The Guardian Weekly

BOXING’S DAMAGED REPUTATION

Boxing has long faced calls to confront its legacy of brain injuries. As a new book lays out the stark consequences for those involved, can the sport afford to delay any longer?

By Donald McRae Illustrations by Sergiy Maidukov

The writer, the fighter, the doctor and the widow all look down into the darkness and damage of boxing. They understand the previously untold story of brain trauma in the ring and, as they talk to me, their testimony underpins a shared belief that change has to come. There is a measured urgency to their words for they love the fighters and they want to offer their knowledge to help make this brutal sport a little safer. Damage and death have always framed boxing. This harsh truth means that, despite the chaos outside the ring, boxing is shockingly real. It can maim and even kill but, in a strange paradox, boxing also makes most fighters feel more intensely alive than anything else.

Tris Dixon has written the book that boxing has always needed. Dixon, the former editor of Boxing News, now a freelance writer and the host of the Boxing Life Stories podcast, confronts the damage done to fighters with unflinching honesty. It is shattering yet tender as Dixon charts the history and science of CTE (chronic traumatic encephalopathy), a brain condition caused by repeated blows to the head. He shows how it was called “punch-drunk syndrome” and “dementia pugilistica” as neurologists struggled to explain the slurred speech, memory loss, shakes, violent mood swings, depression and other symptoms. Dixon’s book reads powerfully because he is such an authority on boxing and he writes about fighters with deep affection and respect.

Dixon also talks to boxing widows. The most interesting is Frankie Pryor who tells me how she met her husband in rehab 30 years ago. Aaron Pryor, revered in boxing as The Hawk, was a two-times light-welterweight world champion who fought professionally from 1976 to 1990. He won 39 of his 40 fights, including two unforgettable battles against another legendary boxer, Alexis Argüello, in 1982 and 1983.

Pryor was friends with Muhammad Ali but The Hawk and The Greatest were both irreparably damaged. Boxing spares no one. Pryor died in 2016, aged 60, and his widow explains his deterioration and the salvation boxing once offered.

Tony Jeffries is the fighter. The 36-year-old is from Sunderland and he and his family are now “living the dream” in Los Angeles where he runs two successful gyms. Jeffries won an Olympic bronze medal in 2008 and he was an unbeaten pro after 10 bouts when, in 2011, his fragile hands forced his retirement. Jeffries hopes he “dodged a bullet” called CTE. He boxed between the ages of 10 and 27 and, according to his calculations, was punched in the head “between 40,000 and 50,000 times”. Jeffries waits anxiously for the consequences. Those numbers are described as “scary” when I share them with Dr Margaret Goodman, a Las Vegas neurologist who worked as a ringside physician from 1994 to 2005. She tended to fighters in more than 500 professional bouts but, in campaigning for their safety, was burnt out by boxing and so she founded, and is now the president of, Vada – the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association. “Boxing,” Goodman notes, “is a beautiful sickness in so many ways.”

The widow, the fighter and the doctor feature in Dixon’s book. They recognise its significance, which comforts the writer. “I am worried the anti-boxing brigade might use my argument against the sport,” Dixon tells me. “But the direction of the book is to say: ‘We don’t talk about it but this is what needs to be done to mitigate the risks and to make sure these guys have a better life after boxing.’ I don’t want a scrapheap of damaged fighters.”

He has been immersed in the sport for decades but does Dixon feel fresh hope that boxing may examine the damage it causes fighters who generate billions of dollars for wayward governing bodies, promoters and managers? “No – but it’s time to find out who cares. Who wants to look after fighters? If these people want fighters to be OK after boxing then I’m not going to have the ego to say they must read the book. But I suggest they learn about CTE, tau protein and links with Alzheimer’s, dementia, Parkinson’s and ALS [amyotrophic lateral sclerosis].

“If they want what’s best for the fighters, then regulate how much sparring they do and have open conversations with boxers as to how they feel after sparring. It’s also down to the fighters to not be so macho. Fighters and trainers need to know what’s going on with their brains.”

Dixon, Pryor, Jeffries and Goodman soon list the causes and possible solutions to brain trauma but it is instructive to hear about the book’s origins. “It was only when I read League of Denial about the NFL’s concussion crisis that I started to piece the puzzle together,” Dixon says. “I read about the erratic behaviour of Mike Webster [who won four Super Bowls with the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 1970s]. He fell on hard times and ended up living in his car.

“I thought: ‘This is boxing.’ CTE is actually punch-drunk syndrome. It was a big epiphany for me: ‘Hang on, the NFL are addressing this but we do nothing in boxing.’ I’d been in boxing 25 years and I didn’t know about CTE, tau protein and things that should be a staple. Fireworks went off in

I went on the podium, got the gold medal and I didn’t have a clue where I was. I said: ‘Did I win?’

my head: ‘Wow, these guys worrying about the NFL could be worrying about boxing, which is far more dangerous.’ The NFL concussion debate started with the Webster case in 2000. Boxing turned its back for nine decades and we haven’t had our Webster moment yet.”

