Ali Hallab

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Ali Hallab boxer
Data
Birth Name Ali Hallab
Weight class Super bantamweight
nationality FranceFrance French
birthday April 4th 1981
place of birth FranceFrance Mantes-la-Jolie
style Left delivery
size 1.68 m
Combat Statistics
Struggles 17th
Victories 16
Knockout victories 9
Defeats 0
draw 1
Ali Hallab medal table

Boxing Boxing

FranceFrance France
World championships
bronze 2005 Bantamweight
European championships
silver 2004 Bantamweight
bronze 2002 Bantamweight
Mediterranean Games
gold 2005 Bantamweight
EU championships
bronze 2004 Bantamweight
gold 2003 Bantamweight

Ali Hallab (born April 4, 1981 in Mantes-la-Jolie ) is a retired French boxer .

Amateur career

Ali Hallab started boxing as a teenager and became a member of the Boxing Amicale Les Mureaux sports club . His coach there was Mokhtar Hadjiri. He also took up studies at the Institut National du Sport et de l'Education in Paris and finished this as a sports teacher.

From 2001 to 2007 he was French bantamweight champion seven times in a row, defeating Daouda Sow and Hicham Ziouti , among others .

His first international success was winning a bronze medal in the light flyweight division at the 1999 European Junior Championships in Sarajevo . In 2001 he started at the World Championships in Belfast , where he was eliminated in the preliminary round against Waldemar Cucureanu.

He then achieved his first medal win in the elite area at the European Championships in Perm in 2002 , when he was able to win a bronze medal in the bantamweight division. After victories against Servin Suleymanov, Mario Pisanti and Detelin Dalakliew , he was only defeated in the semi-finals against Gennady Kovalyov . In this weight class he achieved numerous successes in the following years.

He won the gold medal at the EU Championships in France in 2003 with a final victory against Bashir Hassan and won bronze at the same event in Spain in 2004 after losing to Detelin Dalakliew in the semi-finals this time. At the 2003 World Championships in Bangkok he was eliminated again in the preliminary round against Detelin Dalakliew, but won the silver medal at the 2004 European Championships in Pula . With wins against Muhamed Alija, Ağası Məmmədov and Andrzej Liczik, he moved into the final, where he was again defeated against Gennadi Kowaljow. He was then used at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens , where he was eliminated in the preliminary round against Malik Bouziane.

In 2005 he won the gold medal at the Mediterranean Games in Spain and a bronze medal at the World Championships in Mianyang . He was defeated in the semifinals against Guillermo Rigondeaux after he had previously defeated Satoshi Shimizu , Mekhrodj Umarov and Ma Yunhao.

At the European Championships in 2006 in Plovdiv he lost in the round of 16 against Detelin Dalakliew, but defeated this in his first fight at the 2007 World Championships in Chicago . Another win against Allaberdi Ishankuliyev he reached the round of 16, where he was eliminated by Gary Russell .

In 2008 he took part in the first European Olympic qualification tournament in Pescara , where he was able to defeat Matti Koota, but then narrowly eliminated against Rustam Rachimow 8: 9. At the second qualifying tournament in Athens he then fought his way to first place against Maxim Tretyak, Detelin Dalakliew, Vittorio Parrinello and Chawazi Chatsygov and then took part in the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing . There he was eliminated in the preliminary round against Akhil Kumar.

Hallab is also the winner of several international tournaments, including the Ahmet Cömert tournament in 2002, the Feliks Stamm tournament in 2003 and 2005, and the Tammer tournament in 2003 and 2006.

Professional career

Ali Hallab boxed for the pros from March 2009 to November 2013 and remained undefeated in all of his 17 fights. He became French champion in April 2011 and WBO European champion in May 2011 . In his last fight on November 15, 2013, he still won the title of WBC Mediterranean Champion.

swell

  • Website "www.amateur-boxing.strefa-pl",
  • Box Sport magazine,
  • Website "pekin.franceolympique.dom"

Individual evidence

  1. French champion in amateur boxing (1903-2009)
  2. Junior European Championships 1999
  3. World Championships 2001
  4. European Championships 2002
  5. EU Championships 2003
  6. EU Championships 2004
  7. World Championships 2003
  8. European Championships 2004
  9. 2004 Olympic Games
  10. Mediterranean Games 2005
  11. World Championships 2005
  12. European Championships 2006
  13. World Championships 2007
  14. 1st European Olympic qualification 2008
  15. 2nd European Olympic Qualification 2008
  16. Olympic Games 2008
  17. Ahmet Cömert Tournament 2002
  18. Feliks Stamm Tournament 2003
  19. Feliks Stamm Tournament 2005
  20. Tammer tournament 2003
  21. ^ Tammer tournament 2006
  22. ^ Ali Hallab, BoxRec Profile

Web links