Zabdiel "Zab" Judah (born October 27, 1977) is an
American professional
boxer. Judah has won five world titles between the
light welterweight and
welterweight divisions and is a former
Undisputed World Welterweight Champion.
Judah began boxing at the age of six and compiled an amateur record of 110–5. He was a two-time US national champion and three-time
New York Golden Gloves Champion. He also won the 1996
PAL National Championship. Judah attempted to earn a spot on the 1996 US Olympic boxing team. After defeating
Ishe Smith and
Hector Camacho, Jr., Judah lost to
David Díaz in the finals, preventing Judah from qualifying for the Olympic boxing team.
Judah made his professional debut as an 18 year old on September 20, 1996, in
Miami, Florida and defeated Michael Johnson by
technical knockout in the second round. After winning bouts over George Crain and Omar Vasquez in May and June 1997 respectively, Judah closed the year with first-round
knockouts over Cesar Castro, James Salava and Ricardo Vasquez. Judah began 1998 by knocking out Steve Valdez in the first round in January. Valdez, who had never been stopped in his career, went down four times in the fight. In March, Judah and his opponent, Esteban Flores, accidentally clashed heads in the second round, causing a cut to open above Flores' eye and the bout was stopped in round three as Flores could not continue because of the cut. The bout went into the books as a
technical draw, but the result was changed to a
no contest in May 1998. On April 14, 1998, Judah battered two-time
Dominican Republic champion Angel Beltre, stopping him in the second round.
The victory earned Judah a bout against Micky Ward for the vacant USBA Light Welterweight title. Judah defeated Ward by unanimous decision to win the title. Judah successfully defended the USBA title by stopping Darryl Tyson in the eleventh round on October 15, 1998. Tyson was knocked down three times before the fight was stopped.
Judah captured the
Interim IBF Light Welterweight title with a fourth-round knockout over
Wilfredo Negron in January 1999.
On February 12, 2000, at the
Mohegan Sun in
Uncasville, Connecticut, Judah fought Jan Piet Bergman for the vacant IBF Light Welterweight title. Judah knocked Bergman down twice in the first round, but Bergman sent Judah down to the canvas in the second round. Judah knocked out Bergman in the fourth round to win the title. On June 20, 2000, Judah made his first title defense against
Junior Witter in
Glasgow, Scotland. It was an awkward fight for Judah, as Witter rarely engaged in an extended exchange of punches. Witter frequently switched between fighting right-handed and left-handed, making him an elusive opponent. By the middle rounds, however, Judah's consistent body punching slowed Witter down, and in the fifth round, Judah caught Witter with a straight left hand that hurt Witter and sent his mouthpiece skittering across the ring. Judah defeated Witter by unanimous decision.
Two months later, on August 5, 2000, at the Mohegan Sun in Connecticut, Judah defeated former IBF Light Welterweight Champion Terron Millett by fourth round knockout. Judah was knocked down in the first round from a left hand. Judah rose quickly, and from that point on he dominated the fight. Judah hurt Millett with two combinations near the end of the first round. In round two, Judah sent Millett down with a right hand to the chin. Millett survived the round, but he was clearly hurt. In round four, Judah charged across the ring and inflicted a series of blows on Millett, dropping him to the canvas for the second knockdown in the fight. Millett got up, but Judah continued his assault and knocked Millett down again. Millett rose at the count of four, but his legs were unsteady and the referee decided to stop the bout.
In his third title defense, Judah stopped Hector Quiroz in the eighth round on October 20, 2000, at The Palace of Auburn Hills in Auburn Hills, Michigan. Judah battered and bloodied Quiroz until the referee followed the advice of the ringside doctor and stopped the one-sided bout.
On January 13, 2001, Judah defeated Reggie Green by tenth round technical knockout at the Mohegan Sun in Connecticut. Judah had trouble landing punches effectively against Green for the majority of the fight, but in round ten, he knocked Green down with a left hook. Green beat the count, but Judah then ran across the ring and sent Green down to the canvas with a right hand, forcing the referee to stop the fight.
On June 23, 2001, Judah defeated Allan Vester by third round knockout in his fifth successful defense of the IBF title. In round two, Judah put Vester down to the canvas twice. In the third round, Judah knocked out Vester with a left hand that connected on Vester's temple. Vester went down on his knees and nearly lost his mouthpiece. The referee stopped the fight right before the closing bell. The fight would set up a unification match between Judah and WBC and WBA Light Welterweight Champion Kostya Tszyu, who defeated Oktay Urkal on the undercard.
