JOHANNESBURG (AP) — South African boxer Dingaan Thobela, a two-weight world champion known as “The Rose of Soweto,” has died, the ministry of sports said on Tuesday. He was 57. Thobela won the WBO lightweight title in 1990 and the WBA lightweight title in 1993, when he beat American Tony Lopez in a rematch. He moved up to super-middleweight and beat Britain’s Glenn Catley for the WBC belt with a 12th-round stoppage in 2000, his finest moment. He finished with a professional record of 40 wins, 14 losses and two draws. Thobela hailed from the famed Johannesburg township of Soweto and was widely popular in his home country as his rise coincided with South African boxing’s heyday in the 1980s and 1990s. He was one of several world-class Black fighters to emerge during the last years of apartheid, when boxing was one of the few South African sports to allow Black athletes to compete on the world stage and gain international recognition. |
BRICS summit expected to promote S. Africa's tourism sectorAgricultural collaboration yields rich dividends amid deepening tiesVoters demand crackdown on proBellinger returns from broken ribs, giving Cubs' lineup a big boostSmart tourism development conference held in NanjingZhou wants to inspire a new generation of hometown heroesBayern without fans against Arsenal, Dortmund facing knockout monsters AtleticoLunar New Year Eve sees over 190 million passenger trips across ChinaPromotion of intangible cultural heritage to enhance tourismRosie Huntington