Sam Webb (born 11 April 1981) is a British former professional boxer who competed from 2005 to 2012. He held the British super welterweight title from 2010 to 2011.

Sam Webb
Born (1981-04-11) 11 April 1981 (age 43)
NationalityBritish
Statistics
Weight(s)Light middleweight
Height5 ft 9 in (175 cm)
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights21
Wins18
Wins by KO5
Losses3
Draws0

Professional career edit

Webb's professional debut came on 7 October 2005 with a first-round KO victory over Geraint Harvey at the York Hall in Bethnal Green. He fought once more that year defeating Vadzim Astapuk again at the York Hall. Four fights the following year in 2006 resulted in three more wins but also a first career defeat for Webb. The defeat, on cuts on 30 May 2006, was to Alex Stoda a man who in three contests had yet to win any of them meaning that where Webb suffered his first loss, Stoda celebrated his first win. Webb continued to ply his trade with two fights and two wins in 2007 against the likes of Alex Spitko and Ben Hudson. In 2008 he fought five times and saw a gradual improvement in the level of fighter faced with victories over Paul Dyer (18-8) and Gilbert Eastman (20-6), winning each contest.[1]

Fight with Gilbert Eastman edit

The fight with Eastman, the younger brother of two time world title challenger Howard Eastman, would not be remembered for Webb's victory but for the injury's suffered by his opponent. Having been floored in the final round of their eight-round fight, the fight was stopped with Eastman returning to the dressing room only to collapse and be taken to hospital. Eastman's manager Winston Fuller said "It wasn't a punishing fight at all. He boxed brilliantly in the first four or five rounds and there wasn't a lot in it until he got caught by a couple of shots in the final round. He was well prepared for the fight and 100 per cent fit. There were no weight problems, nothing."[2] Having been taken to the Royal London Hospital, doctor's worked to remove a blood clot on his brain saying that they expected him to make a "full recovery".[3]

British Champion edit

Now with a record of 12–1, Webb begun 2009 with a victory over Max Maxwell at the leisure centre in Newham. On 2 May 2009 he travelled to Sunderland to face Thomas McDonagh in an eliminator for the full British title, winning on points over 10 rounds, it was the first time that Webb had gone such a distance. Despite the win, his chance to fight for the title did not happen that year with his opponent McDonagh actually getting the nod to fight the champion Anthony Small before Webb in what was a voluntary defence for Small. Webb finished off the year with a six-round points win over Paul Morby at the Newport Centre in Newport.[4] In his first fight of 2010 and now boasting a record of 15-1 Webb got his chance on 26 March and defeated Small on a close majority points decision at the Goresbrook Leisure Centre in Dagenham. The fight went the distance despite Webb suffering a bad cut in the fifth round and a doctor's inspection of the cut in the sixth. Webb, who had also defeated Small on two occasions in the amateurs said following the win "I managed to dig deep and pull it out, I'm over the Moon".[5] On 16 October 2010 Webb made the first defence of his title in Limehouse, London. His opponent Martin Concepcion was the reigning Midlands Area champion but struggled throughout the fight as Webb built up to what looked like being a comfortable points victory prior to scoring an 11th-round knockout.[6]

Webb lost the title to Prince Arron in his second defence of the title at Gillingham in Kent. The fight was stopped in the 12th round with Webb considered by the referee to be in no position to continue following a series of knockdowns during the fight.[7]

Professional boxing record edit

21 fights 18 wins 3 losses
By knockout 5 2
By decision 13 1
Draws 0
No contests 0
No. Result Record Opponent Type Round, time Date Location Notes
21 Loss 18–3   Brian Rose UD 12 14 Dec 2012   Winter Gardens, Blackpool, England For British super welterweight title
20 Win 18–2   Matthew Hall SD 12 28 Apr 2012   Royal Albert Hall, London, England
19 Loss 17–2   Prince Arron TKO 12 (12), 1:47 13 May 2011   Medway Park Leisure Centre, Gillingham, England Lost British super welterweight title
18 Win 17–1   Martin Concepcion KO 11 (12), 2:20 16 Oct 2010   The Troxy, London, England Retained British super welterweight title
17 Win 16–1   Anthony Small MD 12 26 Mar 2010   Goresbrook Leisure Centre, Dagenham, England Won British super welterweight title
16 Win 15–1   Paul Morby PTS 6 11 Dec 2009   Newport Centre, Newport, Wales
15 Win 14–1   Thomas McDonagh PTS 10 2 May 2005   Crowtree Leisure Centre, Sunderland, England
14 Win 13–1   Max Maxwell PTS 8 20 Mar 2009   Newham Leisure Centre, London, England
13 Win 12–1   Gilbert Eastman TKO 8 (8), 2:59 17 Oct 2008   York Hall, London, England
12 Win 11–1   Paul Dyer PTS 6 13 Jun 2008   Mountbatten Centre, Portsmouth, England
11 Win 10–1   David Kirk PTS 6 2 May 2008   Harvey Hadden Leisure Centre, Nottingham, England
10 Win 9–1   Paul Royston PTS 6 2 Feb 2008   ExCeL Arena, London, England
9 Win 8–1   Duncan Cottier PTS 4 12 Jan 2008   York Hall, London, England
8 Win 7–1   Ben Hudson PTS 4 15 Jun 2007   National Sports Centre, London, England
7 Win 6–1   Alex Spitko TKO 1 (4), 2:11 27 Apr 2007   Wembley Arena, London, England
6 Win 5–1   David Kirk PTS 4 17 Nov 2006   York Hall], London, England
5 Loss 4–1   Aleksei Stoda TKO 3 (6), 0:57 30 May 2006   York Hall, London, England
4 Win 4–0   Gatis Skuja PTS 4 24 Mar 2006   York Hall, London, England
3 Win 3–0   Aliaksandr Zhuk PTS 4 27 Jan 2006   Goresbrook Leisure Centre, Dagenham, England
2 Win 2–0   Vadzim Astapuk TKO 2 (4), 2:55 4 Nov 2005   York Hall, London, England
1 Win 1–0   Geraint Harvey KO 1 (4), 2:57 7 Oct 2005   York Hall, London, England
Preceded by British Light Middleweight Champion
March 26, 2010 - May 13, 2011
Succeeded by

References edit

  1. ^ "BoxRec - Sam Webb". Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  2. ^ Gareth A Davies (19 October 2008). "British boxer Gilbert Eastman in intensive care following life-saving surgery". Telegraph.co.uk. Archived from the original on 23 October 2008. Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  3. ^ "BBC SPORT - Boxing - Eastman set to make full recovery". Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  4. ^ Boxing News | No Small task for Webb
  5. ^ "Webb stands tall to beat Small". SkySports. Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  6. ^ "BBC Sport - Sam Webb defends his British light middleweight title". Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  7. ^ men Administrator (17 May 2011). "Prince Arron back with a bang". men. Retrieved 3 August 2015.