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Hamzah Sheeraz
British boxer (born 1999) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Muhammad Hamzah Sheeraz (born 25 May 1999) is a British professional boxer. He has challenged once for the WBC middleweight title in February 2025. At regional level, he held the European middleweight title in 2024 and the Commonwealth title between 2022 and 2024.
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Early life
Sheeraz was born on 25 May 1999 in Slough in Berkshire, England.[1][2] His father is of Pakistani Muslim descent and his mother is of Indian Muslim descent.[3] His paternal family belongs to the Janjua clan of Rajputs, originating in the village of Matore, in the Kahuta Tehsil of Rawalpindi District in Punjab, Pakistan.[4][5] His father Kamran Sheeraz was a cricketer who played for Gloucestershire while his paternal grandfather and uncle were both boxers, the latter winning ten national amateur titles for the Slough and Pinewood Star clubs.[6][7]
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Amateur career
I never set sights of being an Olympian, going to world amateur championships, this-that-and the other, it’s difficult to explain but I just didn’t have that much interest in it. The professional game and winning pro titles is just so much more appealing to me.
—Sheeraz discussing his motivations for turning pro early[8]
Sheeraz was first directed to a gym by his uncle at the age of eight and had his first bout at 12.[9] He went on to become a three-time finalist at the national junior championships.[2] However, he became disillusioned with the sport after being overlooked for the Commonwealth Youth championships and took a year off to focus on an electrician's apprenticeship.[7] A meeting with his then-trainer Lenny Butcher led him to come back and try his hand as a professional.[2]
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Professional career
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Light-middleweight
Early career
Sheeraz turned professional in 2017, signing a deal with Frank Warren's Queensberry Promotions on his eighteenth birthday.[10] He made his pro debut on 16 September 2017 on the undercard of the Billy Joe Saunders–Willie Monroe Jr. world title fight at the Copper Box Arena in London. He defeated 35-year-old journeyman Duane Green via technical knockout (TKO) in the second round for his first victory.[11][12] By the beginning of 2019 he was sporting a 6–0 record. He dropped Rod Douglas Jr. three times en route to a first-round TKO in March before stopping Ladislav Nemeth in the second round of their April bout at Wembley Arena.[13] He registered his third-straight TKO victory on 13 July, beating Scott James in under two minutes on the undercard of the Daniel Dubois–Nathan Gorman British heavyweight title fight at The O2 Arena in London.[14]
Rise up the ranks
On 30 November 2019, Sheeraz defeated "Ruthless" Ryan Kelly (14–2, 7 KOs) by sixth-round TKO for the vacant WBO European junior-middleweight title. Late in the sixth round of their fight at Arena Birmingham, he dropped his opponent with a straight right hand. Kelly got up but was forced back onto the ropes as Sheeraz threw a barrage of punches that he was not able to overcome. The referee stopped the fight with two seconds left in the round, giving Sheeraz his first title belt as a professional.[4][15] The win also moved him into the top 15 in the WBO rankings.[16]
He retained his title with stoppage wins over Paul Kean on 10 July 2020,[17] Guido Nicolas Pitto on 28 November 2020.[18] and Ezequiel Gurria on 24 July 2021[19]
Sheeraz defended his title for a fourth and final time against Bradley Skeete at the Copper Box Arena in London on 4 December 2021 winning the fight by stoppage in the ninth-round of a controversial contest which saw him docked a point in round eight for punching Skeete while he was on the canvas after being knocked down.[20][21]
The UK Boxing Writers' Club voted Sheeraz as their 2021 Young Boxer of the Year.[22]
Middleweight
Following the Skeete fight, Sheeraz vacated his title and moved up weight divisions for his next contest which saw him defeat Jez Smith by stoppage in the second round at Wembley Arena in London on 19 March 2022 to claim the vacant WBC International Silver middleweight title.[23]
On 16 July 2022, he stopped Argentina's Francisco Emanuel Torres in the fifth-round at the Copper Box Arena to win the vacant WBC Silver middleweight title.[24]
Sheeraz then closed out his 2022 campaign by defending his title and adding the vacant Commonwealth middleweight belt to his growing collection of championships thanks to a second-round stoppage success over River Wilson-Bent at The O2 Arena on 26 November.[25][26]
