Yevgeny Mikhailovich Makarenko

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Yevgeny Mikhailovich Makarenko medal table

Boxing Boxing

RussiaRussia Russia
World championships
gold 2003 Light heavyweight
gold 2001 Light heavyweight
World cup
gold 2005 Light heavyweight
European championships
gold 2004 Light heavyweight
gold 2002 Heavyweight
bronze 1998 Heavyweight

Yevgeny Mikhailovich Makarenko ( Russian Евгений Михайлович Макаренко ; born October 10, 1975 in Nizhnevartovsk ) is a former Russian boxer in the light heavyweight and heavyweight division .

successes

Yevgeny Makarenko is the Russian light heavyweight champion in 1994, 1995, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 and 2006. His first international successes were winning the gold medal in the light middleweight division at the European Junior Championships in 1993 in Thessaloniki , as well as winning a bronze medal in the light heavyweight division at the 1998 Goodwill Games in New York City and winning a bronze heavyweight medal at the 1998 European Championships in Minsk .

In 2001 he won the light heavyweight world championships in Belfast and in 2002 the heavyweight championships in Perm . He had prevailed against Mahamed Aryphadschyjeu , John Dovi , Viktor Perun, Milorad Gajović , Wiktar Sujeu and Vyacheslav Uselkow, among others .

Starting in the light heavyweight division, he also won gold medals at the 2003 World Championships in Bangkok and the 2004 European Championships in Pula . At the World Cup this time he had beaten Kenneth Egan , Rudolf Kraj and Mahamed Aryphadschyjeu, among others . At the EM, he even won each of his five fights early, including against İhsan Tarhan , Aleksy Kuziemski and Marijo Šivolija .

At the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens , he was able to defeat Yoan Hernández in the preliminary round , but then retired in the quarter-finals against Andre Ward . In 2005 he was still able to win the light heavyweight World Cup in Moscow .

Individual evidence

  1. Olympic.org
  2. Sports Reference
  3. Russian Championships
  4. Junior European Championships 1993
  5. ^ Goodwill Games 1998
  6. European Championships 1998
  7. World Championships 2001
  8. European Championships 2002
  9. World Championships 2003
  10. European Championships 2004
  11. 2004 Olympic Games
  12. World Cup 2005