I don’t want to be here. Sunny Edwards and the kid with the pale blue eyes

The communal head guard was always too tight. The gum shield always dug in a little on one side. The ring was small and the shallow vaulted ceiling narrowed the space above still further. I sat on the ring apron, sweat flooding from every pore. In the ring a 17-year-old with a mop of blond hair and pale blue eyes was dancing, feet sliding effortlessly across the canvas as my fellow 30-something plodded toward him. Two minute rounds that lasted a week inside the ropes, a handful of breaths on the outside, ticked past.

The youngster was talented. A natural. Quick, elusive and brave, he punched harder than a Lightweight should too. I was the bigger man, I mumbled in the torment of knowing I had to get back in when the two minutes ended and the minute’s rest the kid didn’t need was up. His quarry’s nose sprang a bloody leak and brought an early close to my wait. Most of the time I’d spent on that apron I’d contemplated how I could get out of this position with pride in tact. Or whether I really cared about my pride. A childhood spent avoiding fights had brought me to this place twenty years on. I’d smirked at the swell of dread, tasted its familiarity. A nervous response to the absurdity of being where I was. As the other victim climbed down, bright red ribbons running into his mouth the colour correspondingly drained from my face.

Continue reading “I don’t want to be here. Sunny Edwards and the kid with the pale blue eyes”

Elementary Brad Watson

There are few periods in British boxing that stand comparison to the current buoyancy and popularity of the sport. Within this on-going euphoria it is easy to become desensitised to the merits of a good old fashioned ‘scrap’. The Dennis Hobson card which appeared on FreeSports here in the UK, live from Ponds Forge, Sheffield, offered just such an opportunity to remember the value of evenly matched opponents intent on securing a victory over their foe. Small purses, but gallons and gallons of courage, determination or, to make best use of age-old boxing parlance, heart.

Luoa Nassa, the favourite, succumbed in the final round of 10 to a desperate onslaught from Brad Watson. Rallying from a knockdown in the 6th, apparent fatigue and a potentially fight ending cut on the bridge of his nose, Watson eventually overwhelmed Nassa with a series of flush right hands. Continue reading “Elementary Brad Watson”

The incomparable Steve Bunce ‘goes off on one’

I didn’t catch Calderon’s recent fight, a weekend at the Setanta-less parents house can do that to you, which means I missed a good fight and old Buncey sticking it to the ambitious Dougie Fischer. Fischer, best known to the marauding Internet boxing fan as the face of Maxboxing.com was doing a passable impression of David Ruffin in Sonny Liston’s best suit, a reference for the older reader, as he interviewed Ivan Calderon about his future prospects. The irrepressible Buncey didn’t let Fischer’s performance go unchallenged.

Continue reading “The incomparable Steve Bunce ‘goes off on one’”

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