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・ Matthew Kantakouzenos
・ Matthew Kapell
・ Matthew Kapstein
・ Matthew Karatz
・ Matthew Karwalski
・ Matthew Kasten
・ Matthew Hervey
・ Matthew Hewlett
・ Matthew Heywood
・ Matthew Higgins
・ Matthew Higgs
・ Matthew Highton
・ Matthew Hilger
・ Matthew Hill
・ Matthew Hilton
Matthew Hilton (boxer)
・ Matthew Hilton (designer)
・ Matthew Hiltzik
・ Matthew Hindley
・ Matthew Hindson
・ Matthew Hislop
・ Matthew Hitt
・ Matthew Hittinger
・ Matthew Hoch
・ Matthew Hockley
・ Matthew Hodgson
・ Matthew Hogg
・ Matthew Hoggard
・ Matthew Holden
・ Matthew Holland (cricketer)


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Matthew Hilton (boxer) : ウィキペディア英語版
Matthew Hilton (boxer)

Matthew Hilton (born December 27, 1965) was a Canadian boxer from Montreal, Quebec and one of the four brothers from the fighting family Hilton.
He started boxing professionally in early 1983, and while doing so lived (along with his father/trainer and other family members) a nomadic lifestyle, moving from place to place in a 'movable trailer.'
==Fighting Style==
It was tough growing up for Hilton, but he transferred that toughness to the ring, at least as his career started. Though Matthew had decent boxing skills for a brawler, he preferred to press forward, back up his opponents, and detonate his punishing left hooks, and powerful overhand rights. Two of the big names he faced in his rise to stardom were former 3-time world champion Wilfred Benítez and former world middleweight champion Vito Antuofermo, who both fell victim to his devastating KO power. He won the IBF junior middleweight title, and brought Canada its first world boxing title since the 1940s, with a 15-round unanimous decision over defender Buster Drayton〔 on ABC in Montreal, June 27, 1987, which was also named KO Magazines ''TV Fight of the Year'' for 1987. He made one defense on the Tyson-Biggs undercard on HBO in October of that year, busting and bruising up a totally outclassed Jack Callahan before the referee called things off after two rounds. His next fight was an exciting non-title bout on ESPN in the middleweight division against Paul Whitaker of New Orleans, who was knocked down and brutally battered by Hilton before being KO'd in the fourth round. Matthew then apparently had the upper hand in the early going in his next defense - a November 1988 matchup with Robert Hines on Showtime.
After knocking a bloodied Hines down twice, he let Hines back in the fight, and Hines steadily hammered a very tired and not very well prepared Hilton in winning a come-from-behind 12-round unanimous decision, after which Hilton would be champ no more. Hilton admitted after the fight that he had sustained rib injury during training for that fight (''Between rounds, Hilton could be heard telling his father that he couldnt throw his left hand''). Matthew later rebounded with a lackluster (though controversial) draw against Fermin Chirino, a bout in which many felt that Matthew had won by a 10-round unanimous decision, followed by two more exciting bouts against journeyman Tim T. Williams (on ESPN), who was KO'd in round 10, and Tennessee toughman Knox Brown, who had only previously been down at the hands of John Mugabi, and was again floored by Hilton in a 10-round decision victory on the USA Network. His last crack at a title was on the Foreman–Cooney undercard in January 1990, when his eyes were again swollen shut by the punches of defending WBO middleweight titlist Doug DeWitt.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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