Patrick Majewski (born December 23, 1979) is a retired Polish American professional boxer who was the NABF Middleweight professional boxing champion. He was the highest world ranked Polish boxer based in the United States along with former Heavyweight contender Tomasz Adamek during his career. Nicknamed 'The Machine', Majewski was a wrestler in high school who also excelled in Karate. Majewski went to college to become a teacher in Poland, but later moved Atlantic City, New Jersey in the United States.

Patrick Majewski
NABF Middleweight champion Patrick Majewski in the ring at Bally's Atlantic City, photo by sports writer Robert Brizel
Born
Przemysław Majewski

(1979-12-23) December 23, 1979 (age 44)
Radom, Poland
NationalityPolish
Other namesThe Machine
Statistics
Weight(s)Middleweight
Height6 ft 0 in (183 cm)
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights24
Wins21
Wins by KO13
Losses3
Draws0
No contests0

Amateur career

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After coming to the United States on a student visa exchange visa, Majewski took up amateur boxing. As an amateur, Majewski won the Pennsylvania Golden Gloves title at 165 pounds twice.

Professional career

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Majewski began his pro career in 2006 late at age 26 with a 17 fight win streak, including a ten-round decision win over Marcus Upshaw to win the vacant WBO NABO middleweight title in 2011.

On July 7, 2012, Majewski won the vacant NABF middleweight title with a fifth round stoppage over Irish Chris Fitzpatrick at Bally's Atlantic City Hotel Casino in Atlantic City, New Jersey.[1]

Training Background

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Majewski's first trainer in Atlantic City was James 'Rocky' McRae. Currently, Majewski is trained by Atlantic City-based trainers Arnold Robbins and Bill Johnson, father the late world lightweight titleholder Leavander Johnson.[2] Majewski is promoted by Global Boxing Promotions, which promotes professional boxing and Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) fighters, as well as amateur boxing.[3]

Acting career

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Majewski knocks down his opponent, but subsequently gets knocked out in an imaginary middleweight title bout in season one, episode 8 of the 2012 Spanish television series Cloroformo.[4]

Professional Boxing Record

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21 Wins (13 knockouts), 3 Losses, 0 Draw
Result Record Opponent Type Round Date Location Notes
Loss 21–3   Curtis Stevens TKO 1 (10) 2014-01-24   Resorts International, Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA
Loss 21–2   Patrick Nielsen UD 12 (12) 2013-09-08   Frederikshavn
Win 21–1   Jamaal Davis UD 10 (10) 2013-02-23   Atlantic City, New Jersey
Win 20–1   Latif Mundy MD 10 (10) 2012-09-29   Atlantic City, New Jersey
Win 19–1   Chris Fitzpatrick RTD 5 (10) 2012-07-07   Atlantic City, New Jersey Won vacant WBC-NABF middleweight title
Win 18–1   Antwun Echols TKO 3 (8) 2012-04-07   Southaven, Mississippi
Loss 17–1   Jose Miguel Torres TKO 6 (10) 2011-11-05   Uncasville, Connecticut Lost WBO-NABO;
For vacant WBC-NABF middleweight title
Win 17–0   Marcus Upshaw UD 10 (10) 2011-06-11   Southaven, Mississippi Won vacant WBO NABO Middleweight title
Win 16–0   Allen Medina TKO 1 (6) 2011-04-01   Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Win 15–0   Eddie Caminero TKO 8 (8) 2010-12-09   Newark, New Jersey
Win 14–0   Joe Gomez TKO 7 (8) 2010-10-16   Kissimmee, Florida
Win 13–0   Loren Myers TKO 6 (8) 2010-05-22   Atlantic City, New Jersey
Win 12–0   Anthony Pietrantonio UD 6 (6) 2010-02-06   Newark, New Jersey
Win 11–0   Latif Mundy UD 8 (8) 2009-06-06   Atlantic City, New Jersey
Win 10–0   Jimmy Lubash TKO 7 (8) 2009-04-24   Newark, New Jersey
Win 9–0   Danny Rivera RTD 5 (6) 2008-11-25   Melville, New York
Win 8–0   Ariel Espinal UD 4 (4) 2008-05-09   Atlantic City, New Jersey
Win 7–0   Victor Paz TKO 2 (6) 2008-02-15   Atlantic City, New Jersey
Win 6–0   Nick Collins KO 1 (4) 2007-11-10   Wildwood, New Jersey
Win 5–0   Maurice Williams UD 4 (4) 2007-08-31   Atlantic City, New Jersey
Win 4–0   Vincent Irwin TKO 3 (6) 2 Jun 2007   Atlantic City, New Jersey
Win 3–0   Esteban Cordova UD 4 (4) 2007-02-16   Franklin Square, New York
Win 2–0   Ken Dunham TKO 2 (4) 2006-12-24   New York, New York
Win 1–0   Terry Peacock TKO 2 (4) 2006-09-20   New York, New York

References

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  1. ^ "Majewski wins NABF title". fightnews.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04.
  2. ^ "Patrick "The Machine" Majewski: The Accidental Middleweight - Boxing News".
  3. ^ "FROM A TRUE PASSION FOR BOXING". globalboxing.com. GLOBAL BOXING. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
  4. ^ "Patrick majewsski - Bing video".
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