, is also a professional boxer out of Belgium. As of October 2015, his record is 17-1-1. He is a former WBC Youth Silver and Belgium super lightweight champion.[12]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Coster, Robert (September 22, 2010). "New Faces: Stephane Jamoye". Fight News. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  2. "Kameda vs Jamoye Rematch Ordered by the WBC". Boxing Scene. September 30, 2010. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  3. "Jamie McDonnell retains European bantamweight title". BBC. January 22, 2011. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  4. Coster, Robert (March 27, 2011). "Santa Cruz takes down Jamoye". Fight News. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  5. "Brave Haskins surrenders European belt". ESPN.co.uk. December 14, 2012. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  6. "Ashley Sexton was stopped in eight rounds by European champion Stephane Jamoye". Sky Sports. March 11, 2011. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  7. "Shocker: Guerfi dethrones WBC #1 Jamoye to claim Euro bantam belt". Fight News. September 29, 2013. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  8. "Yamanaka retains belt with fifth straight knockout win". Taipei Times. April 25, 2014. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  9. "Quigg prepares for 'dangerous' title defence". espn.co.uk. September 12, 2014. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  10. Coook, Steven (September 13, 2014). "Scott Quigg vs. Stephane Jamoye: Winner, Scorecard and Analysis". Bleacher Report. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  11. "Stephane Jamoye Professional boxing record". BoxRec. Retrieved October 11, 2015.
  12. "Steve Jamoye Professional boxing record". BoxRec. Retrieved October 16, 2015.

External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Lee Haskins
EBU Bantamweight Champion
14 December 2012 – 28 September 2013
Succeeded by
Karim Guerfi
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