Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Kevin Kelley (boxer)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Real name
  
Kevin Kelley

Stance
  
Height
  
1.70 m

Draws
  
2

Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Professional Boxer

Total fights
  
72


Rated at
  
Name
  
Kevin Kelley

Division
  
Featherweight

Nickname(s)
  
The Flushing Flash

Wins
  
60

Martial art
  
Boxing

Losses
  
10

Kevin Kelley (boxer) httpsiytimgcomvixalSVxjZishqdefaultjpg


Born
  
June 29, 1967 (age 56) Brooklyn, New York, USA (
1967-06-29
)

Kevin Philip Kelley (born June 29, 1967) is an American former professional boxer who competed from 1988 to 2009, and held the WBC featherweight title from 1993 to 1995.

Contents

Kevin Kelley (boxer) Kevin Kelley 40 Brown s 1999 Boxing Card

Amateur career

Kevin Kelley (boxer) Former world champ Kevin Kelley Talks Floyd Mayweather

Kelley won two New York Golden Gloves Championships as well as the 1985 119 lb Sub-Novice Championship and the 1986 119 lb Open Championship. In 1988 Kelley advanced to the finals of the 125 lb Open division and was to have met Fred Liberatore in the finals. Kelley was injured and could not fight. Liberatore was declared the Champion by Default-Injury.

Kevin Kelley (boxer) Recent Additions Kevin Kelley signed 10x8 photograph

In the Olympic box-offs he lost to Carl Daniels. His record was 62-5.

WBC featherweight champion

Kevin Kelley (boxer) Kevin Kelley boxer Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Known as the "Flushing Flash", Kelley held the WBC Featherweight title and defended it until he lost by TKO to, Mexican Alejandro Martín González, after Kelley failed to come out for the 11th round due to both eyes swollen shut. Kelley won the title by defeating Gregorio Vargas by unanimous decision in 1993.

Kevin Kelley (boxer) Best I Faced Kevin Kelley The Ring

Kelley was then signed to an HBO contract, and remained in title contention for the next decade. More known for being in big fights rather than gaining big victories, Kelley's resume includes TKO losses to boxing legends Prince Naseem Hamed and Marco Antonio Barrera and Erik Morales, both of which came during Kelley's career decline.

Loss to Hamed

Kevin Kelley (boxer) The Flushing Flash Kevin Kelley Interview 2014 YouTube

Kelley's defeats include losses to Naseem Hamed. In 1997 Hamed flew to the United States to fight there for the first time. His ceremonious arrival on the British Airways Concorde was covered by multiple media outlets. There, he and former two-time WBC Featherweight champion of the world Kevin Kelley fought in Ring Magazine's fight of the year at the Madison Square Garden in New York. Despite being dropped three times himself, Hamed put Kelley down for a third and final time to win by a fourth-round knockout. This was his first of many fights on HBO. The fight was ranked 100th in Channel 4's 100 Greatest Sporting Moments in 2002.

Kevin Kelley (boxer) Kevin Kelley Tommy Parks YouTube

Kelley knocked out former WBA featherweight champion Derrick Gainer in 1996, a loss which Gainer later avenged via unanimous decision in 1998.

Loss to Bobby Pacquiao

Kelley was then outclassed and KO'd by Bobby Pacquiao. On September 28, 2006, Kelley met Carlos Hernández in the ring. In an upset victory, Kelley put on his best performance in years, dropping Hernandez in the 4th round en route to a UD victory. Hernandez announced his retirement right after this fight.

Kelley was David Díaz's mandatory for the WBC Interim Lightweight Championship, but in his most recent bout, a close decision to former titleist Manuel Medina.

His current record is 60 wins, 10 losses, and two draws. He has 39 wins by knockout.

Life after boxing

While fighting, Kelley also has moonlighted as a color commentator, most notably for HBO. Kelley was the lead on HBO's short lived KO Nation television show. The show served as a "hip hop" based boxing broadcast, and was hosted by Ed Lover. Kelley now lives in Las Vegas, Nevada and works as a timeshare salesman for The Grandview at Las Vegas.

References

Kevin Kelley (boxer) Wikipedia