(JAN 16) January 2020 marks
11 years since Giselle Salandy at just the age of 21 years
old died in a vehicular accident on the morning of January 4,
2009, when she crashed into a concrete pillar while driving west
into Port of Spain on the Beetham Highway.
Giselle Salandy (a.k.a. Jizelle Joseph) of Fyzabad in Trinidad and Tobago was born in
Siparia on January 25,1987.
Giselle began boxing at age 11. Giselle made her professional boxing
debut ... at age 13 on February 25, 2000 in Port of Spain,
Trinidad. At this time, Salandy had a birth certificate that showed
she was over the legal minimum age of 17 for licensing
professional boxers in Trinidad. In 2001, the Trinidad Boxing Commission realized Salandy's
true age ... and banned her from fighting in the country again
until she turned 17. This forced Salandy's boxing career to move
offshore.
On January 29, 2004, four days after her 17th birthday and
receiving her pro license, she defended the WIBA Ibero-American
Light Welterweight Title at the Indoor Sports Arena in Saith
Park, Chaguanas, Trinidad and Tobago where she defeated Paola Rojas
by a decision in a rematch.
On September 15, 2006 at Skinner
Park in San Fernando, Trinidad and Tobago, Salandy won the WBA
and WBC women's Junior Middleweight titles when she defeated
American Elizabeth Mooney by a seventh-round TKO. She was the youngest boxer to win a world boxing title
and the first boxer in the history of West Indies to win the WBA
and WBC titles in one night.
On December 9, 2006 Salandy (149¼ lbs) made still more boxing
history at the Jean Pierre Complex in Port of Spain, Trinidad.
Giselle won five Junior Middleweight world title belts - WBA,
WBC, NABC, WBE, and IWBF - defeating Miriam Brakache by
decision.
Salandy's
multi-title win also earned her WBAN's nomination as "Top
History-Making Fighter for 2006".
In Salandy's last fight, she fought on December 26, 2008,
defeating Yahaira Hernandez by a ten-round unanimous decision
where she was defending the WBC / WBA / WIBA Super welterweight
world titles.
Eight days later, tragically, Giselle Salandy died following a vehicular accident
on the Beetham Highway on the outskirts of Port of Spain on the
morning of January 4th 2009.
Salandy was a role model for others in the sport and she hoped to use her boxing fame to do her part in the fight
against youth crime in Trinidad. She felt that drugs were the
main source of the crime in Trinidad. Salandy felt
strongly that the solution
could be found in sports or other extra-curricular activities that
could help to develop disciplined and positively driven
individuals.
Salandy had credited sports for being the turning point in her
life after she lost her mother at age 11. She also had hoped eventually to open and run a home for the
abandoned and destitute children who were her one passion
outside boxing.
Some bright lights burn only briefly, but their brilliance is
long remembered. Giselle was one of them.