Ukraine's dominant heavyweight champion who held world titles for ten consecutive years and unified the belts multiple times.
Wladimir Klitschko was born in Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan in 1976, the son of a Soviet military officer, and became the most dominant heavyweight champion of the 2000s and 2010s — holding the IBF, WBA, WBO and IBO heavyweight titles simultaneously for over nine years, the longest reign as world heavyweight champion since the era of Joe Louis. He defended his unified titles 18 times. His jab-and-grab style — maintaining opponents at range with a precise jab, clinching to neutralise his counter-punching — was derided by critics as negative but proved almost impossible to solve. He won Olympic gold at the Atlanta Games in 1996. He lost to Corrie Sanders in 2003 and Lamon Brewster in 2004 — two unexpected defeats that prompted him to hire Emanuel Steward as trainer, a partnership that transformed him from a powerful but sometimes vulnerable champion into an almost impregnable one. He made 23 successful title defences after the Steward appointment. He lost a challenge for Anthony Joshua's titles in 2017 in a bout that generated over one million pay-per-view purchases — the largest boxing audience in British history. He retired following that defeat. He earned a PhD in sports science and has been an active Ukrainian politician, serving as Mayor of Kyiv since 2014.
Dominant heavyweight champion with exceptional jab and reach
How They Played
Technical boxer with powerful jab and clinical finishing
Lasting Impact
One of longest-reigning heavyweight champions in boxing history
IBF/WBA/WBO Heavyweight Champion 2006-2015
He defended his heavyweight title 18 times — the third most successful heavyweight title defence run in history.
Did You Know?Career Honours
- IBF/WBA/WBO Heavyweight Champion 2006-2015
- Olympic Gold 1996
- PhD in Sports Science