Misplaced Pages

Eagle Kyowa

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 718 Bot (talk | contribs) at 07:01, 21 August 2008 (Reverted edits by Betacommand (talk) to last version by Tassedethe). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Revision as of 07:01, 21 August 2008 by 718 Bot (talk | contribs) (Reverted edits by Betacommand (talk) to last version by Tassedethe)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Eagle Den Junlaphan
BornDen Junlaphan
(1978-12-04) December 4, 1978 (age 46)
Phichit, Thailand
NationalityThailand Thai
Other namesEagle
Statistics
Weight(s)Strawweight
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights20
Wins18
Wins by KO6
Losses2
Draws0
No contests0

Eagle Den Junlaphan (born as Den Junlaphan on December 4, 1978 in Phichit province, Thailand) is a professional boxer in the strawweight (105 lb) division (he also calls himself Eagle Akakura). His record is 18-2 (6 KOs). He is a former WBC world strawweight champion.

Den Janlaphan originally won the WBC strawweight title on January 10, 2004, when he defeated José Antonio Aguirre. In his second defense of the title, a shoulder injury forced him to lose to Isaac Bustos by TKO. Kyowa fought against Katsunari Takayama for the WBC strawweight title again in his first match after the injury (eight months later, on August 6, 2005). Den Janlaphan regained the title in that match with a unanimous decision victory. He has defended the title four times since then. He made his most recent defense in June, 2007, against Akira Yaegashi.

Biography

Eagle Den Janlaphan was born as the eight of nine children in Phichit, Thailand. He entered Thammasat University at the age of 16, and began boxing, making his amateur debut in 1995. He turned pro, and made his professional debut in January, 2000, in Bangkok, Thailand. He transferred to the Kadoebi Houseki Gym in Tokyo, Japan, and made his Japanese debut in August, 2001 as "Eagle Okuda", winning by first round knockout. He won the WBC Minimumweight title in January, 2004, beating Jose Antonio Aguirre by decision. He made his first defense in May of the same year, but lost his second defense in December, 2004 against Isaac Bustos. The fight was stopped in the 4th round due to a shoulder injury by Kyowa. He made his return in August, 2005, against Katsunari Takayama, who had beaten Bustos to win the WBC Minimumweight title. Kyowa won by decision, regaining his title.

Kyowa made two more defenses in 2006 (third total defense), but almost lost his title to journeyman Lorenzo Trejo in November, 2006. Kyowa dropped Trejo in the 3rd round, but was knocked down twice in the 6th. All three judges awarded Kyowa the decision by one point, and Kyowa won a close third title defense (fourth total).

He met Akira Yaegashi, the WBC's 6th ranked contender, on June 4, 2007 in Yokohama, Japan, for his fourth defense (fifth total). Kyowa dominated the young challenger from the first round to make his fourth straight defense by unanimous decision. He lost a point for an accidental head-butt in the 2nd round, but knocked down Yaegashi in the 10th round to secure his victory. All three judges awarded him the win by over ten points. This fight also utilized the open scoring approved by the World Boxing Council. Every four rounds, they would announce the official scoring of the fight. The Japan Boxing Commission is one of the few organizations that has used the WBC's open scoring feature thus far.

Notes

  • He has a Japanese wife, who he married in Thailand in 2000. He has two children, born in 2003 and 2004. His wife is a former kickboxer.
  • He has changed his ring name several times, making his amateur and professional debut with different ring names, and making his Japanese debut as "Eagle Okuda" (イーグル奥田). He changed his ring name to "Eagle Akakura" (イーグル赤倉) after his sponsor in 2003, and finally to "Eagle Kyowa," after the Kyowa buildings company became his sponsor. However, Kyowa went out of business after being investigated over a yakuza connection, forcing Kyowa to change his ring name again to his birth name, Den Janlaphan.
  • He decided he wanted to become a boxer after seeing legendary Thai fighter Khaosai Galaxy on TV.
  • During his childhood, he did not have any money to pay for a ferry ride, and swam across a river to get to school.
  • He has challenged Japanese boxer Koki Kameda several times, but Kameda's management has never acknowledged Kyowa's calls, and it is unlikely that the two will ever fight.

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ BoxRec.com editors. "Eagle Kyowa." BoxRec.com. URL accessed 13 July 2006.

External links

Preceded byJosé Antonio Aguirre Strawweight boxing champion (WBC)
January 10, 2004December 18, 2004
Succeeded byIsaac Bustos
Preceded byKatsunari Takayama Strawweight boxing champion (WBC)
August 6, 2005November 29, 2007
Succeeded byOleydong Sithsamerchai

Template:Persondata

Categories: