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Each
month Westminster Journal will be adding an individual to its GEMs section. GEM
stands for Great European Muslim. This individual will be recommended by
Editorial process. Any submissions would be welcomed - simply send through
details of the GEM you wish to recommend and give the reasons why you feel they
deserve their place.
Amir Khan (born December 8, 1986) is a
British Asian boxer from Bolton, Greater
Manchester. He is the current Commonwealth lightweight champion, and former IBF
inter-continental light welterweight champion, and is ranked number 4 by the
WBO and number 6 by the WBC.
He went to Devonshire
Road Primary
School, Smithills High School and Bolton
Community College in Bolton.
He was a hyperactive child and a born fighter, according to his father, who
encouraged him to take up boxing.
He often uses his position as a well-known
British Muslim to encourage better relations between British Muslims and the
wider community, particularly in his home town of Bolton. He is the older brother of boxer
Haroon Khan and the younger cousin of cricketer Sajid Mahmood.
Khan rose to fame as Britain's sole representative in
boxing at the 2004 Athens Olympics, winning a silver medal at the age of 17 in
the lightweight boxing category. He was Britain's youngest Olympic boxer
since Colin Jones in 1976. He lost in the final to Mario Kindelan, the Cuban
who had also beaten him several months earlier in the pre-Olympic match ups in Greece.
In 2005 he avenged the two losses by beating the 34 year old Kindelan in his
final amateur fight.
Despite declaring after the 2004 Olympics
that he would pursue a Gold medal at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Khan turned
professional in 2005, signing with England's leading boxing promoter,
Frank Warren. This was fuelled by a row with the English Amateur Boxing
Association over the ticketing allocation for his family and friends at the
English ABA Finals.
He has won all his professional fights,
drawing good reviews in the press. Khan moved from Lightweight for a single
fight at Light Welterweight for the IBF Inter-Continental Light Welterweight
title against French fighter Rachid Drilzane on December 9, 2006, winning a 10
round decision. Khan experienced the first knockdown of his career; he got his
foot caught in the rope and touched down with his glove, giving the referee no
choice but to award his opponent the knock-down. Drilzane had never scored a
knockout in his 13 fight career. Khan did not defend this belt - instead he
returned to the Lightweight division for future fights.
Khan has announced his intention to be a
World Champion by the time he is 21, by the end of 2007 - comments which have
prompted reactions from boxing fans directed towards his promoter to increase
the level of his opposition. Khan is often compared to the only other high
ranking British Pakistani fighter. Ashish Khan who was the the 3 times title
holder for the LBA. Khan's life and career to date have already been documented
in a book titled Amir Khan: a Boy from Bolton
and he has even released a DVD of his first nine fights.
On April 7, 2007, he beat Steffy Bull in a
three round technical knockout in Cardiff,
which was later criticized by many observers to have been fixed, but the
remarks were later polished by defending promoter Frank Warren.
On July 14, 2007 Khan faced Willie Limond
for the Commonwealth lightweight title. During the fight Khan was knocked down
in the 6th round and appeared to be hurt badly. However, after another barrage
of right hands, Khan weathered the storm and in the seventh round knocked down
Limond after a fierce exchange of punches. The referee had stopped the fight on
advice of the doctor since Limond sustained a perforated eardrum, broken nose
and damaged right eye.
On October 6, 2007 Khan faced Scott Lawton
in his first defense of the Commonwealth Lightweight Title. Khan fought a
mature and clinical fight, boxing with single punches for the majority of the
first three rounds. Khan increased the pressure at the end of the third, and
secured a TKO victory in the fourth. The referee stepped in when Lawton failed to fight
back.
The most significant win of Amir's career
so far came when Khan celebrated his 21st birthday by successfully defending
his Commonwealth Lightweight Title against Graham Earl on December 8, 2007.
Earl, rated the no.1 British lightweight and a former world title challenger,
was considered Khan's toughest test by some way and a tough fight was expected
- especially due to some ill-feeling between the pair in the run up to the
fight. However, It took Khan just 72 seconds to have the fight referee declare
Earl in no fit state to continue. The speed at which Amir dispatched his man
came as a big surprise to most observers, Earl looking barely in the same ring
as the Commonwealth champion. Khan later claimed that he rated this victory as
the best of his career. Khan beat Australian Gairy St Clair on February 2,
2008, the match was for the Commonwealth lightweight title at the ExCel Arena
in London. This
was his first fight to last all 12 rounds and was won via a unanimous 120-108
scoring from all three ringside judges.
He went to Pakistan
to help the 2005 Kashmir earthquake victims.
He is involved in the No Messin' campaign which promotes child safety around
British railways. He has started a gym in his home town to help keep children
away from railways.
Amir was involved in a TV programme for
Channel 4, "Amir Khan's Angry Young Men", which consisted of three 50
minute long episodes. The programme centred around troubled men and aimed to
use the disciplines of boxing, coupled with faith and family values, to help
re-focus their lives, and help steer them away from trouble in the future. It
was screened in August/September 2007.
He recently signed a new three year deal
with Reebok worth an estimated £2 million.
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