Mohamed Bahari

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Mohamed Bahari boxer
Data
Birth Name Mohamed Bahari
Weight class Super middleweight
nationality Algerian
birthday June 29, 1976
place of birth Sidi Bel Abbès
Combat Statistics
Struggles 7th
Victories 3
Knockout victories 1
Defeats 2
draw 2

Mohamed Bahari ( Arabic محمد بحاري, DMG Muḥammad Baḥārī ; * June 29, 1976 in Sidi bel Abbès ) is a former Algerian boxer. Bahari won the gold medal at the 1995 and 1999 Pan-African Games and he won the bronze medal at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.

Career

amateur

In 1994 Bahari won the silver medal in the middleweight division at the African Championships. In the same year he also took part in the Junior World Championships (U19), but was eliminated in the quarter-finals. At the 1995 World Championships Bahari could not compete for the first fight due to injury, but he won in the same year the African Games where he the winner of the Pan-African Games in 1991 Salem Karim Kabbary, in the semifinals of Egypt , and in the final Sackey Shivute, Namibia beat.

With this success Bahari qualified for the 1996 Olympic Games , in which, after winning over the future professional Marcus Thomas, Barbados (RSC 2nd), Akaki Kakauridze, Georgia (8: 5), and the later WBA world champion Brian Magee, Ireland (15: 9), reached the semi-finals, which he narrowly lost against Malik Beyleroğlu , Turkey (+11: 11), and thus won the Olympic bronze medal.

1997 Bahari won the light heavyweight (-81 kg) bronze medal at the Military World Championships in San Antonio , where he lost in the semifinals to Timur Ibragimov, Uzbekistan (7: 5). At the African Championships the following year, he won the gold medal. He also won the title at the Africa Games in 1999, where he u. a. Ahmed Ismail , Egypt, and Albert Jegbefumer, Nigeria , suggested. Although he qualified for the 2000 Olympic Games with this success , he did not participate in them.

professional

He turned pro in 2003 but had little success. After a knockout loss against Venezuelan Gusmyl Perdomo, who later became opponent of Mario Veit , he ended his career in 2004 after seven professional fights.

Web links & sources