Gerald Washington (boxer)


Gerald Washington is an American professional boxer who challenged for the WBC heavyweight title in 2017.

Early life

Washington was born to an African American father and a Mexican American mother, and lived in Mexico for part of his childhood. He served in the United States Navy. He went on to play tight end and defensive end for the University of Southern California. In the NFL, he was member of the Seattle Seahawks and Buffalo Bills practice squads.

Professional career

Early career

At the somewhat advanced age of 30 Washington made his pro debut in 2012. In his first professional fight, Washington knocked out Blue DeLong at the HP Pavilion in San Jose, California. A month later in August, Washington defeated Gary Cobia via 1st-round TKO at the Fantasy Springs Casino in California. Washington's first decision win came in his 3rd professional fight against Terrance Perro. Perro was knocked down once in round 1, after 4 rounds the scorecards were 40–34, 39–35, and 39–35 in favor of Washington.
On June 8, 2013, Washington fought 40 year old veteran Sherman Williams to an 8-round unanimous decision victory at the Home Depot Center in Carson, California. Since 2005, Williams had only lost two of his last thirteen fights. The three judges all had it 79-72 in favour for Washington. In April 2014, Washington scored a 2nd-round knockout of fellow American Skipp Scott. There was controversy after the fight as Scott took a knee, but was hit with a body shot after he was on the canvas. The stoppage was at 1 minute, 40 seconds of round two. Due to the controversy, Scott's team filed a protest to correct the decision.
Washington fought veteran journeyman Travis Walker in June 2014. The fight ended when Washington stopped Walker in round 2, following some hard power shots. Walker had trouble getting back up and the referee waved the fight off. Two months later, Washington was taken the 8-round distance for the first time when he fought 28 year old Nagy Aguilera. Washington won on the scorecards 78–74, 78–74, and 77–75.
Washington next fought in December 2014 against 39 year old journeyman Mike Sheppard at the Pechanga Resort & Casino in Temecula, California. The fight lasted just 1 minute and 26 seconds as Washington dropped Sheppard twice.

Career from 2015–2016

On March 13, 2015 Washington went the 8 round distance, winning a wide decision of 78–71, 79–70, and 79–70, against 37 year old journeyman Jason Gavern. The fight took place at the Citizens Business Bank Arena in Ontario, California on the undercard of Andre Berto vs. Josesito Lopez interim welterweight title fight. Gavern was dropped three times in the fight.

Washington vs. Mansour

In September 2015, it was announced that Washington would fight heavyweight contender Amir Mansour at the Little Creek Casino Resort in Shelton, Washington. Washington had his best win to date in March 2015 when he beat longtime veteran Jason Gavern in a 10-round decision victory. The fight took place on Tuesday 13 October 2015. The fight was to take place on Premier Boxing Champions on Fox Sports 1 from the Little Creek Casino Resort, in Shelton, Washington.
In a controversial decision, Washington and Mansour fought to a 10-round draw. The final judges' scores were 97–93 for Washington, 96–94 for Mansour, and 95–95. Washington looked to be fading after round 4, he previously had a reputation of being gassed out after 5 rounds in previous fights. Washington appeared to lose the last 6 rounds of the fight due to his running, holding and low punch output. Washington was mostly just holding and running away from Mansour from rounds 5 to 10. Mansour was able to land a lot of body shots that clearly bothered Washington and him holding on and doing a lot of shoving. The crowd loudly booed the outcome.

Washington vs. Chambers

On February 2, 2016 a fight between Washington and rising Colombian prospect Óscar Rivas was set to take place at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California on February 27 on Showtime. Two days before the fight, the California State Athletic Commission conducted an eye exam, which Rivas failed. The scheduled 10-round bout was cancelled.
On April 6, it was announced that Washington would fight former world title challenger Eddie Chambers on April 30 at the StubHub Center, Carson, California. it was scheduled to be a 10-round bout, but this changed to 8 rounds. Washington threw three times the amount of punches and used his big size advantage to beat Chambers by an 8-round unanimous decision. The final judges' scores were 79–73, 80–72, and 80–72.