The much anticipated matchup between Judah and Tsyzu took place on November 3, 2001, at the
MGM Grand in
Las Vegas,
Nevada for the
Undisputed Light Welterweight Championship. Judah entered the fight as a 3-to-1 favorite to win and he won the first round by utilizing his superior quickness to land several punches on Tsyzu.
With 10 seconds left to go in round two, Tszyu landed a right hand clean on Judah's chin and he backed away from Tszyu with his hands down. Tszyu went after Judah, throwing another right hand that landed on his chin and sent Judah crashing to the canvas. Judah jumped up instinctively and tried to signal that he was fine to referee
Jay Nady, but was still dazed by the punch and fell down a second time. When Judah collapsed, Nady waved the fight over, resulting in a technical knockout victory for Tsyzu and Judah's first professional loss.
While Tszyu celebrated in his corner, Judah was in disbelief of what just happened and became infuriated. Judah picked up his stool and hurled it towards center ring. While being restrained by his father and trainer, Yoel Judah, he broke loose and walked up to Nady and stuck his gloved fist into his neck and had to be pulled off by cornermen. A few minutes later, Jimmy Lennon, Jr. announced the official decision and Judah screamed out in agony and again had to be restrained by a growing number of security guards and cornermen. Judah was fined $75,000 and suspended for six months by the Nevada State Athletic Commission.
After defeating Omar Weis by unanimous decision in July 2002, Judah challenged DeMarcus Corley for the WBO Light Welterweight title on July 12, 2003, at the Orleans Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. Judah knocked Corley down with a left hand in the third round en route to defeating Corley by split decision. Judah broke his left hand during the fight. In his first and only defense of the WBO title, Judah knocked out Jaime Rangel in the first round on December 13, 2003.
On April 10, 2004, at the
Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Judah fought
Cory Spinks for the
Undisputed Welterweight Championship. Judah had trouble at the start figuring out how to fight Spinks, the taller fighter. He could not move forward to get inside, but was having success moving laterally. Spinks scored a knockdown in the eleventh round, but Judah came back and put Spinks down to the canvas in the final round. In the end, Spinks defeated Judah by unanimous decision with scores of 114–112 twice and 116–111.
For the rest of 2004, Judah defeated Rafael Pineda by split decision and Wayne Martell by first round technical knockout. On February 5, 2005, Judah would get a rematch with Spinks at the Savvis Center in St. Louis, Missouri, Spinks' hometown. The fight was the first major bout in St. Louis in more than 40 years, and it was a sellout. Judah was the aggressor throughout the fight. He knocked Spinks down to his knees at the bell in the seventh round, but it was not ruled a knockdown. Spinks had a strong start to the ninth round and connected with a left hand, then followed with a right hand and a combination, but Judah scored a knockdown moments later. Judah pressed the attack after the first knockdown and avoided Spinks' desperate efforts to tie him up. After Spinks was knocked down for the second time, the referee stopped the fight, and Judah became the new Undisputed Welterweight Champion.
In his first fight as undisputed welterweight champion, he fought
Cosme Rivera on May 14, 2005, at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Judah sent Rivera down with a straight left hand to the face less than 30 seconds into the bout. Rivera beat the count, but was knocked down again about 10 seconds later. Judah hit Rivera hard several times in the second round, and in the third round, he connected with a left uppercut, that caused Rivera to stagger backwards and fall into the ropes before hitting the canvas. Rivera rose at the count of five, but he was badly hurt and the referee stopped the fight.
His next fight took place on January 7, 2006 at Madison Square Garden in New York City against Carlos Baldomir. For Judah, the fight was viewed as a tuneup bout that would lead to a lucrative bout between Judah and WBC Light Welterweight Champion Floyd Mayweather, Jr., which was tentatively scheduled for April.
Judah entered the fight as a 10-to-1 favorite over Baldomir.
The stage was set when Judah unsportingly punched Baldomir on the thigh during the prefight introductions instead of touching gloves to show sportsmanship. The early rounds of the fight were close, but as the rounds passed, Judah was doing less than necessary to win, while Baldomir kept applying pressure on Judah.
In round seven, Judah was hurt by a right hand and Baldomir landed a series of right hands to Judah's head along the ropes during the tenth round. Baldomir defeated Judah by unanimous decision with scores of 115–113, 114–113 and 115–112 from the three judges.