The historical sweep of Dixon’s book shows how, in 1928, the American doctor Harrison Martland wrote a paper called Punch Drunk. It was a groundbreaking study but Martland argued wrongly that punch-drunk syndrome only affected mediocre boxers. Damage is a salutary reminder that almost all great fighters – from Joe Louis and Sugar Ray Robinson to Muhammad Ali and Aaron Pryor – had their senses obliterated by boxing.

Dixon and Frankie Pryor argue that boxing missed a huge opportunity to educate people during Ali’s tragic case. “The old punch-drunk terminology was rarely used with Ali,” Dixon says. “Perhaps they thought it too cruel a label for a man who gave so much and awed the world with his brutal elegance. The stigma remains that punch-drunk syndrome happened to guys who aren’t very good. Maybe Ali was too vain to say: ‘Boxing did this to me.’”

Frankie Pryor agrees: “The one fighter who could have brought lots of attention to this was Ali. [But] Ali’s family chose to say: ‘Oh, he has Parkinson’s, it has nothing to do with boxing.’ It has everything to do with boxing.”

Dixon’s book is compassionate in the company of Frankie and Brenda Spinks – whose husband, Leon, shocked a faded Ali in the first of their two fights in 1978. Leon Spinks, who fills the final pages of Damage, was a slurred wreck before his death in February. “At the end,” Dixon says, “I wrote that the neurologists were as much the heroes to me as the fighters. If I could rewrite that sentence I’d say the wives, women like Frankie and Brenda, are the real heroes. Their strength of character is what boxing needs to address the damage. The fighters I’ve met who don’t have these women to look after them, to feed or clothe them, end up homeless and suicidal.”

Frankie Pryor fills my Zoom screen with warmth and humour – and a little anger at boxing’s failure to discuss the damage it did to her husband and most fighters. “I took care of everything,” she says of her 30 years with Aaron. “I didn’t understand the damage was caused solely by boxing until he started showing anger. Aaron was so easy-going until then. I started taking him to a neurologist around 1994. At that point we didn’t know [it was CTE]. Initially it was just front temporal lobe damage but he never stopped going to a neurologist until he died. A neurologist said: ‘This is the only Hall of Fame fighter I’ll ever work with and we need more proof to confirm what we believe.’”

Was there sufficient proof Pryor had been brain-damaged by boxing? “Oh yes. You see that damage in every old fighter – without exception. I noticed all the fighters acting the same when we got together. His wife would go to the restroom and that fighter would get confused. One of us other wives would handle the situation. We educated ourselves about CTE because it’s not something you talk about to your regular girlfriends. We had this group – me, Brenda Spinks, Marvin Hagler’s wife Kay, Ken Norton’s wife, Rose.”

Amid the mess of boxing will their experience of CTE be shared widely? “You said it. Boxing is a mess and that’s why I have no hope this will ever get solved unless there is one central governing body. I’d talk for hours if you get me started on the crooks in boxing. It’s awful and they take such advantage of dedicated fighters who love their sport. Nothing will ever originate from boxing itself.”

Pryor believes the only hope is to educate a new generation of fighters and trainers. She stresses: “I’ve no hate for boxing because Aaron loved it so much. It took my husband but his choice to box came before me. One of his nurses said: ‘Don’t you wish you’d never boxed?’ He said: ‘What do you mean? No. What would I have done?’ Aaron was a fighter. Whenever we went out people always yelled: ‘What time is it? Hawk Time!’ Aaron was born for it and his great achievement was to become this amazing athlete, The Hawk, who came out of a desperately troubled childhood.”

She laughs when I ask if she also called him The Hawk? “Of course. I’d say: ‘Even The Hawk has to take out the garbage.’ He was The Hawk the day he died.”

Tony Jeffries was called “Jaffa” or “The Mighty Mackem” when he boxed. We talk on a beautiful morning in Santa Monica, where he teaches boxing exercise to fitness professionals at his Box N Burn Academy. His accent is pure Mackem as he remembers being punched in the head as a 10-year-old. “I got the black flash. When I was 12 there were times sparring where I would cry because I’d been hit that hard. But I got through it.”

Ali spoke of “the black lights” a fighter sees when hit by a concussive blow. “Yeah,” Jeffries says, “it’s like you’ve closed your eyes for three seconds then, boom, they’re open. ‘What happened?’ In the European final, when I was 16, I fought this Greek guy who was knocking everyone out. He hit me so hard my legs went like jelly. I got a standing eight count and won the fight. Twenty minutes later I went on the podium, got the gold medal, and I didn’t have a clue where I was. I said: ‘Did I win?’ That’s pure concussion.

“A few years later, after I got hit so hard, I was in my room when my phone rang. ‘Sarah? Who is Sarah? Oh, my girlfriend [and now wife].’ But you just think: ‘This is boxing.’”