Washington vs. Austin

On July 11, it was announced that Washington would fight 47 year old American Ray Austin on the undercard of Wilder-Arreola on July 16, 2016 at the Legacy Arena in Birmingham, Alabama. Washington delivered by stopping veteran Austin in round 4 via knockout. Washington unloaded a flurry of punches followed by a straight right which put Austin flat on his back.

Career from 2017–2019

Washington vs. Wilder

On January 26, 2017, Washington became a front runner to land a fight against WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder at the Legacy Arena in Birmingham, Alabama, on February 25 on Fox. This came after Wilder's original opponent for the fight, Polish boxer Andrzej Wawrzyk, tested positive for stanozolol, an anabolic steroid, during testing for the WBC's Clean Boxing Program. The fight was officially confirmed on January 30, 2017. Washington released a statement following the announcement, "I'm very happy to get this opportunity to fight for my first world championship. I know that I'll be fighting Deontay Wilder in his backyard, but that adds more excitement... I'm looking forward to going to Birmingham and coming away with a victory just like I did in my last fight there."
Wilder would win the bout by TKO in the 5th round. Washington started off strong with power punches as Wilder moved around with jabs. Midway through the 5th, Wilder got Washington against the ropes and landed a combination of power shots, the last shot being a left to the head of Washington, dropping him backwards against the ropes. Washington recovered quickly on unsteady legs. The fight resumed, and Wilder unloaded heavy blows the head of Washington, missing some, but eventually leading referee Michael Griffin to halt the fight at 1 minute and 45 seconds of the round. Washington attributed his loss due to lack of experience, saying after the fight, "I just got a little impatient. I was trying to go for it. It was an even boxing match. I could have kept it like that and kept it boring. I don't know why I fell asleep there. I guess I lost a little focus."
Washington earned $250,000 from the fight while Wilder earned $900,000. The fight was watched by an average audience of 1.76 million viewers, peaking at 1.86 million. The bout was the most watched boxing match in the United States for 2017 until the Thurman-Garcia unification fight drew 3.74 million on March 4.

Washington vs. Miller

On June 27, it was announced that Washington would fight unbeaten heavyweight contender Jarrell Miller on the undercard of Garcia-Broner at the Barclays Center in New York on July 29, 2017 in a 10-round bout. Miller weighed in a career high 298.8 pounds and Washington weighed 248 pounds, 9 pounds heavier than when he challenged Wilder for the WBC title in February 2017. After the weigh in, the face off was tense as Miller trash-talking to Washington, who never did any trash-talking back. Miller then threw his promotional cap towards Washington as the face off was broken up. Miller broke down Washington over 8 rounds eventually forcing the corner and referee stopping the fight. Washington had a good opening round, but Miller took control landing power shots and causing heavy punishment. By the end of the fight, both fighters looked tired. Washington suffered his second consecutive stoppage loss and Miller fought for the first time in 11 months. Stephen Espinoza, Showtime Sports general manager praised Miller and said he could soon feature on 'Showtime Championship Boxing' soon. Miller had a $70,000 purse for the win, while Washington earned $50,000.
After 11 months out, Washington returned to the ring on a Sunday edition of PBC on Fox Sports 1 on June 10, 2018. His opponent was 32 year old John Wesley Nofire. His only loss came to veteran journeyman Joey Abell in 2016. The fight took place at the Pioneer Event Center in Lancaster, California. The 10-round bout was mostly back and forth. Washington started of fast, landing big shots and applying pressure on Nofire. In round 3, Nofire landed some hard shots on Washington, however he recovered and took over, landing his own big shots. Nofire slowed down after landing his big shots. Washington remained in control for most of the fight. The three judges scored the bout 98–91, 97–92, and 97–92 in favor of Washington, giving him the much needed win and snapping his 2-fight losing streak.