''The Ring'' named Baldomir's victory over Judah the upset of the year for 2006. Judah's IBF and WBA belts were not on the line, because Baldomir did not pay sanctioning fees to the IBF and WBA. Baldomir did win ''The Ring'' and WBC titles, while the WBA (Super) title was vacated after Judah's loss (WBA (Regular) titleholder Luis Collazo became the sole WBA Champion), but the IBF still recognized him as their champion.
With the loss to Baldomir, it appeared that Judah's much anticipated bout with Mayweather was off, but Judah's promoter
Don King and Mayweather's promoter
Bob Arum reworked the deals so the fight would go on. Mayweather was scheduled to earn a minimum $6 million while Judah was to earn $3 million plus a percentage of the profits, but because of Judah's loss, Mayweather earned a minimum $5 million while Judah was guaranteed $1 million plus a percentage of profits above $7 million. The fight took place on April 8, 2006, at the
Thomas and Mack Center in Las Vegas.
Judah started strongly and put up a valiant fight, at times matching Mayweather's speed and punching precision.
It appeared that Judah scored a knockdown in the second round when Mayweather's glove touched the canvas; however, referee Richard Steele ruled it a slip.
In round four, Judah landed a right hand to the head that caused Mayweather to retreat to the ropes and cover up. The momentum changed in the fifth round, when Mayweather hurt Judah with a combination to the face. Then Mayweather landed a right hand on the bridge of Judah's nose, and blood began to flow. The seventh round was the most dominant for Mayweather to that point. Once again, he drew blood from Judah's nose. A combination from Mayweather backed Judah into a corner, and Judah's foot movement was considerably slower than it had been earlier in the fight.
With about 10 seconds left in the tenth round, Judah hit Mayweather with a low blow and followed it with a right hand to the back of Mayweather’s head. As Mayweather hopped around the ring in pain, Steele called time to give Mayweather a rest period. Mayweather’s uncle and trainer, Roger Mayweather, climbed into the ring and approached Judah. Yoel Judah entered the ring and threw a punch at Roger. At that point, members of both fighters' camps entered the ring and an all-out melee ensued. More than a dozen security officers and police officers rushed into the ring and managed to control the situation. After the ring was cleared, Roger Mayweather was ejected from the fight. Mayweather cruised through the last two rounds on his way to a unanimous decision victory by scores of 116–112, 117–113 and 119–109.
After the fight, the purses for both fighters were withheld until video of the fight could be reviewed. Don King argued that Mayweather should have been disqualified because his uncle was the first person to enter the ring. At an April 13 hearing, the Nevada State Athletic Commission fined Roger Mayweather $200,000 and revoked his boxing license for one year. At a hearing on May 8, the Commission disciplined the other offenders in the melee. It fined Yoel Judah $100,000 and revoked his license for one year, fined Mayweather cornerman Leonard Ellerbe $50,000 and suspended his license for four months, and fined Zab Judah $350,000 and revoked his license for one year.
On April 13, 2007, Judah made his return to the ring against Ruben Galvan at the
Fitzgeralds Casino & Hotel in
Tunica, Mississippi. Judah came out strongly in the first round, landing numerous shots on Galvan. During the round, a bad cut opened near the top of Galvan's head. The referee called for a timeout to allow the doctor to take a look at the cut. Due to the severity of the cut, the fight was waved off. The cut was ruled to be caused by an accidental foul with an elbow and since the fight did not go past four rounds, the fight was ruled a no contest.
On June 9, 2007, Judah took on WBA
Welterweight Champion
Miguel Cotto in New York City before a soldout crowd at
Madison Square Garden.
In the first round, Cotto landed a low blow that put Judah to the canvas. Referee Arthur Mercante, Jr. offered a stern warning to Cotto. In the third round, Judah took yet another low blow from Cotto, which resulted in Cotto receiving a point deduction.
Cotto and Judah delivered an all-action brawl, but after weathering some difficult early rounds as he figured out Judah's southpaw style and adjusted to his speed, Cotto took over the bout. In round seven, both fighters went toe-to-toe and in round eight he hurt Judah several times. In round nine, Judah took a knee to gain a breather from Cotto's aggressive style. By the tenth round, Judah was bleeding from a cut over his right eye and was hurt by an uppercut from Cotto that sent him retreating to the ropes, but Judah stayed upright. Early in the eleventh round, Cotto landed a combination that dropped Judah to the canvas. He managed to get to his feet, but Cotto went after Judah with a relentless attack, turning him sideways along the ropes as he continued to throw punches. That forced the referee to stop the fight.