Jeffries tells me how many times he was hit in the head. “I had 106 fights. I averaged four rounds a fight. That’s 424 rounds. Let’s say I got hit to the head an average seven times a round. That’s 2,968 punches. If I sparred 10 times for each fight and each spar was six rounds, that’s 6,360 rounds. Seven headshots every round makes 44,520 blows. It could be a little less or a little more. But 40,000 to 50,000 punches landed.”

This methodical calculation underpins a key point that could change boxing. There should be a limit on the amount of sparring where fighters take head shots for, as Jeffries admits, “after just about every spar, as a pro, I would have a splitting headache”. He acknowledges it would be hard to regulate sparring so the only solution is for trainers and fighters to educate themselves about the damage it does and restrict most of their training to body punching.

Jeffries highlights medical evidence that proves that punches to the head of a child under 14, when the brain is still developing, are especially dangerous. “I was punched in the head 4,000 times by the time I was 12. You don’t have to be a genius to think that’s not good for the brain.”

Five years ago Jeffries met Dr Charles Bernick who “runs the biggest fighter brain study in the world. They study fighters’ brains over a long period. When I first went I was worried. After the test they said: ‘Your brain is average for a 31-year-old.’ I was like: ‘Yes!’ They went: ‘But you need to come back for years because your brain could have been above average – or it might deteriorate later. They told me I’ve got a big split in my membrane which attaches the brain to the skull. That’s after being punched in the head. It’s scary.

“If I forget my car keys or slur my words I think: ‘Boom, brain damage.’ But I’m doing all I can do to help my brain. I haven’t drunk alcohol since 2019. I want to do what I can for my brain so I can be as good as possible for my kids.”

Jeffries emphasises how much he owes the sport for it sparked his booming new career. “Boxing is great. But it has that sad end and the only way to fix this is by changing boxing culture.”

Dr Goodman agrees and, from a neurological perspective, she believes “it’s pretty simple. I would say 99% of brain damage comes from sparring. Too many fighters go into a fight with concussion, or mild concussive symptoms. So much brain trauma is based on sub-concussive blows. I think of Terry Norris [a three-times world champion], a boxer of great skill, and a beautiful person, but he thought it was better to take punishment, especially to his head, in the gym. We see the damage that did.”

Boxing is chaotic, without an international governing body, but does Goodman believe educating trainers and fighters would curb the damage? “I really do. We need to get boxing out of the dark ages because this information is at their fingertips. It amazes me boxing does not help fighters in this way.” What else should be done to make the sport safer? “Fight at the right weight. So many fighters are put in the wrong division. If they were in the correct weight class it would stop so much damage and prevent eating disorders. They also need to avoid all performance-enhancing drugs. Even those that are not prohibited are detrimental. Alcohol, too, because it can rot a fighter’s brain. Fighters are so intelligent it’s silly for them not to take responsibility for their wellbeing. They have the knowledge to say no to a fight or sparring. Taking that responsibility is the most important way we can change boxing.”

She points to Floyd Mayweather Jr. “I worked on his first championship fight and he is the quintessential professional. He looked at his Uncle Roger [the former fighter who suffered brain damage before his death in March 2020] and understood that staying in shape was vital. Floyd was so smart about sparring so little.” Mayweather, however, could be spiteful and his care for himself did not always extend to other fighters in the gym. Goodman suggests: “George Foreman is another good example because he never sparred much either. Even after all those tough fights he’s healthy today.”

Goodman also believes doctors should lessen the pressure on fighters by ending bouts earlier. “What bothers me more than anything is that ringside physicians don’t want to be the one pulling the plug. Fighters are willing to go out on their shields – and if they don’t then they get ludicrous abuse. The physician should take the responsibility off the fighter and the corner. Of course it’s not easy. I’ve been the brunt of terrible criticism and felt like I needed to check my brakes before driving home. You develop so many enemies.”

She was so consumed by safeguarding boxers that, before being ringside, she studied their previous bouts for signs of neurological damage. Goodman was also the ringside doctor when two fighters, Pedro Alcázar and Leavander Johnson, lost their lives. Finally, drained and exhausted, she stepped away. Does she ever think boxing should be banned? “No. We can make it safer. I don’t think boxing should be banned – ever.”

The doctor, the widow, the fighter and the writer have witnessed the worst of boxing. But they still support its

Boxing is great. But it has that sad end and the only way to fix this is by changing boxing culture

existence and its human qualities of courage and resilience, skill and intelligence. Goodman sounds uplifted when she remembers working with fighters. “It was such a privilege to examine and talk to fighters who have been among the most famous and brilliant in boxing. Just to understand their motivation was inspiring.

“Fighters were the best patients I ever had – even if the regulators weren’t protecting them enough. I don’t want to insult the patients I have now, but sitting with a fighter at the weigh-in, in the corner during a fight and then afterwards was more dramatic, incredible, educational and amazing than anything else. Oh my God, to be with a fighter after a fight? To see the emotion after winning or losing? It almost seemed inappropriate to have been privy to that. So from a medical and a personal standpoint I never had anything I enjoyed more than boxing. We know the damage but, oh, the fighters are incredible. We just need to take care of them and help them take better care of themselves.”

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