Frank Warren (promoter)

Frank Warren (born 28 February 1952) is an English boxing manager and promoter. Warren and his son George own and run Queensberry Promotions. Warren was also a founder of the British boxing television channel BoxNation which ran for over 11 years from 2012.

Frank Warren
Warren in 2018
Born (1952-02-28) 28 February 1952
Islington, London, England
NationalityEnglish
OccupationBoxing promoter

Frank Warren has promoted and managed world champions and top ranked fighters including Naseem Hamed, Frank Bruno, Tyson Fury, Josh Warrington, Joe Calzaghe, Nigel Benn, Billy Joe Saunders, Steve Collins, Chris Eubank, Amir Khan and Ricky Hatton.

Early life and early career

The son of a bookmaker, Warren trained as a solicitor's clerk with J Tickle & Co on Southampton Row in London.[1]

Promoter

Warren was approached by his second-cousin Lenny McLean who having just lost a fight and wanting a rematch, could not find a promoter. Warren agreed to become an unlicensed promoter, getting McLean a trainer who had worked with Chris Finnegan, and made the rematch at the Rainbow Theatre, Finsbury Park.[2]

Warren's first licensed show was held at the Bloomsbury Crest Hotel, in London in 1980,[1] promoting two unknown United States heavyweights. However, although he had arranged TV coverage, he was blocked from broadcasting the fight by the British Boxing Board of Control rules preventing first-timers from televising their first fights. However Warren was later given his first TV date with the BBC in a British light welterweight fight between London's champion Clinton McKenzie and Coventry contender Steve Early.[2]

Warren soon became a leading figure in British boxing, and since has managed some of Britain's best boxers of the last twenty five years, including 'Prince' Naseem Hamed, Nigel Benn, Joe Calzaghe, Ricky Hatton, Derek Chisora, Nicky Piper and Amir Khan.

Warren guided Hamed to become Britain's youngest ever world champion when he beat Steve Robinson to win the WBO Featherweight title at the Cardiff Arms Park, Wales, in 1995; he oversaw the ascent of Ricky Hatton to the IBF Light Welterweight Championship of the World after beating Kostya Tszyu in 2005; and has been with former IBF and WBO/WBC/WBA/Ring Magazine Super Middleweight Champion Joe Calzaghe throughout the majority of his 46 fight unbeaten career.

Warren signed the 2004 Olympic Lightweight silver medallist Amir Khan and guided him to be a world champion in 2009, but the two split in 2010. He continued this post-Olympic record by signing others after the 2008 Olympics.

In December 2007, Warren was elected to the International Boxing Hall of Fame and was inducted in June 2008.[3]

Sports network

Warren's major vehicles for promotion are Sports Network Ltd and Sports Network Europe, which employ 15 people, but rises up to 1,000 on the day of a big fight. In 1995 Warren signed an exclusive deal with the pay-TV operator British Sky Broadcasting, but having moved his promotions successfully around all of the UK television networks, he has now severed all ties with Sky Sports.

After the loss of the dispute with Calzaghe, Sports Network Ltd was put into administration.[4]

Boxing

Current stable

[5]

Boxer Nationality Weight Title
Masood Abdulah England English Super-featherweight
Amaar Akbar England English Super-lightweight
Khalid Ali England English Welterweight
Sonny Ali England English Super-lightweight
David Avanesyan England English Welterweight European Welterweight champion
Frank Arnold England English Super-featherweight
David Adeleye England English Heavyweight
Hannah Baggaley England English Super-welterweight
Nick Ball England English Featherweight
George Bance England English Welterweight
Royston Barney-Smith England English Super-featherweight
Denzel Bentley England English Middleweight British middleweight champion
Mohammed Bilal Ali England English Lightweight
Micky Burke Jr. England English Welterweight
Junaid Bostan England English Middleweight
Anthony Cacace Northern Ireland Northern Irish Super-featherweight British super-featherweight champion
Andrew Cain England English Bantamweight
Jamie Chamberlain England English Super-featherweight
Mark Chamberlain England English Lightweight
Raven Chapman England English Featherweight
Lennox Clarke England English Super-middleweight British and Commonwealth super-middleweight champion
Owen Cooper England English Welterweight
Jason Cunningham England English Super-bantamweight European Super-Bantamweight champion
George Davey England English Light-middleweight
Liam Davies United Kingdom British Super-bantamweight English Super-bantamweight champion
Daniel Dubois England English Heavyweight
Lewis Edmondson England English Super-middleweight
Ekow Essuman United Kingdom British Welterweight British welterweight champion
Brad Foster England English Super-bantamweight British and Commonwealth super-bantamweight champion
Charles Frankham England English Super-featherweight
Joshua Frankham England English Super-welterweight
Levi Frankham England English Super-welterweight
Tyson Fury England English Heavyweight WBC, and The Ring heavyweight champion
Tommy Fury England English Light-heavyweight
Ryan Garner England English Featherweight
William Hayden Republic of Ireland Irish Super-lightweight
Nathan Heaney England English Middleweight
James Heneghan England English Middleweight
Jake Henty England English Super-welterweight
Willy Hutchinson Scotland Scottish Light-heavyweight
Sahir Iqbal England English Welterweight
Karol Itauma England English Light-heavyweight
Ethan James England English Light-welterweight
Callum Johnson England English Light-heavyweight
Joe Joyce England English Heavyweight
Umar Khan England English Featherweight
Jonathan Kumuteo England English Super-welterweight
Louie Lynn England English Featherweight
Dennis McCann England English Bantamweight
Adan Mohamed England English Featherweight
Dylan Moran Republic of Ireland Irish Welterweight
Raheem Muhammad England English Bantamweight
Sam Noakes England English Welterweight
Arnold Obodai England English Cruiserweight
Macauley Owen England English Lightweight
Zach Parker England English Super-middleweight
Hamzah Sheeraz England English Light-middleweight
Brad Strand England English featherweight
Ezra Taylor England English Light-heavyweight
Zolani Tete South Africa South African Bantamweight
Callum Thompson England English Lightweight
Henry Turner England English Super-lightweight
Anthony Yarde England English Light-heavyweight
Aloys Youmbi England English Cruiserweight