Judah, who trailed 97–91 on all three scorecards, claimed he had been weakened by the two low blows early in the fight. He said, "The first low blow was very hard. The second one took a lot out of me. The low blows affected me from the time they hit me." Cotto earned $2.5 million plus a piece of the pay-per-view profits, while Judah earned $1 million plus a percentage of the profits.
Judah fought Edwin Vazquez at the Hard Rock resort in Biloxi, Mississippi on September 7, 2007. Despite suffering a cut over his left eye, Judah defeated the overmatched Vazquez by unanimous decision. Judah hurt Vazquez several times over the course of the contest, but he injured his left hand midway through the fight and was unable to finish off Vasquez.
On November 17, 2007, in Providenciales, Judah defeated Ryan Davis by unanimous decision. Judah was scheduled to fight Shane Mosley on May 31, 2008, at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, but it was postponed after Judah needed 50 stitches in his right arm after slipping in his bathroom and smashing it through a glass shower door.
On August 2, 2008, Judah lost to
Joshua Clottey by
technical decision in a fight for the vacant IBF Welterweight title at the
Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas. Judah began the busier fighter, showing quick hands and throwing effective combinations behind a
jab. Clottey began steadily closing the distance between himself and his opponent from the third round, landing an increasing number of punches that took their toll on Judah. In round four, Clottey landed an uppercut that caused Judah to lose his balance, and by the end of the round, Judah had blood running down his nose. Judah staged a comeback in the sixth round as he landed a flurry of punches, but in the middle of the seventh round, Clottey landed a right hand that hurt Judah and caused him to back into a corner. In round nine, Judah suffered a cut over his right eye and the fight was stopped after he said he could not see. The referee had ruled the cut was caused by an accidental clash of heads and so the fight went to the scorecards. Two judges scored the fight 86–85 and the other judge scored it 87–84, all in favor of Clottey.
After the loss to Clottey, Judah fought Ernest Johnson on November 8, 2008, at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Judah dominated the bout early, but in round three, Judah suffered two cuts from accidental head butts. Finding success with lead right hands and short left hands. Judah won the bout by unanimous decision with scores of 99–91, 98–92 and 98–92.
On November 6, 2009, Judah took on Ubaldo Hernandez from Mexico at Palms Resort, in Las Vegas, Nevada. The former Undisputed Welterweight Champion won the fight by TKO in the second round.
Judah was in line for a fight with Devon Alexander, after the latter's win against Juan Urango. He has also been linked to a match with Timothy Bradley, as he was considered as a possible replacement for Marcos Maidana. The former undisputed champion publicly challenged both of them on more than one occasion in 2010. Promoter Gary Shaw tried to began negatiations with Judah for a potential bout in 2010. However, Judah declined the match but promised to fight Bradley and Alexander after a tune-up fight on July 16 at the Prudential Center in New Jersey.
The Brooklyn native's tune up fight in July was co-promoted by Main Events and Super Judah Promotions. In June 2010, Judah expressed his intention in moving down to the light welterweight division after the upcoming fight, hoping to revitalize his career. His opponent was Jose Armando Santa Cruz of Mexico (28–4; 17 KO). Judah won the bout by TKO in round three.
On November 6, 2010, Judah won a
split decision over previously undefeated
Lucas Matthysse in a fight for the vacant regional
NABO Light Welterweight title at the Prudential Center in
Newark, New Jersey. The former world champion fought in the light welterweight division for the first time in almost seven years.
The Brooklyn native began the busier fighter, using the jab and trying to land uppercuts for the first two rounds, while Matthysse worked on the body. In round three, a clash of heads opened a cut outside of the left eye of Judah. Matthysse displayed more aggression and became the aggressor in the third and the fourth round and Judah switched to a defensive tactic. In the next two rounds, the American boxer picked up the pace, beginning to land more combinations. The seventh round was less active but in the eight, Judah landed some hard right counter shots. Judah continued to box throughout the ninth round but Matthysse began to show more power in the tenth, focusing on the head of his opponent and knocking down the American boxer after a hard right hand to the jaw. Judah got up but he was hurt, and the Argentine fighter tried to press the attack after the knockdown. However, Judah held and worked on the defensive and managed to finish the bout. Two judges scored the fight 114–113 for Judah, while the other judge scored it 114–113 for Matthysse.
