Zygmunt_Chychła

Zygmunt Chychła

Zygmunt Chychła

Polish boxer


Zygmunt Chychła (5 November 1926 – 26 September 2009) was a Polish boxer. He won the first post-World War II Olympic gold medal for Poland.[1][2]

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Career

In 1939 he began training at the Polish boxing club Gedania, having started boxing at the age 12.[1] During the war he lost his Gdańsk citizenship and was compulsorily conscripted into the Wehrmacht in 1944.[1] In France he deserted and joined the 2nd Polish Army, led by general Władysław Anders, in Italy.[1] He returned to Poland in 1946.[1]

In 1947, he made his debut with the national boxing team of Poland, led by famous coach Feliks Stamm. He started at the 1948 London Olympic Games and reached the quarterfinal. In 1951 he won the European Amateur Boxing Championships in Milan. He was chosen the best Polish Sportspersonality of the Year in a Plebiscite of the Sport Review.

Chychła won the gold medal at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki beating in the final a representative of the Soviet Union, Sergei Scherbakov.[1] On the way to the final, he won against Július Torma (Czechoslovakia), the Olympic Champion from London in 1948 and the European Champion from Oslo in 1949. In the same year he was again selected by the Plebiscite of the Przegląd Sportowy.[1]

After the Olympic Games, he found out that he was ill with tuberculosis.[2] He decided to resign from sports. However, not wanting to lack a competitor at the 1953 European Amateur Boxing Championships in Warsaw, the Polish sports authorities introduced him by mistake, claiming that the disease had backed off.[citation needed] He again won the gold medal there. However, due to lack of treatment, Chychła's tuberculosis worsened, causing a considerable pit in his lungs. Debilitated, he ended his sporting career in 1953. In the early 1970s, he emigrated to Germany.

He boxed 17 times for the national team of Poland (15 fights won and 2 lost). In his career, he fought 263 fights: 241 won, 10 tied, and 12 lost.

He was awarded the Honourable Citizen of City of Gdańsk title in 2003.[2]

Zygmunt Chychła died on 26 September 2009 in Senior's House in Hamburg.[2]

Statistics

Chychła won the welterweight gold medal at the 1952 Helsinki Olympic games.

Olympic results

See also


References

  1. Lech Ufel (3 August 2022), "Z polskiego mistrza zrobili zdrajcę. Dezerter z Wehrmachtu bohaterem kraju", onet.pl (in Polish), Przegląd Sportowy
  2. Jacek Główczyński (27 September 2009), Pierwszy polski powojenny mistrz olimpijski nie żyje (in Polish), Moje Trójmiasto

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