5' 5" bantamweight Ellen Simwaka, born on June 6, 1997, in
Malawi. She grew up with her grandparents and mother
in Chitipa District----a small township until the age of 11 when
she went to live with her father and stepmother in Lilongwe, as
they could offer her a better life and education.
As a teenager, Ellen played
soccer as a sport. Her father was a soccer player and in
that sport he fully supported her.
When Ellen was just 14 years old
her father passed away. At that time she moved with her
uncle.
Ellen continued to play soccer, but then one day through a group
of friends, she was invited to the Kamuzu Institute for Sports
where she saw some young athletes boxing. Ellen had
put on some weight as a teenager and her friends encouraged her
to try boxing to lose some weight.
She started training at the Kamuzu Institute for Sports with
Jobson Adams and Kassim Makwinja, where they saw huge potential
in her and within a month of starting training she had her first
amateur fight.
She went on to have 30 amateur fights with only 2 losses. As an
amateur boxer, she went to the Africa Youth Games in Botswana
where she earned a silver medal.
It got to the stage where no amateur boxers wanted to fight her
anymore in Malawi and that's when she decided to turn
professional in 2016 when she won her first fight by TKO. Since
then she has gone on to have 7 wins, 4 losses and 2 draws.
Ellen decided to move to South Africa to further her
professional career in boxing in August 2017 as Malawi has
limited resources for training and promoters.
The highlight of Ellen, "The Tigress" career has been winning
the WBF International Bantamweight title in 2018 against
Simangele Hadebe.
WBAN published a July 2, 2018
press release from the WBF, which stated, "After losing a
decision to South African rival Simangele “Smash” Hadebe last
September, and drawing in the rematch only five weeks ago, Ellen
Simwaka from Malawi finally came out on top in their third
encounter on Saturday night, June 30. At the Turfontein Race
Cource in Johannesburg, with the vacant World Boxing Federation
(WBF) Women's International Bantamweight title on the line, it
was obvious that these boxers know each other well, making it a
nip-and-tuck battle in the first six rounds. But, fighting
on her opponents home-turf, Simwaka impressively took matters
out of the judges hands in round seven, scoring a technical
knockout to win her first professional championship less than
two years after making her debut."
The biggest disappointment in her boxing career to date has been
the missed opportunity to be the first African female boxer to
win the Commonwealth belt in Scotland in November 2018 against
Kristen Fraser. Ellen retired in the 5th round due to massive
frustration around refereeing decisions. In hindsight, she
hugely regrets her decision and according to Ellen, she has repeatedly been asking for a
rematch which to date they will not give her.
There are challenges being a Malawian national fighting from
South Africa, but Ellen now has her sights firmly set on the WBO,
IBF and WBC Belts and is stronger, fitter and more determined
than ever before.