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Eddie Haddad(February 20, 1928 inWinnipeg,Manitoba– August 14, 1978 inChilliwack,British Columbia)[1]was a boxer primarily active in the 1940s inManitobaandBritish Columbia.His first major international tournament was at the1948 Olympic Gamesas a lightweight boxer where he lost in the quarterfinals to the eventual gold medalist, Joseph Vissers of Belgium. Haddad was also a Canadian team member of the1950 British Empire Games(now called theCommonwealth Games).
In local amateur boxing in British Columbia one of his important achievements was the 1948Golden Boyaward.[2]
1948 Olympic results
editBelow are the results of Eddie Haddad, a Canadian lightweight boxer who competed at the 1948 London Olympics:
- Round of 32: defeated Ezz El-Din Nasir (Egypt) on points
- Round of 16: defeated Edward Grey (Ceylon) on points
- Quarterfinal: lost to Joseph Vissers (Belgium) on points
Haddad is an inductee in the Military, Manitoba and the Greater Victoria Sports Halls of Fame.[3]
Hall of Fame inductions
editIn 2010, Haddad was one of 15 to be the core group of inductees to the BC Amateur Boxing Hall of Fame. Some others of note were Freddy Stephen Fuller, Frank Albert Scott and Dale Walters in the boxer category[4]
Haddad was inducted into theManitoba Sports Hall of Famein 2008.[5]
References
edit- ^Eddie Haddad's profile at Sports Reference.com
- ^BC Amateur Boxing News
- ^Greater Victoria Sports Hall of FameArchived2008-07-16 at theWayback Machine
- ^BC Amateur Boxing Hall of Fame
- ^"Eddie Haddad".Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame - Honoured members database.Sport Manitoba.Retrieved10 November2021.