Following the win against Matthysse, negotiations for a fight against
Kaizer Mabuza began. Both sides eventually agreed to a March 5 bout, with the vacant IBF Light Welterweight title on the line. Former champion
Pernell Whitaker joined Judah's training camp to help him prepare for the match. Whitaker said: "I don't train guys to be like me. I help guys to do the things that work for them. If I can teach you how to hit and not get hit, that's a blessing for you. Zab has the same abilities I have, but Zab still has to put it together and do it the way that Zab knows how to do it." On March 5, 2011, Judah defeated Mabuza via technical knockout in the seventh round, at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, claiming the IBF title again after almost ten years.
Judah fought
WBA (Super) Champion
Amir Khan in a unification bout on July 23, 2011 at Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, Las Vegas. Judah was knocked out by Khan in the 5th round after Khan landed an uppercut body shot. Judah was unable to answer the referee's 10 count, thus recording his 7th career loss. Khan was ahead 40-36 on all three judges score cards at the time of the knock out. Judah was adamant that the body shot should have been called low (clearly landing below the belt line that the referee indicated as low at the beginning of the fight) and claimed that he had been expecting a mandatory five-minute recovery period.
|-
|align="center" colspan=8|
42 Wins (29 knockouts, 13 decisions),
7 losses (3 knockouts, 4 decisions),
0 Draws,
2 No Contests
|-
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Res.
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Record
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Opponent
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Type
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Rd., Time
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Date
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Location
|align=center style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Notes
|-align=center
|Win
|42–7
|align=left|
Vernon Paris
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Loss
|41–7
|align=left|
Amir Khan
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|41–6
|align=left|
Kaizer Mabuza
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|40–6
|align=left|
Lucas Matthysse
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|39–6
|align=left|
Jose Santa Cruz
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|38–6
|align=left| Ubaldo Hernandez
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|37–6
|align=left| Ernest Johnson
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Loss
|36–6
|align=left|
Joshua Clottey
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|36–5
|align=left| Ryan Davis
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|35–5
|align=left| Edwin Vasquez
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Loss
|34–5
|align=left|
Miguel Cotto
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background:#dae2f1;"|NC
|34–4
|align=left| Ruben Galvan
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Loss
|34–4
|align=left|
Floyd Mayweather Jr.
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Loss
|34–3
|align=left|
Carlos Baldomir
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|34–2
|align=left|
Cosme Rivera
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|33–2
|align=left|
Cory Spinks
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|32–2
|align=left| Wayne Martell
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|31–2
|align=left| Rafael Pineda
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Loss
|30–2
|align=left|
Cory Spinks
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|30–1
|align=left| Jaime Rangel
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|29–1
|align=left|
DeMarcus Corley
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|28–1
|align=left| Omar Gabriel Weis
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Loss
|27–1
|align=left|
Kostya Tszyu
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|27–0
|align=left| Allan Vester
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|26–0
|align=left| Reggie Green
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|25–0
|align=left| Hector Quiroz
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|24–0
|align=left| Terron Millett
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|23–0
|align=left|
Junior Witter
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|22–0
|align=left| Jan Piet Bergman
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|21–0
|align=left| David Sample
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|20–0
|align=left| Juan Torres
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|19–0
|align=left| Wilfredo Negron
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|18–0
|align=left| Darryl Tyson
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|17–0
|align=left| Otilio Villarreal
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|16–0
|align=left|
Micky Ward
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|15–0
|align=left| Angel Beltre
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background:#dae2f1;"|NC
|14–0
|Align=left| Esteban Flores
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|14–0
|align=left| Steve Valdez
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|13–0
|align=left| Anthony Johnson
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|12–0
|align=left| Ricardo Vazquez
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|11–0
|align=left| Rick Edson
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|10–0
|align=left| James Salava
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|9–0
|align=left| Cesar Castro
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|8–0
|align=left| Omar Vasquez
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|7–0
|align=left| Troy Cain
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|6–0
|align=left| Paul Denard
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|5–0
|align=left| Chris Slaughter
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|4–0
|align=left| John Scalzi
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|3–0
|align=left| Jose Luis Torres
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|2–0
|align=left| Pablo Tejada
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
|-align=center
|Win
|1–0
|align=left| Michael Johnson
|
|
|
|align=left|
|align=left|
''Major World Titles:''
Interim IBF Light Welterweight Champion ''(140 lbs)''
IBF Light Welterweight Champion ''(140 lbs)''
WBO Light Welterweight Champion ''(140 lbs)''
WBC Welterweight Champion ''(147 lbs)''
WBA (Super) Welterweight Champion ''(147 lbs)''
IBF Welterweight Champion ''(147 lbs)''
(2) IBF Light Welterweight Light Welterweight Champion ''(140 lbs)''
''Minor World Titles:''
IBC Light Middleweight Champion ''(154 lbs)''
''The Ring/Lineal Championship Titles:''
''The Ring'' Welterweight Champion ''(147 lbs)''
''Regional/International Titles:''
Interim USBA Light Welterweight Champion ''(140 lbs)''
WBO Inter-Continental Welterweight Champion ''(147 lbs)''
WBO NABO Welterweight Champion ''(147 lbs)''
Judah has nine brothers and two sisters. Five of his brothers also box, with three of them,
Josiah,
Joseph and
Daniel Judah, boxing professionally. Judah's father and trainer,
Yoel Judah, is a six-time kickboxing world champion and a seventh degree
black belt. Judah's father is an avowed
Black Hebrew Israelite and Judah's family has declared themselves
Jewish. However, that declaration is ambiguous because Judah thanked "his Lord and Savior
Jesus Christ" after his 2005 fight against
Spinks. Zab is now a
Born again Christian.
