Tuesday 30 July 2024 | Written by Supplied | Published in Boxing, Sports
Teremoana Teremoana celebrates his win in Paris. Photo: AAP/24072918
Inspired by the memory of his late grandfather and spurred on by family in the crowd, Cook Islander Teremoana Teremoana has become the first Australian to win a Super Heavyweight fight in Olympic history.
The 26-year-old beat Ukrainian Dmytro Lovchynskyi in a first-round knockout with a devastating display of power in their 92kg+ bout at the North Paris Arena on Monday.
He will now fight reigning Olympic champion Bakhodir Jalolov from Uzbekistan in the quarter-finals on Friday.
“We’re here to win and I’m just glad I got it out of the way in the first round,” Teremoana said.
“I wasn’t planning to go for the knockout, I am confident in my strength, but the plan was to go out there and box, and I was landing a few clean punches and he was feeling it.
“We’ve been working on everything in the past 18 months, I fought him last February and he beat me over three rounds, so I was just very happy to get my revenge.”
Teremoana boxed as a junior but gave the sport away at 19 and later travelled around Australia in a caravan.
But the passing of his grandfather just before his 21st birthday made him return to the sport and in Paris he celebrated his victory with a special dance in a nod to his heritage.
“I’m representing my grandfather, he was a Cook Islander,” he said.
“He was a family person who led by example, and I respect him so much because he walked the talk and I’m trying to be a representation of him.
“I am Teremoana Junior, named after him. I used to be known as Sampson and I decided at my 21st (birthday) that I was going to go by Teremoana.
“Since then I wanted to put his name on the world stage and I decided I would go back to boxing and do that.”
Teremoana could become the third boxer with Pacific Island heritage to win a medal at the Olympic Games, according to RNZ Pacific.
Samoan David Tua was the first boxer with Pacific Island heritage to win a medal at the Olympics, claiming bronze for New Zealand at the 1992 Games.
While Tonga's Paea Wolfgramm was the second Pacific Island boxer to win a medal at the Olympics, claiming silver at the 1996 Atlanta Games.
No other Pacific boxer has been able to follow suit.