Leon McKenzie

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Leon McKenzie
Personal information
Full name Leon Mark McKenzie
Date of birth (1978-05-17) 17 May 1978 (age 45)
Place of birth Croydon, London, England
Position(s) Forward
Youth career
Crystal Palace
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1995–2000 Crystal Palace 85 (7)
1997Fulham (loan) 3 (0)
1998Peterborough United (loan) 14 (8)
2000–2003 Peterborough United 90 (46)
2003–2006 Norwich City 79 (20)
2006–2009 Coventry City 62 (12)
2009–2010 Charlton Athletic 12 (0)
2010–2011 Northampton Town 27 (10)
2011 Kettering Town 9 (2)
2012–2013 Corby Town 12 (3)
Total 393 (115)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals
Leon McKenzie
Other namesBig McK, Legacy, The Secret
Statistics
Weight(s)Super-middleweight
StanceSouthpaw
Boxing record
Total fights11
Wins8
Wins by KO4
Losses2
Draws1
No contests0

Leon Mark McKenzie (born 17 May 1978) is an English former professional footballer who played as a forward from 1995 to 2013 who scored in all four English professional leagues during his career. He was also a professional boxer, competing in the super middleweight class.

McKenzie started his professional career with Crystal Palace in 1995. He also appeared for Fulham and Peterborough United on loan whilst with The Eagles before securing a permanent move to Peterborough in 2000. Three years later he joined Norwich City and was a part of the side which won promotion to the Premier League. He went on to play for Coventry City, Charlton Athletic and Northampton Town before dropping into non-league football with Kettering Town and Corby Town. He retired from competitive football on 1 January 2013. Following his football career, he went on to become a professional boxer. He is a former International masters champion. English and Southern area challenger. He retired in 2017.

Football career[edit]

McKenzie began his career with his local club Crystal Palace, making his debut during the 1995–96 season. In 1997, he was loaned to Fulham and in 1998 to Peterborough United, where he scored 9 goals in 15 games.

In 2000 McKenzie joined Peterborough on a permanent basis for a fee of £25,000. In three years at London Road he scored 49 goals in 103 games.

He joined Norwich from Peterborough in December 2003 for a fee of £325,000, and instantly won over the Canaries supporters by scoring twice on his debut to help beat local rivals Ipswich Town at Portman Road and go top of the First Division. His goals made a significant contribution to Norwich's promotion to the Premier League as First Division champions at the end of the 2003–04 season. Within a year, he had turned from a Second Division to a Premiership player. McKenzie took time to find his feet in the Premiership but he established a strike partnership with Dean Ashton which would become one of the most potent in the division during the closing stages of the 2004–05 season. His goals helped Norwich to haul themselves into contention to avoid the drop, although they were relegated on the last day of the season.

He came third in the Norwich City Supporters Player of The Season vote for the 2004–05, beaten by Darren Huckerby and Damien Francis.[citation needed] The 2005–06 season for McKenzie was interrupted by injuries and personal difficulties surrounding the break-up of his marriage. At the start of the 2006–07 campaign, he handed in a transfer request to manager Nigel Worthington. Although Worthington rejected McKenzie's request, he subsequently confirmed that McKenzie would be sold if they received an offer that matched the club's valuation of the player.

McKenzie was signed by Coventry City on transfer deadline day in August 2006 for an initial £600,000 that, depending on appearances and promotion, could rise to £1m. Coventry's first match after signing McKenzie was against Norwich – however, McKenzie was unable to play due to a condition of the transfer that prevented him from playing in either of the two fixtures between Coventry and Norwich in the 2006–07 season. He made his debut for Coventry on 12 September 2006 as a substitute against Ipswich Town at Portman Road. He started the 2007–08 season well, scoring against Barnsley on the opening day of the season and against Hull, before a knee injury put him out of action for several weeks. He scored in Coventry's opening game of the 2008–09 season against his old club, Norwich City. This marked McKenzie's 100th professional career goal and he celebrated by revealing a vest with "100" on it. He was subsequently booked for his celebration.

On 1 September 2009 it was confirmed that he had signed for Charlton Athletic. He scored his first and only goal for Charlton against Southampton in the Football League Trophy on 11 November 2009.[1] He was one of six players to be released by Charlton Athletic following the end of the 2009–10 league season. On 8 September 2010 it was confirmed he had signed a contract with Northampton Town until the end of 2010–11 season.

McKenzie featured in a friendly for Conference club Luton Town against Bedford Town prior to the 2011–12 season. On 15 December 2011 Mckenzie announced his retirement from professional football. He played his final game on 17 December 2011, after which he made a music single teaming up. ambitions. In July 2012, however, McKenzie came out of retirement to sign for Conference North side Corby Town.[2]

On 1 January 2013 Leon played his last football game for Conference North side Corby Town and is now officially retired from football.