BoxNation

In July 2011, Warren started the BoxNation TV channel alongside the Boxing Channel Media Limited group.[6] The channel was originally free-to-air and only released on the Sky platform, but on 1 December 2011 BoxNation was broadcast on Virgin Media for the first time and became a subscription channel at the same time.[7]

Shooting

On 30 November 1989, Warren was shot outside the Broadway Theatre in Barking by an unknown assailant wearing a balaclava, who was never caught. A 9mm bullet from a Luger pistol missed Warren's heart by an inch, and he lost half a lung and parts of his ribs.[8] The former boxer, Terry Marsh, who had become Warren's first world champion two years earlier, was accused of the shooting but acquitted by a jury.

Other interests

Warren was also the founder and owner of the London Arena. Beset by transport problems, he was about to raise additional finance until shot - he says the incident cost him £8million, as he was forced to sell it in 1996.[8]

Warren has major share holdings in various hotel developments in Portugal, and a share in one of New York City's top restaurants, the Michelin-starred 81, off Central Park.

Warren also invested in Hertford Town FC.

Warren also invested in Bedford RFC "Bedford Blues" during the 1996–97 season, taking over as chairman from Ian Bullerwell.[9] The club went on to win the Allied Dunbar Division 2 Championship in 1998.

Personal life

Warren is a fan of Arsenal F.C. He lives in Shephall, Stevenage[10] in Hertfordshire with his family.

Philanthropy

In September 2023 Warren joined the board of BoxWise, the UK’s leading boxing youth work charity, helping young people to make successful transitions to adulthood through sports.[11][12]

Notable television appearances

Warren appeared as himself in "Raging Pig", an episode of Operation Good Guys. Warren observed, "A few people have seen that show! It is funny, I read somewhere that someone had done a review on one of our videos and they asked why I'm such a miserable bastard - it goes to show that they don't know me. Ask anyone who knows me; I'm a pretty outgoing person. Operation Good Guys was put together by Ray Burdis, who is a good mate of mine, and I enjoyed it. Maybe people get pre-conceived views of who I am but I do enjoy myself and have my bit of fun. Ask anyone who really knows me and they'll tell you that some of stuff that is said on the Internet doesn't accurately describe me, but people have an opinion and are entitled to express it."[13]

References

  1. "Frank Warren: 'Calzaghe was the biggest disappointment. Total disloyalty ...'". The Independent. London. 13 February 2009. Retrieved 30 April 2009.
  2. "Boxing, Frank Warren: Quarter of a century of fighting his corner". The Independent. London. 5 December 2005. Retrieved 30 April 2009.
  3. "Frank Warren". International Boxing Hall of Fame. 2008. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
  4. "Warren company in administration". BBC Sport. 30 April 2009. Retrieved 30 April 2009.
  5. "Fighters Archives". Frank Warren.
  6. Davies, Gareth. "Frank Warren launches BoxNation, a new fight sports channel on Sky". The Telegraph. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
  7. Laughlin, Andrew. "BoxNation to launch on Virgin Media". Digitalspy.co.uk. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
  8. Syed, Matthew (17 February 2009). "Frank Warren still rolling with life's punches". The Times. London. Retrieved 30 April 2009.
  9. "1996-1997 Season". Bedford RFC. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
  10. Home / W. PROMOTIONS LIMITED / Frank Warren Retrieved 2016-10-01.
  11. "'Trailblazer' Windrush generation sportsman inspires sports students". Newbury Today. 12 July 2022. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  12. "This UK Foundation's Charity Is Helping Young People Punch Above Their Weight". 7 September 2022. Archived from the original on 7 September 2022. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  13. "Danny Williams should have retired after Klitschko: Warren - Boxing News". Boxingscene.com. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.