The Herald (Zimbabwe)

BOXING LEGEND TINAGO DIES

- Mukudzei Chingwere in GWERU and Ellina Mhlanga in HARARE

ZIMBABWE’S sporting fraternity was plunged into mourning yesterday following the death of boxing icon Langton “Schoolboy” Tinago.

Tinago, a three-time Commonweal­th champion and acknowledg­ed as the greatest boxer to come out of this country, died yesterday in Gweru at the age of 69.

The legendary boxer died at Gweru Provincial Hospital in the early hours of yesterday after having been taken ill on Sunday evening.

He was suspected to have suffered from pneumonia.

He is survived by his wife, seven children and several grandchild­ren.

Mourners are gathered at his mother’s residence at No. 42 Nkenyani Road, Mambo, Gweru.

Burial arrangemen­ts for the boxer who got his name into the Guinness Book of Records are yet to be advised, but indication­s are that he will be buried in Gweru and not his rural home in Shurugwi.

Family spokespers­on, Wellington Pombi, who is his brother, broke the sad news.

“He was taken to hospital on Sunday evening and passed away this morning (yesterday) at the General Hospital,” he said.

“It is a shock to the family and his death is a great loss to the whole family, we looked up to him a lot.

“Burial arrangemen­ts are yet to be announced. I have talked to the Minister of Sports (Kazembe Kazembe), (Midlands) Minister of State (Owen Ncube), the boxing fraternity, among many other stakeholde­rs and they are saying they want to take part in his burial.

“Remember he is an icon, a national hero and as a family we will give the nation the opportunit­y to mourn their hero.

“I have received a number of phone calls and it sounds like a lot of people are really concerned and are mourning with us.

“As a family we will be very happy if he is accorded a sendoff that is worth his heroic status of being the only sportspers­on to achieve the biggest number of accolades at his time.

“His death has really affected our mother, who is 86, if you remember our mum used to be with him wherever he was fighting.”

Kazembe said the local sports fraternity had lost a pillar.

“It is a sad loss to Zimbabwe and Africa as a whole to lose a sportspers­on of his stature, we needed people like him to help in the resuscitat­ion of sport in the country,” said Kazembe.

“Zimbabwe is pushing to get back into the Commonweal­th and these are the people we were looking up to, especially his success in the sports fraternity.

“It is unfortunat­e we have lost him and he will be greatly missed. May his soul rest in peace.”

Tinago died a very bitter man after spirited calls for Zimbabwean­s to help him eke out a living did not get the desired response.

In April this year, the boxer appeared to foretell his death.

“I know Zimbabwean­s are fond of passing glowing eulogies when someone dies yet they would have never bothered to check on him or her during the days when that person needed them the most,” he told The Herald.

Zimbabwe National Boxing Control Board chairman Richard Hondo said the country has lost one of its greatest sports personalit­ies.

“Langton is the greatest boxer to ever emerge from Zimbabwe. I am speaking from my heart when I say Tinago is the greatest boxer to ever come from Zimbabwe since regulated boxing started in Zimbabwe in 1956.

“Since that time, up to now, he has been the greatest one.

“The reason I am saying this is, if we start with the local scene Tinago was the dual national champion at lightweigh­t and welterweig­ht.

“He retired unbeaten on the local scene, that’s how much he dominated the local scene,” said Hondo.

Some of the boxers he used to battle out against include Joao Mapepa, Jack Schoolboy, John Fighter and Safui Oke-Badan.

The Gweru-based boxer was then under the stable of one of the best boxing trainers in Zimbabwe — Dave Wellings.

Tinago’s first Commonweal­th title came soon after independen­ce when he won the lightweigh­t title after beating Nigeria’s Hogan Jimoh in his backyard in Lagos.

“Soon after Independen­ce he travelled to Nigeria to challenge for the Commonweal­th title which was then held by Jimoh in Lagos and to beat the Nigerian at home was unthinkabl­e those days.

“For Tinago, the downside was that they made him sign a contract which meant Jimoh had to be the first one Tinago had to defend the title first and he had to go back to Nigeria.

“This time it was even earlier, I think he stopped him in five or six rounds.

“He then met an Australian called Graeme Brooke, this fight took place at Granada Studios in Manchester, UK and I personally attended that one because I was away from work on a sabbatical.

“That was second time he became champion in the lightweigh­t against Brooke, then he lost to a British boxer — Mo Hussain — six months later,” Hondo said.

Tinago went on to fight in super featherwei­ght division against Safui Oke-Badan and won the title to become three-time Commonweal­th champion, with two titles coming from the lightweigh­t division.

Boxing Board member Patrick Mkondiwa, who worked with Tinago, said he was a discipline­d and humble person.

“Langton Tinago was a very humble person, down to earth, he was a legend in boxing, but he would ask for advice, especially from us administra­tors.

“He would call if there was something he was working on.

“He is one of the guys who pushed Gweru City Council to get a boxing licence and we used to have some tournament­s there. Of course they were few, but he pushed for it, he did his part.

“It’s a sad loss considerin­g this guy has a record that is not yet broken at Commonweal­th.

“He is someone who was nurturing other upcoming boxers. When you are talking of discipline he was the best,” said Mkondiwa.

 ??  ?? THE GOLDEN BOY . . . Legendary Zimbabwean boxer Langton “Schoolboy” Tinago (right) prepares to fire a big right onto the head of Nigeria’s Safin Oke Badan during their showdown in 1981
THE GOLDEN BOY . . . Legendary Zimbabwean boxer Langton “Schoolboy” Tinago (right) prepares to fire a big right onto the head of Nigeria’s Safin Oke Badan during their showdown in 1981

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