Woodhall turned pro in 1990 and was undefeated as the Commonwealth Middleweight Champion from 1992 to 1995. He was then undefeated as the European Middleweight Champion from 1995 to 1996. Woodhall defeated a number of useful fighters during this period, including; Future World Super Middle and World Light Heavyweight Champion
Silvio Branco,
Art Serwarno,
Heath Todd,
Jacques LeBlanc,
Zdravko Kostic,
Derek Wormald,
Vito Gaudiosi and
Royan Hammond. In late 1996 he fought WBC middleweight title holder
Keith Holmes. Woodhall went into this fight carrying an injury, but took the fight anyway. Woodhall did not perform as well has he might otherwise have, losing by 12th-round TKO. In 1998 he moved up to Super Middleweight and after a tune up against
Bernice Barber captured the WBC super middleweight title with a unanimous decision win over
Thulani Malinga. He successfully defended the title twice, defeating fellow Briton and future World Champion
Glenn Catley and former World Champ
Vincenzo Nardiello before losing it to
Markus Beyer by decision in 1999, a fight in which Woodhall was down in the 1st and twice in the 3rd. Woodhall rallied late in the fight and came close to stopping Beyer, however his revival came too late. Woodhall bounced back with a win over the experienced
Errol McDonald, setting him up for his final bout against
Joe Calzaghe for the
WBO super middleweight title. Woodhall was TKO'd in 10 rounds by
Joe Calzaghe in an exciting fight in which Calzaghe always had the edge. Woodhall retired after this bout which took place on 16 December 2000. ==Personal life==