Personal life[edit]

He is the son of former British and European boxing champion Clinton McKenzie and nephew of three time world boxing champion Duke McKenzie. Leon has written an autobiography which was published by MacAnthony Media, and was released on 29 November 2012. Leon is a head coach at 12x3 gym in Aldgate East and speaks internationally about mental health. Leon is divorced and has five children – Kasey McKenzie, Mariya McKenzie, Naima McKenzie, Talia McKenzie and Teagan-Faith Courtney Mckenzie.

McKenzie has admitted battling depression. He was jailed for six months on 21 February 2012 for trying to avoid speeding convictions.[3] In December 2011 McKenzie admitted that he had tried to commit suicide whilst a player with Charlton.[4] McKenzie has gone onto be a speaker and ambassador for mental health.

Boxing career[edit]

McKenzie made his boxing debut on 29 June 2013 when he fought John Mason at York Hall, Bethnal Green in London. The fight was stopped in the second round with McKenzie picking up a victory in his first professional bout.[5]

On 14 March 2015 McKenzie won his first title by beating Ivan Stupalo at York Hall to win the International masters belt, which made him the mandatory challenger for the Southern area title. On 17 October 2015 McKenzie beat the previously undefeated John McCallum at York Hall. The contest was brought to a halt at the end of the sixth round after McCallum was pulled out by his corner after suffering a badly damaged left eye. This edged McKenzie closer to a shot at the British super-middleweight title.

On 12 November 2016 McKenzie fought Jahmaine Smyle at York Hall for the English super-middleweight title, but lost for the first time in his career.[6]

On 10 September 2017 McKenzie retired from boxing, after a four-year career. He said he hopes to change mental health issues and inspire in other ways to help people.[7]

Professional boxing record[edit]

8 Wins (3 knockouts, 4 decisions, 1 retired), 2 Losses, 1 Draw
Res. Record Opponent Type Round Date Location Notes
Loss 8-2-1 United Kingdom Cello Renda TKO 9 (10) 2017-09-09 England York Hall, Bethnal Green, London For vacant BBBofC Southern Area Super Middleweight Title
Loss 8-1-1 United Kingdom Jahmaine Smyle SD 10 2016-11-12 England York Hall, Bethnal Green, London For BBBofC English Super Middleweight Title
Win 8-0-1 United Kingdom Kelvin Young TKO 1 2016–01–30 England Copper Box Arena, Hackney Wick, London English super-middleweight final eliminator
Win 7-0-1 United Kingdom John McCallum RTD 6 (10) 2015–10–17 England York Hall, Bethnal Green, London British super-middleweight title eliminator
Win 6-0-1 Croatia Ivan Stupalo PTS 10 2015–03–14 England York Hall, Bethnal Green, London International Masters super middleweight title
Win 5-0-1 United Kingdom Scott Douglas PTS 6 2014–12–13 England York Hall, Bethnal Green, London  
Win 4-0-1 United Kingdom Danny Brown PTS 6 2014–05–17 England York Hall, Bethnal Green, London
Win 3-0-1 Bulgaria Nikola Varbanov KO 2 (4) 2014–03–08 England York Hall, Bethnal Green, London
Draw 2-0-1 United Kingdom Darren McKenna PTS 4 2013–12–07 England York Hall, Bethnal Green, London
Win 2–0 Poland Robert Studzinski PTS 4 2013–09–14 England Epic Centre, Norwich, Norfolk
Win 1–0 United Kingdom John Mason TKO 2 (4) 2013–06–29 England York Hall, Bethnal Green, London Professional debut.

Honours[edit]

Promotions[edit]

Boxing Titles[edit]

  • International Masters Belt beut

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Southampton 2–1 Charlton". BBC. 11 November 2009. Retrieved 11 November 2009.
  2. ^ "Corby bring in veteran McKenzie". BBC Sport. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Former Norwich City footballer Leon McKenzie jailed". BBC News. 21 February 2012.
  4. ^ Harry, Jack (8 February 2018). "'I tried to take my life': Leon McKenzie on football, boxing and male pride". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  5. ^ "Former footballer Leon McKenzie claims stoppage win in professional boxing debut". Sky Sports. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  6. ^ Prenderville, Liam (13 November 2016). "Former Premier League striker Leon McKenzie loses first professional fight". mirror. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  7. ^ "Footballer-turned-fighter Leon McKenzie retires from boxing aged 39". Sky Sports. Retrieved 10 September 2017.

External links[edit]