Shondell `Mystery Lady’ Alfred was born with the boxing gene in
her Deoxyribonucleic acid or what is commonly referred to as
DNA.
Not much is known of her mother Ingrid, but her father, Cecil
Alfred, represented Guyana at the 1976 Central and American
Caribbean boxing championships held in Jamaica.
Cecil Alfred was a well-known pugilist in his heyday known as
much for his nickname as for his prowess with his fists.
His nickname was `Koker Dog.
I am not able to ascertain how he got the name but it obviously
has something to do with his fighting ability as he won his
first two bouts at the CAC championships before losing the third
to Mike Mc Callum.
Losing to a fighter of the caliber of Mc Callum was not a
disgrace some might even call it an achievement as Mc Callum,
later known as the `Body Snatcher’ went on to become World
Champion.
Upon returning home Cecil Alfred joined the Guyana Defence Force
(GDF) and continued his amateur career.
He was successful in avenging two of his earlier defeats to
Winfield Braithwaite and Michael Reid respectively.
He then turned professional in 1980, a year before Shondell was
born.
Shondell Alfred was born on September 6th 1981 in Albouystown,
Callender Street, to be precise. Growing up she attended St
Stephen’s Primary and later St Joseph’s High School and although
she did not participate in boxing, growing up, she did take part
in athletics and karate.
Boxing in Guyana has always been a male dominated sport and in
an effort to attract more females into the ring (ring girls were
to come later) rather than being mere onlookers, the then Guyana
Boxing Board of Control (GBBC) went talent hunting for female
boxers.
Myself and Trevor Arno were told by Orin Moore to go to Tiger
Bay and ask for `Nini.’
When we did find her we found out that her name was Stephanie
`Razor’ George. Mike Parris, the 1980 Olympic Games bronze
medallist took George under his wing and a win over Ann Howard
for the national bantamweight title was the result.
Howard was from Albouystown and George from Tiger Bay, two areas
well known for producing individuals who could be labeled as
`bad’.
The search for someone who could exact revenge took us to Cecil
Alfred, who said he had a daughter who was involved in karate.
He told me to come back the next day and the rest was history.
At the time Wencel Thomas was the coach for the Forgotten Youth
Foundation Gym and he took her under his wing.
The bout pitting Alfred against George took on a Tiger Bay
community versus Albouystown matchup (to put it mildly) and
generated intense interest.
When the dust finally settled Albouystown and Alfred were
victorious.
It was Alfred’s first pro fight and it was held on February 19,
1999.
She was just 18 years old and back then she had no inkling that
boxing would lead her to heights previously unknown or that
someday she would be a world champion but that is exactly what
happened.
Wins over Sharon Johnson and Shondell Thomas, who were both in
the first professional fights followed and, under agent Boxu
Potts, Alfred journeyed to Canada where she took on Doris Hackl
on June 9th 2000 at the Casino Nova Scotia, Halifax, Nova
Scotia, Canada.
She lost that fight by a TKO in round four of the six-round
contest but was not undaunted.
In fact, she took another fight in Canada a mere three months
later against a Canadian boxer by the name of Lisa Brown.
The inexperienced Alfred was simply no match for Brown and she
suffered a similar result, losing in round two of the super
bantamweight contest at the Casino Rama, Rama, Ontario, Canada.
Alfred got her career back on track with a points win on August
5, 2001 over Joenette Toby, (also known as Giselle Salandy).
Salandy, of Trinidad and Tobago, was to go on to a storied
career before she died in a car crash.
Alfred, meanwhile, continued to rack up the wins including a
second defeat of Stephanie George.
On August 29, 2003 she journeyed to Barbados where she knocked
out Vicki Boodram in the first round of their four round
flyweight contest at the Sir Garfield Sobers Sports Complex.
In December of that year, she defeated George, this time over
eight rounds for the vacant bantamweight title of Guyana.
*A special thank you for Stabroek News allowing WBAN to publish
this interesting background on this talented boxer Shondell
Alfred.
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