Nickname(s) Super Hooper Height 1.80 m Losses 1 Role Boxer Draws 0 | Name Damien Hooper Total fights 9 Nationality Australian Weight 80 kg Wins by ko 8 | |
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Rated at 80 kg (180 lb) Light Heavyweight Born |
Rob powdrill v damien hooper knockout 8 november 2014
Damien 'Super' Hooper (born 5 February 1992) in Toowoomba, Queensland) is an Indigenous Australian professional boxer. Selected to represent Australia at the 2012 Summer Olympics in the light heavyweight division.
Contents
- Rob powdrill v damien hooper knockout 8 november 2014
- Damien hooper v marion alta
- Early life
- Amateur
- 2012 London Summer Olympics
- Professional boxing
- Personal life
- Controversy
- References

Damien hooper v marion alta
Early life

Hooper was raised by his grandmother, Lillian Weribone, in a Dalby Queensland, Australia. Hooper began boxing at the age of eleven with older brother Troy Hooper, His early career was nurtured by Dalby policeman Chris Seng, a former top pro boxer who saw the fight game as a way of keeping local youngsters in the gym and out of strife. . By the age of 11 hooper had his first boxing match weighing 42 kg
Amateur

In 2010, he became the first Indigenous Australian to win a junior world title when he won the 75 kg category at the Youth Olympics in Singapore. In the same year, he won a silver medal at the Youth World Championships in Baku, Azerbaijan, and was selected in the Australian team for the 2010 Commonwealth Games in New Delhi. He was an Australian Institute of Sport boxing scholarship holder.

The following year, Hooper stepped up a weight division and into open competition. He returned to Baku for the 2011 World Amateur Boxing Championships – Light heavyweight 2011 World Amateur Boxing Championships, where he made the quarter finals, being edged out by Julio Cesar la Cruz 13:14 and earned direct qualification for the London Olympics. In the last of his 180 amateur fights,
2012 London Summer Olympics
At the 2012 London Summer Olympics, he beat Marcus Browne then he lost on points to 81 kg gold medallist Egor Mekhontsev of Russia.
Professional boxing
Before he made his debut in 2013, Hooper signed with Ricky Hatton's Hatton Promotions by 2014 he had 9-0 8KO. Then momentum in Hooper's promising professional career stalled, with the Olympians loss to Rob Powdrill in November 2014 then in 2015 He lost his professional deal with Ricky Hatton’s promotional company and spent a year in jail for assault. 2017 Hooper (12-1, 8KO) took on unbeaten Russian Umar Salamov (19-0, 14KO) on the undercard to the Pacquiao v Horn blockbuster and got a unanimous decision 96-94 on all three judges score cards to win the WBO International light heavyweight title and vacant IBF International light heavyweight title improving his record to 13-1 8KO.
Personal life
Hooper's older brother Troy died in 2012 in a workplace accident, two months after he fought at the London Olympics. He traces his Indigenous family ancestry to the Kamilaroi people. He is recognized in the Australian Olympic Committee list of Australian Indigenous Olympians.
Controversy
On 30 July, in London at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Hooper stepped into the ring for his Olympic bout wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the Australian Aboriginal flag: the same flag now approved to fly on public buildings in Australia. The Australian Olympic Committee demanded he make a public apology. Wearing the shirt was said to have breached the Olympic Charter. "I'm representing my culture, not only my country", said Hooper. "I'm proud of what I did."
On August 2013, Magistrate Damian Carroll fined him $1500 and recorded a conviction against him after the 21-year-old became so aggressive with police after a night of drinking in Toowoomba that he had to be put in a padded cell.