Vitali Klitschko

Boxer

Birthday July 19, 1971

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Belovodskoye, Kirghiz SSR, Soviet Union

Age 52 years old

Nationality Soviet Union

Height 201 cm

Weight 112 kg

#1668 Most Popular

1971

Vitalii Volodymyrovych Klychko (Віта́лій Володи́мирович Кличко́ ; born 19 July 1971), known as Vitali Klitschko, is a Ukrainian politician and former professional boxer.

1974

Originally, as karate and kickboxing were both banned in the Soviet Union, and amateur boxing was one of five sanctioned combat sports available to general public (along with judo, sport sambo, freestyle and classical wrestling), Klitschko took up boxing, being trained by former Soviet boxer, 1974 World Championships bronze medalist Anatoliy Klimanov, a head boxing coach of the CSKA Kyiv Sports Club.

After the ban was lifted and Soviets assembled their kickboxing team, Klitschko was a member.

He was competing in amateur boxing, kickboxing, and sport karate simultaneously, showing considerable success in all combat sports in which he was involved.

1991

X Summer Spartakiad of Peoples of the USSR, boxing (+91 kg), Minsk, Belarus SSR, July 1991:

1992

WAKO European Kickboxing Championships, light contact division (+89 kg), Varna, Bulgaria, November 1992:

1993

Japanese mixed martial arts promotion Pancrase – All Japan Kickboxing Federation under WKA Special Rules (no low kicks), Tokyo, Japan, 27 November 1993:

1994

ISKA World Super Heavyweight Championships, 1994:

XVI President's Boxing Cup (+91 kg) Jakarta, Indonesia, February 1994:

VII Boxing World Cup (+91 kg), Bangkok, Thailand, June 1994:

XLI World Military Boxing Championships (+91 kg), Tunis, Tunisia, 1994:

1995

XXIII Chemistry Cup (+91 kg), Halle, Germany, March 1995:

World Championships (+91 kg), Berlin, Germany, May 1995:

Military World Games (+91 kg), Ariccia, Italy, September 1995:

WAKO European Kickboxing Championships, light contact division (+89 kg), Kyiv, Ukraine, November 1995:

Amateur boxing record: 195 wins, 15 losses.

Kickboxing record: 34 wins (22 knockouts,) 2 losses (2 knockouts.)

He was a kickboxing world champion six times (winning amateur world championships twice and professional championship tournaments four times).

1996

In 1996, he finished his amateur boxing career and turned professional, signing with the German-based Universum Box-Promotion (UBP.)

1999

He held the World Boxing Organization (WBO) title from 1999 to 2000, the Ring magazine title from 2004 to 2005, and the World Boxing Council (WBC) title twice between 2004 and 2013.

Overall, he defeated 15 opponents in world heavyweight title fights, and made 12 successful title defences.

2005

He became actively involved in Ukrainian politics in 2005 and combined this with his professional boxing career until his retirement from the sport in 2013.

He holds a Doctoral Degree (Ph.D.) from Kyiv University's Physical Science Department.

As a boxer, Klitschko won multiple world heavyweight championships.

2006

From 2006 until 2015, Vitali and Wladimir (also a multiple world champion) dominated heavyweight boxing, a period widely known as the "Klitschko Era" of the division.

Klitschko formally began his political career in 2006 when he placed second in the Kyiv mayoral race.

2010

In 2010, he founded the party Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform (UDAR) and was elected for this party the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election.

2011

In 2011, Vitali and his younger brother Wladimir Klitschko entered the Guinness World Records as the pair of brothers with most world heavyweight title fight wins (30 at the time; 40 as of 2020).

2012

Klitschko's last fight was in 2012, but he remained the WBC heavyweight champion at age 42 when he announced his retirement in December 2013.

2013

He was a leading figure in the 2013–2014 Euromaidan protests, and he announced his possible candidacy for the Ukrainian presidency but later withdrew and endorsed the eventual winner Petro Poroshenko.

2014

He serves as mayor of Kyiv, and is also head of the Kyiv City State Administration, having held both offices since June 2014.

Klitschko is a former leader of the Petro Poroshenko Bloc, and is a former member of the Ukrainian Parliament.

He was elected Mayor of Kyiv on 25 May 2014.

He headed the election list of the winner of the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election, the Petro Poroshenko Bloc but gave up his parliamentary seat to stay on as mayor of Kyiv.

2015

On 28 August 2015, the UDAR party merged into Petro Poroshenko Bloc, and Klitschko became the new party leader.

Klitschko was reelected as mayor on 15 November 2015.

2019

Klitschko revived UDAR, and left Petro Poroshenko Bloc with it, in May 2019 and simultaneously announced that UDAR would take part in the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election autonomously.

UDAR failed to win any seats.

2020

Klitschko was re-elected to a second term as mayor in the 2020 Kyiv local elections, securing 50.52% of the votes in the first round of voting and thus avoiding a run-off.

Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Klitschko and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy have been internationally praised as symbols of Ukrainian resistance.