Previously unbeaten Dmytro Mytrofanov was next to fall victim to Sheeraz's punching power as he was knocked out in round two of their bout in Poland on 26 August 2023.[27]
He made even shorter work of opponent Liam Williams in his next contest knocking out the Welshman in round one at the Copper Box Arena on 10 February 2024.[28]
Sheeraz vs. Williams
On June 1, 2024, at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Sheeraz dominated Austin Williams in an 11th-round TKO to win the WBC middleweight title eliminator as the captain of Queensberry promotions in the 5vs5 event.[29][30][31]
On September 21, 2024, in London, England, Sheeraz defeated Tyler Denny by TKO in the second round to win European, Commonwealth and WBC "Silver" middleweight titles.[32][33]
In November 2024, Sheeraz vacated his European title ahead of a planned world title fight.[34][35]
Sheeraz vs. Adames
Sheeraz challenged WBC middleweight champion Carlos Adames at The Venue Riyadh Season in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on 22 February 2025. The fight ended in a split draw with one ringside judge scoring it 115–114 in his favour, another seeing it 118–110 for his opponent, while the third had it a 114–114 draw.[36][37]
Super middleweight
On 12 March 2025, Frank Warren told Ring Magazine that due to weight issues, Sheeraz would move up to the super middleweight division for his next fight and remain at the weight for the foreseeable.[38]
Sheeraz vs Berlanga
On 20 April, Ring Magazine announced a card to take place in New York, promoted by themselves on 12 July 2025 on DAZN. Sheeraz was revealed to headline the card against former world title challenger, Edgar Berlanga (23-1,18 KOs), in a WBC title eliminator. Berlanga's sole career defeat came against Canelo Álvarez via unanimous decision in September 2024. He had a comeback win in March 2025, prior to the fight being announced. [39] It was reported the co-headline fight, featuring Shakur Stevenson and William Zepeda will be treated as the main event during fight week, however on Sheeraz vs. Berlanga would headline the card itself on fight night. There was some in the media discussing whether the fight deserved to close the event.[40] On 15 May, Ring Magazine announced the card would take place at the Louis Armstrong Stadium, located in USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in the Flushing Meadows-Corona Park in Queens. This would mark the first time the stadium would host a boxing event.[41] From the moment the bout was confirmed, tensions flared between the two fighters, kicking off at the launch press conference. Berlanga taunted Sheeraz about his previous match, stating, “You received a gift in your last fight. Even your trainer acknowledged that you lost.” Sheeraz fired back, saying, “If we’re discussing past fights, you’re Canelo’s bitch,” alluding to Berlanga’s only career defeat.[42] The sports books had Berlanga as a +125 underdog, with Sheeraz -155.[43] Both weighed the same 167.6 pounds.[44]
Sheeraz delivered a flawless fifth-round knockout against Berlanga in their WBC title eliminator. Sheeraz showcased his power by knocking Berlanga down twice in the fourth round with a series of combinations, leaving the latter visibly shaken and struggling to survive until the end of the round. As the fifth round commenced, Sheeraz concluded the bout decisively with a right-left combination, sending Berlanga to the canvas for the third time. The referee, David Fields, promptly stopped the fight just 17 seconds into the round.[45][46][47] According to CompuBox, Sheeraz landed 62 of 162 punches thrown (38.3%) and Berlanga landed 46 of his 119 thrown (38.7).[48][49]
After the fight Sheeraz addressed the talks about him fighting Canelo Álvarez in 2026. He responded, "It would be an honor to share the ring with him; it genuinely would. Someone I've looked up to, and next thing you know you're in the ring with them. I'll put on a good performance because that's what it's about, daring to be great and I'll do just that." Sheeraz addressed the $100,000 wager that he and Berlanga had agreed upon. However, Sheeraz informed Berlanga to keep the money, citing his religious beliefs that prohibit gambling. The bet was originally proposed by Berlanga.[50][51]
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Professional boxing record
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See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hamzah Sheeraz.
References
External links
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