Washington vs. Kownacki

On November 13, 2018 it was announced that Washington, who was at the time negotiating a possible fight with British heavyweight Joe Joyce, would fight on January 26, 2019 at the Barclays Center in New York against Polish-born, Brooklyn-based Adam Kownacki. The fight would air live on FOX, as part of their new long term deal with PBC, on the undercard of Keith Thurman vs. Josesito Lopez.

Outside of boxing

On September 16, 2014 Washington was arrested during a routine traffic stop. The arrest took place in Burbank, California. According to some sources, Washington was pulled over because his Chevrolet truck was 'straddling the lines' and also had expired tags. Washington fully cooperated with the police and was not under the influence. However the police noticed that there was a warrant for his arrest for previously driving without a licence. A bail of $5,000 was set after Washington was taken into custody.

Professional boxing record

No.ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
25Loss20–4–1 Charles MartinTKO6, 1:57Feb 22, 2020MGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, U.S..png" />
24Win20–3–1 Robert HeleniusKO8, 2:32Jul 13, 2019 Minneapolis Armory, Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
23Loss19–3–1 Adam KownackiTKO2, 1:09Jan 26, 2019 Barclays Center, New York City, New York, U.S.
22Win19–2–1 John Wesley NofireUD10Jun 10, 2018 Pioneer Events Center, Lancaster, U.S.
21Loss18–2–1 Jarrell MillerRTD8, 3:00Jul 29, 2017 Barclays Center, New York City, New York, U.S.
20Loss18–1–1 Deontay WilderTKO5, 1:45Feb 25, 2017 Legacy Arena, Birmingham, Alabama, U.S.
19Win18–0–1 Ray AustinKO4, 1:45Jul 16, 2016 Legacy Arena, Birmingham, Alabama, U.S.
18Win17–0–1 Eddie ChambersUD8Apr 30, 2016 StubHub Center, Carson, California, U.S.
17Draw16–0–1 Amir MansourSD10Oct 13, 2015 Little Creek Casino Resort, Shelton, U.S.
16Win16–0 Jason GavernUD8Mar 13, 2015 Citizen's Business Bank Arena, Ontario, California, U.S.
15Win15–0 Mike SheppardKO1, 1:26Dec 11, 2014 Pechanga Resort & Casino, Temecula, California, U.S.
14Win14–0 Nagy AguileraUD8Aug 22, 2014 Sports Center, Fairfield, U.S.
13Win13–0 Travis WalkerTKO2, 0:31Jun 27, 2014 Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
12Win12–0 Skipp ScottTKO2, 1:40Apr 3, 2014 Fantasy Springs Casino, Indio, California, U.S.
11Win11–0 Arron LyonsTKO5, 0:50Jan 24, 2014 Fantasy Springs Casino, Indio, California, U.S.
10Win10–0 Travis FultonTKO1, 2:20Oct 19, 2013 Deportivo Morelos, Mexico City, Mexico
9Win9–0 Jerry ForrestKO2, 1:32Aug 9, 2014 Fantasy Springs Casino, Indio, California, U.S.
8Win8–0 Sherman WilliamsUD8Aug 9, 2013 Home Depot Center, Carson, U.S.
7Win7–0 Curtis HarperTKO5, 0:39Mar 8, 2013 Fantasy Springs Casino, Indio, California, U.S.
6Win6–0 DJ HughleyUD4Feb 11, 2013 Fantasy Springs Casino, Indio, California, U.S.
5Win5–0 Marcus WashingtonKO1, 0:23Dec 8, 2012 Business Expo Center, Anaheim, California, U.S.
4Win4–0 Brandon SpencerKO3, 0:21Dec 3, 2012 Business Expo Center, Anaheim, California, U.S.
3Win3–0 Terrance PerroUD4Sep 29, 2012 Phoenix Club, Anaheim, California, U.S.
2Win2–0 Gary CobiaTKO1, 1:22Aug 24, 2012 Fantasy Springs Casino, Indio, California, U.S.
1Win1–0 Blue DeLongTKO1, 2:36Jul 28, 2012 HP Pavilion, San Jose, California, U.S.