Garth Wood
Personal information
Full nameGarth Wood
Born (1978-06-13) 13 June 1978
Sydney, NSW, Australia
Playing information
Height179 cm (5 ft 10 in)
Weight80 kg (12 st 8 lb)
PositionWing, Fullback
Club
Years Team Pld T G FG P
1997–98 South Sydney 6 0 0 0 0
1999 Balmain Tigers 3 0 0 0 0
2004–05 South Sydney 16 6 0 0 24
Total 25 6 0 0 24
Source: [1][2]
Boxing career
NationalityAustralian
Other namesFrom the Hood
Statistics
Weight(s)Super Middleweight
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights17
Wins12
Wins by KO6
Losses4
Draws1
No contests0

Garth Wood (born 13 June 1978) is an Australian professional boxer and former professional rugby league footballer. Wood won the 2009/2010 Contender Boxing Series. He played rugby league for the South Sydney Rabbitohs and the Balmain Tigers in the NRL.

Background

Wood was born in Sydney.

Garth is the brother of Balmain Tigers, Sydney Roosters and Warrington Wolves utility Nathan Wood and the son of Newtown, Norths and Souths halfback Barry Wood.

Rugby league career

A Souths junior Wood seemed destined to play the game as father, Barry Wood, was a halfback for the club and his brother, Nathan, also a Souths junior, signed and played for fellow foundation club Balmain Tigers in 1993. Wood debuted for Souths at 17 years of age, but his rugby league career was fledging as he only played nine games for Souths and Balmain between 1997 and 1999, before four gap where he rejoined the Rabbitohs in 2004 and appeared in a further 16 games. After this Wood decided to make a career out of boxing like fellow league converts Anthony Mundine and Solomon Haumono. Wood describes the area he grew up in was a factor in his career path "When I was growing up, it was a tough area: you either played footy or fought".[3]

Boxing career

In only his eighth professional bout, on 11 January 2010 Wood became the first winner of The Contender Australia by defeating Kariz Kariuki by a split points decision after seven rounds. The win earned him $25,000 and a fight with "The Man" Mundine. Wood overcame Victor Oganov in the five round semi-final by a majority decision and stopped Israel Kani in the second round of the quarter-finals to reach the final against Kariuki. Throughout the filming of The Contender Australia Wood was rated a Super Middleweight along with all the other contestants.[4]

On 8 December 2010 Wood defeated Anthony Mundine by knockout at the Acer Arena.[5] Wood was aggressive from round 1, attempting to rough up and lure Mundine into a brawl, in the fifth round it was a left hook to the jaw that dropped Mundine while he was bending his body sideways and considerably low. Wood had to drop weight to Middleweight for the fight after the Mundine camp offered $100,000 as a sweetener. They originally wanted Wood to drop to a Junior Middleweight, but Wood refused.[6] Wood lost to Mundine in a rematch via a points decision.

Television career

Wood is a co-anchor of Fight Call Out on Fox Sports[7][8]

Professional Boxing Record

Professional record breakdown
0 matches wins losses
Date Result Opponent Method Round Time Location Notes
19 February 2014 Loss Daniel Geale RTD 6 3:00 Hordern Pavilion, Moore Park, NSW, Australia
16 May 2013 Win Virgil Kalakoda TKO 2 1:07 The Melbourne Pavilion, Flemington, VIC, Australia
15 February 2013 Win Togasilimai Letoa TKO 9 1:12 All Sorts Arena, Alexandria, NSW, Australia
12 February 2012 Loss Sam Soliman Decision (Unanimous) 12 Olympic Park Sports Centre, Homebush, NSW, Australia
13 April 2011 Loss Anthony Mundine Decision (Unanimous) 10 Brisbane Entertainment Centre, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
8 December 2010 Win Anthony Mundine KO 5 0:58 Acer Arena, Sydney, NSW, Australia

References

  1. Rugby League Project
  2. NRL Stats
  3. Petersham fighter Garth Wood is a real contender
  4. The Contender Australia Final Preview
  5. Choc topped: Mundine KO'd by hard Wood
  6. Wood to fight light against Mundine
  7. "FIGHT CALL OUT - Episode 1 - Epicentre.tv". Archived from the original on 23 October 2017. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  8. "Fight Callout". Archived from the original on 21 May 2017. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.