In July 2006, he was arrested after a celebrity basketball game at Madison Square Garden on a Family Court warrant. In August 2007, Judah became involved in a fight at Stereo nightclub in New York. According to the ''New York Daily News'', Judah started throwing punches after he was hit first by someone who approached him. Two of the perpetrator's friends then joined in the fight and eventually everyone involved were kicked out of the club. After reviewing the videotape, the club indicated the perpetrators "might have been plotting something."
New York Police linked rapper Fabolous to a crew of robbers who targeted Judah twice. According to police reports, the Street Fam Crew, the gang that attempted to rob Judah, is made up of 20 members, all former drug dealers from Fabolous' Brooklyn neighborhood. In 2006, three men tried to rob Judah as he stood next to his Lamborghini on West 27th Street at 10th Avenue in New York City. The three men drove up to Judah in a minivan at about 5 am, and came out. One man pulled a handgun on Judah, and told him to put his jewelry on the hood of his car, but Judah ran instead. The muggers followed in their minivan, but crashed into a tree a block away. All three robbers fled the scene, but one was captured by a Homeland Security agent on his way to work, and another was grabbed by a nearby cab driver.
Notable boxing families
List of light welterweight boxing champions
List of welterweight boxing champions
List of The Ring world champions
List of WBC world champions
List of WBA world champions
List of IBF world champions
List of WBO world champions
List of boxing triple champions
List of left-handed boxers
Zab Judah fight-by-fight career record
HBO Boxing bio
Zab Judah profile from BoxingGurus.com
{{s-ttl | title=IBF Light Welterweight ChampionInterim Title
| years=January 16, 1999 – February 12, 2000Won full title}}
|-
{{s-ttl | title=IBF Light Welterweight Champion |
years=February 12, 2000 – November 3, 2001}}
{{s-ttl | title=WBO Light Welterweight Champion |
years=July 12, 2003–2004Vacated}}
{{s-ttl | title=WBC Welterweight Champion''The Ring'' Welterweight Champion
| years=February 5, 2005 – January 7, 2006}}
{{s-ttl | title=WBA Welterweight Super Champion |
years=February 5, 2005 – January 7, 2006Stripped}}
|-
{{s-ttl | title=IBF Welterweight Champion |
years=February 5, 2005 – April 8, 2006}}
{{s-ttl | title=Undisputed Welterweight Champion |
years=February 5, 2005 – January 7, 2006''Titles fractured''}}
|-
{{s-ttl | title=IBF Light Welterweight Champion |
years=March 5, 2011 – July 23, 2011}}
Category:1977 births
Category:African American boxers
Category:African-American Christians
Category:International Boxing Federation Champions
Category:Light-welterweight boxers
Category:Living people
Category:People from Brooklyn
Category:People from New York
Category:Southpaw boxers
Category:World Boxing Association Champions
Category:World Boxing Council Champions
Category:World Boxing Organization Champions
Category:Welterweight boxers
Category:World light-welterweight boxing champions
Category:World welterweight boxing champions
Category:World boxing champions
Category:Jewish boxers
de:Zab Judah
fr:Zab Judah
it:Zab Judah
ja:ザブ・ジュダー
pl:Zab Judah
ru:Джуда, Заб
fi:Zab Judah