Walid Smichet, born on 17 August 1979, is a professional boxer based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Known by the nickname "Tempete de Sable" ("The Sand Storm"), Smichet competed in the middleweight division. He gained recognition for his punching power in both hands.

Walid Smichet
Born
Walid Smichet

(1979-08-17) 17 August 1979 (age 45)
NationalityTunisia
Canada
Other names"La Tempete de Sable"
"The Sand Storm"
Statistics
Weight(s)middleweight
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights32
Wins21
Wins by KO15
Losses8
Draws3
No contests0

Smichet has been the Canadian middleweight champion and also contended for the IBF International middleweight title.[1]

Background

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Smichet was born in Tunisia although he fought all of his professional fights in Canada.[1]

Career

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Amateur career

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Walid Smichet boxed as an amateur from the age of nine. He was the Tunisian national champion for five years, from 1994 to 1999, and represented Tunisia at the 2001 Francophone Games.[2]

Professional debut

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After remaining in Canada post the Francophone Games, Walid Smichet embarked on his professional boxing career in July 2002. His debut match, which took place at the Pierre-Charbonneau Centre in Montreal, resulted in a victory on points against Martin Desjardins. Following this, Smichet experienced mixed results in his next two bouts, recording a loss and a draw, both determined by points.

However, Smichet's subsequent career trajectory showed a notable upswing. Out of his next 14 fights, he secured victories in 13, with one ending in a draw. Notably, his punching prowess was evident as he achieved knockouts in 10 of these bouts.[1]

Donny McCrary fight

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Following this four-year unbeaten stretch, Walid Smichet then faced Donny McCrary, star of the reality TV boxing show The Contender, at the Montreal Casino, in February 2006.

McCrary landed strong punches throughout, notably in the second round. However, Smichet waved McCrary forward dismissively and then streamed forward, and towards the later rounds outworked McCrary.[3]

The fight was over after eight rounds and was scored a draw with one judge each giving the decision to either fighter and the other judging it a draw.[1]

Canadian middleweight title

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Smichet's most high-profile fight came when he fought for his first title belt against Matt O'Brien. They faced each other for the Canadian middleweight interim title in March 2007 again at the Montreal Casino.

O'Brien, who was undefeated in his professional career with a record of 17 straight wins, fought well and was ahead on the judges scorecards when with less than half a minute remaining in the bout he was caught with a right-hand from Smichet and knocked clean out.

Smichet was then handed the full title after Byron Mackie failed to defend his belt against him.[1][4]

Demers and the IBF International middleweight title

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Smichet then faced Sebastien Demers for his newly won Canadian title and the IBF International Middleweight title. Demers had just been beaten for the first time in his career after facing Arthur Abraham for the IBF middleweight title in Germany.

Prefight Smichet had predicted that he would knockout Demers within eight rounds. Smichet was initially the aggressor and pushed forward relentlessly to take Demers out of his rhythm, however he lost momentum towards the end of the fight and Demers' superior technique pulled him through. Demers won a clear points verdict, however, the decision was met with a chorus of boos with commentators stating that the fight was much closer than the scorecards suggested with Demers just nicking many of the rounds. Demers stated, "I thought I won the rounds, but closely!".[1][3][5]

John Duddy fight

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On Feb 23, 2008, Smichet waged war against Irish boxer John Duddy. The fight he is best remembered for and was a candidate for 2008 Fight of The Year. on the undercard of the Wladimir Klitschko world heavyweight title unification fight versus WBO belt holder Sultan Ibragimov at the Madison Square Garden in New York City. The fight stole the show away from the main event, Smichet won many of the early rounds as the two stood toe to toe and opened a massive gash over Duddy's left eye. Beginning in round 5, Smichet tired noticeably and was ultimately outboxed by Duddy. He lost by majority decision, the scores were 95-95, 92-98, 92-98.

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Boxrec. "Walid Smichet". Boxrec Fighter Page. Archived from the original on 2012-09-29. Retrieved 5 June 2007.
  2. ^ "This storm waits for nobody once in the ring". GYM. Archived from the original on February 2, 2008. Retrieved 5 June 2007.
  3. ^ a b Graham Houston. "SEBASTIEN DEMERS vs WALID SMICHET". FightNews Canada. Archived from the original on 2007-10-30. Retrieved 5 January 2008.
  4. ^ Stéphane Proulx. "Walid Smichet gagne son pari mais non sans heurts". Éveil. Archived from the original on 3 March 2008. Retrieved 5 January 2008.
  5. ^ Dave Spencer. "Demers captures Canadian title!". FightNews Canada. Archived from the original on 3 March 2008. Retrieved 5 January 2008.