peoplepill id: mate-parlov
MP
Croatia
2 views today
2 views this week
Mate Parlov
Croatian boxer and Olympic gold medalist

Mate Parlov

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Croatian boxer and Olympic gold medalist
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Split, Split-Dalmatia County, Croatia
Place of death
Pula, Istria County, Croatia
Age
59 years
Stats
Height:
186
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Mate Parlov (16 November 1948 – 29 July 2008) was a Yugoslav boxer of Croatian origin, and Olympic gold medalist who was European and World Champion as amateur and as professional. Parlov is the greatest Croatian boxer of all time, and the Croatian sportsman of the 20th century.

Background

Mate Parlov was born in Split, the older of two brothers in a Croatian family originally from the village of Ričice near the town of Imotski. In 1958, the family moved to Pula.

Amateur

In his amateur career he participated in 310 matches and lost 13. He was eight-time champion of Yugoslavia in the light heavyweight category (1967–1974), five-time champion of the Balkans (1970–1974), two-time champion of Europe (1971 in Madrid, and 1973 in Belgrade), and world champion at the inaugural 1974 World Championships in Havana, Cuba. He won the Golden Glove award twice, in 1967 and 1969. He participated in the Munich 1972 Summer Olympics, winning the gold medal in the light heavyweight division.

Professional career

Parlov won twelve of his first thirteen fights as a professional boxer before successfully challenging for the European light-heavyweight title. In 1976, he faced the future world champion Matthew Saad Muhammad. In their first fight in Milan, scheduled for eight rounds, he was defeated following the referee's decision. In a rematch, he and Muhammad struggled to a ten-round draw. After successfully defending the European title three times, he met Miguel Angel Cuello in Milan for the WBC world light-heavyweight title in January 1978. The two men had been scheduled to meet in the quarter-finals at the Munich Olympics, but Cuello withdrew due to an injury. Parlov knocked out Cuello in the ninth round to become the first professional world champion from a communist country. Parlov lost the title on his second defense and would later challenge for the World cruiser-weight title without success.

Retirement

In retirement, Parlov ran a coffee bar in Pula. He returned to boxing as coach of the Yugoslavian Olympic team prior to the 1984 Olympics, when Yugoslav boxers achieved their best results ever: one gold, one silver and two bronzes. He later moved to Fažana near Pula, away from boxing and the public. In March 2008, he was diagnosed with lung cancer, and died four months later.

Private life

Mate Parlov was married to Laura Parlov with whom he had two children, daughter Mira and son Matko. He was an economist by profession, and had one graduate exam left before gaining the title of Master of Economics.

Honors and awards

  • Golden Gloves: 1967, 1969
  • Croatian Sportsman of the Year: 1971, 1972, 1973
  • Yugoslavian Sportsman of the Year: 1971, 1972, 1974
  • Golden Badge award for best athlete of Yugoslavia: 1972, 1974
  • Croatian Sportsman of the 20th century
  • Lifetime Honorary President of Croatian Boxing Federation
  • WBC Honorary Champion: 2006
  • Croatian Walk of Fame: 2008
  • Mate Parlov Sport Centre

    Amateur highlights

    • Record: 310–13
    • Eight-time champion of Yugoslavia
    • Five-time champion of the Balkans

    1969 – European Championships: Bucharest, Romania: Silver Medal (Middleweight)

      • Defeated Ewald Jarmer (West Germany) PTS
      • Defeated Janusz Gortat (Poland) PTS
      • Defeated Reima Virtanen (Finland) PTS
      • Lost to Vladimir Tarassenko (Soviet Union) PTS
    • Represented Yugoslavia as a Middleweight at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City, Mexico.
      • Defeated Lahcen Ahidous (Mauritania) PTS
      • Defeated Jan van Ispelen (Netherlands) PTS
      • Lost to Chris Finnegan (England) PTS (Finnegan would win the gold medal)
    • 1971 – European Championships: Madrid, Spain: Gold Medal (Light Heavyweight)
      • Defeated Anthony Roberts (Wales) PTS
      • Defeated Vladimir Metelev (Soviet Union) TKO 2
      • Defeated Janusz Gortat (Poland) PTS
      • Defeated Horst Stump (Romania) PTS
      • Defeated Ottomar Sachse (East Germany) PTS
    • Won the Light Heavyweight Gold medal for Yugoslavia at the 1972 Olympics in Munich, Germany.
      • Defeated Nouredine Aman Hassan (Chad) KO 2
      • Defeated Imre Toth (Hungary) KO 2
      • Defeated Miguel Angel Cuello (Argentina) Forfeit
      • Defeated Janusz Gortat (Poland) PTS
      • Defeated Gilberto Carrillo (Cuba) TKO 2
    • 1973 – European Championships: Belgrade, Yugoslavia: Gold Medal (Light Heavyweight)
      • Defeated Michael Imrie (Scotland) TKO 1
      • Defeated William Knight (England) TKO 3
      • Defeated Oleg Karatayev (Soviet Union) TKO 2
      • Defeated Janusz Gortat (Poland) PTS
    • 1974 – World Championships, Havanna, Cuba: Gold Medal (Light Heavyweight)
      • Defeated Constantin Dafinoiu (Romania) PTS
      • Defeated Gilberto Carrillo (Cuba) PTS
      • Defeated Ottomar Sachse (East Germany) PTS
      • Defeated Oleg Karatayev (Poland) TKO 2

    Professional boxing record

    24 Wins (12 knockouts, 12 decisions), 3 Losses (1 knockout, 2 decisions), 2 Draws
    ResultRecordOpponentTypeRoundDateLocationNotes
    Loss24–3–2United States Marvin CamelUD1531 March 1980Nevada Las Vegas, Nevada, United StatesFor inaugural WBC World Cruiserweight title.
    Draw24–2–2United States Marvin CamelPTS158 December 1979Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Split, YugoslaviaFor inaugural WBC World Cruiserweight title.
    Win24–2–1Australia Tony MundinePTS1226 September 1979Italy Gorizia, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, ItalyWBC World Cruiserweight title eliminator.
    Win23–2–1United States Joe MayeKO528 July 1979Germany Munich, Bavaria, West Germany
    Loss22–2–1United States Marvin JohnsonTKO102 December 1978Italy Marsala, Sicily, ItalyLost WBC World Light Heavyweight title.
    Win22–1–1United Kingdom John ContehSD1517 June 1978Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Belgrade, YugoslaviaRetained WBC World Light Heavyweight title.
    Win21–1–1United States Tony GreeneTKO628 April 1978Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Sarajevo, Yugoslavia
    Win20–1–1Argentina Miguel Angel CuelloKO97 January 1978Italy Milan, Lombardy, ItalyWon WBC World Light Heavyweight title.
    Win19–1–1Germany Leo KakolewiczTKO621 August 1977Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Rijeka, Yugoslavia
    Win18–1–1Norway Harald SkogUD159 July 1977Switzerland Basel, SwitzerlandRetained EBU Light Heavyweight title.
    Win17–1–1Spain Francois FiolPTS155 April 1977Switzerland Morges, SwitzerlandRetained EBU Light Heavyweight title.
    Win16–1–1France Christian PonceletPTS105 March 1977Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Velenje, Yugoslavia
    Draw15–1–1United States Matthew Saad MuhammadPTS103 December 1976Italy Trieste, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy
    Win15–1Italy Aldo TraversaroPTS1515 October 1976Italy Milan, Lombardy, ItalyRetained EBU Light Heavyweight title.
    Win14–1United States Al BoldenKO911 September 1976Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Zagreb, Yugoslavia
    Win13–1Italy Domenico AdinolfiTKO1110 July 1976Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Belgrade, YugoslaviaWon EBU Light Heavyweight title.
    Loss12–1United States Matthew Saad MuhammadPTS821 May 1976Italy Milan, Lombardy, Italy
    Win12–0Tonga Maile HaumonaPTS1020 March 1976Australia Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
    Win11–0Fiji Sentiki QataPTS106 March 1976Australia Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
    Win10–0United States Macka FoleyTKO26 February 1976Italy Trieste, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy
    Win9–0Italy Onelio GrandoPTS826 December 1975Italy Reggio Emilia, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
    Win8–0United States Billy FreemanPTS1022 November 1975Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Skopje, Yugoslavia
    Win7–0United States Karl ZurheideKO130 October 1975Italy Milan, Lombardy, Italy
    Win6–0United States Johnny GriffinTKO56 October 1975Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Zagreb, Yugoslavia
    Win5–0Argentina Jose Evaristo GomezPTS813 September 1975Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Pula, Yugoslavia
    Win4–0Spain Jose Galvez VasquezPTS822 August 1975Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Split, Yugoslavia
    Win3–0Germany Horst LangKO112 July 1975Italy Arenzano, Liguria, Italy
    Win2–0France Robert AmoryTKO520 June 1975Italy Milan, Lombardy, Italy
    Win1-oItaly Dante LazzariKO131 May 1975Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Opatija, Yugoslavia
    The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
    Lists
    Mate Parlov is in following lists
    comments so far.
    Comments
    From our partners
    Sponsored
    Mate Parlov
    arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes