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Darroll Wilson

Darroll Wilson
Statistics
Real name Darroll Lamont Wilson
Rated at Heavyweight
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Reach 79 in (201 cm)
Nationality American
Born (1966-06-08) June 8, 1966 (age 50)
Danville, Virginia
Stance Orthodox
Boxing record
Total fights 39
Wins 27
Wins by KO 21
Losses 10
Draws 2

Darroll Lamont Wilson (born June 8, 1966 in Danville, Virginia) is a former professional heavyweight boxer best known for his gutsy performances, and taking on some of the best fighters of his day.

Known as "Doin' Damage", Wilson was a prospect early in his pro career. After 13 wins and a draw he fought another unbeaten prospect in Terry McGroom light-heavy Golden Gloves champ. Wilson and McGroom fought to a ten round draw.

In Wilson's next fight he outpointed an unbeaten heavyweight in James Stanton. Not the biggest heavyweight at 215 lbs, he quietly built a record of 15-0-2 (10 KOs) before stepping onto the world stage.

In 1996, he competed in HBO's "Night of the young heavyweights". His unbeaten opponent, 25-0 Shannon Briggs was an amateur star and being touted as a future champ, he was the main feature of the card. In a huge upset, the Wilson took Briggs best shots in the opening rounds, turned the tide in the second, then knocked Briggs out for the full count in the third. This is by far the highlight #1 of Wilson's career. Briggs for a while had the reputation to be "chinny" but wasn't knocked down by George Foreman (he actually won a highly questionable decision in Foreman's last fight and became champion), lasted 5 with Lennox Lewis and the only other guy in 10 years to score a knockdown against him was Jameel McCline.

Later that year 1996, Wilson was brought back to HBO a fight later to meet another undefeated Top-prospect, the Samoan born, New Zealand Olympic bronze medallist David Tua, who had also won on the previous "young heavys" card. After two minutes of give-and-take the hard hitting Tua KO'ed Wilson in the first round with his lethal left hook.

Wilson had lost, but was still a semi-attraction, and got his second chance when he met once-beaten South African Courage Tshabalala. The two staged one of the most famous fights of the year 1997. In the first round Courage dropped Wilson with a stiff left jab 25 seconds into the fight. Things looked even worse for Wilson when he was dropped again in the third, this time much harder, with a right hand. Courage tried to finish in the fourth but Wilson fought back with the heart he showed in the Briggs fight, and leveled his opponent for the count.

Wilson's next big fight was an upset loss to Terrence Lewis by fifth round TKO in 1998. Lewis was a tough and dangerous fighter with a respected right hand, however, the result was still a surprise. Wilson was no longer a fringe contender and dropped to journeyman status.


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