Archive for the ‘media’ Category

Boxing and the Canadian soul

Tuesday, April 17th, 2012

Dear Friends,

A number of people have been kind enough to express interest at my recent boxing match for a Charity fundraiser here in Canada.

Below is an article I wrote about the experience for the local newspaper. Plus a link to the actual fight. If this moves anyone to make a contribution to the charity, it would be very much appreciated.

Best wishes to all,

Declan

Click here for the pre-fight video and donation page

View the full fight video here

Boxing and the Canadian soul
Declan Hill, Ottawa Citizen
Published: Saturday, April 07, 2012

Last weekend’s fight in Ottawa between politicians Justin Trudeau and Patrick Brazeau was staged to raise money for cancer research. But it also set off a debate about the nature of Canadian identity and our historic reputation as fighters. Journalist-turned-academic DECLAN HILL, who fought on the undercard, explores the dark secret of our national psyche.

When you fight in a boxing match, the whole world goes grey. I realized that about 15 seconds into my fight last Saturday, a white-collar bout staged just before the Justin Trudeau-Patrick Brazeau charity showdown in Ottawa.

Hundreds of people were watching, but the only thing that my mind seemed to comprehend was that I was in a cramped, closed ring with another person who wanted to hurt me. My senses could not take in anything tangential, anything unimportant to my physical survival.

My opponent, Jeff Davis, a muscular businessman who runs the Heart & Crown bar in the ByWard Market, appeared white against the grey wall. I hit him with an up-down-up, Cuban combination and moved quickly to my left. I knew that Jeff loves to fight and that his entire strategy was to inflict as much pain as possible on me.
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When I took up boxing a few years ago, I was surprised by the level of good manners in the sport. I’ve played competitive soccer almost all my life, and, compared to boxing, the Beautiful Game is a nest of cheating, lying and whiny bad sportsmanship.
In soccer, for example, it is common for players to swear at the referee. Many fans regard it is as a sign of how hard a player is trying.

Many fans also think that pretending to be hurt to get your opponent penalized is a good thing, so much so that players falling over to draw a foul is now almost an art form.

Boxing, to my astonishment, has none of these problems. The modern variation of the sport was organized by a 19th-century British aristocrat, and it still carries the vestiges of the code of the gentlemen. The referee and judges wear bow ties. The fighters shake hands with their opponent’s coaches and cornermen and, at the end of a long, violent fight, they frequently hug.

I was also surprised to learn that most boxers are extraordinarily modest outside of the ring. I had expected them to be jerks like Mike Tyson or Floyd Mayweather, but what I discovered is that the norm for real boxers is a strong sense of humility. What they have to do inside a ring is so intense, the line between victory and defeat so thin, that there is little energy to waste on outside nonsense.

Of course, there is a hard, undeniable core of brutality at boxing’s heart. The strong emphasis on good manners at all times – well, except for the weigh-in at which boxers are supposed to go through pantomime insults to drum up interest – is a cover for this sheer visceral animalism.
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In the second round of our threeround bout, Jeff hit me with three slow, hard left hooks. Each punch hurt. I staggered.

Through the grey wall of my senses, I could hear a section of the crowd roar with approval. The sound frightened me as much as Jeff’s blows. To hear people rejoicing because you are being hurt is a surreal, unpleasant experience. I could feel it in the ring as a palpable presence.

In less time than it takes to read these lines, my body moved automatically out of the range of his punches and I stopped, winded, and waited for his next attack.
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In the weeks before the fight, I trained with both Trudeau and Brazeau. They handled themselves well. In the gym, there were no false airs from either and the other fighters working out at the gym were roughly divided as to who would win.

But, on the night of the fight, I knew Trudeau would win almost as soon as I walked into the dressing room. Standing beside Trudeau was a very gentle fellow who I realized, as we shook hands, was Ali Nestor, the great Montreal fighter.

In true boxing form, Nestor, the most dangerous person in the room, was also the most understated and shy. Trudeau told me that Nestor was his coach. I laughed and said, “Oh, that’s your secret!”

Until that moment, Trudeau had displayed a public attitude of casual surprise: “What, there’s a fight on … oh yes, I should probably train for it.”

At the official weigh-in a few days before the fight, Trudeau drank a beer and seemed relaxed and unconcerned. (Jeff and I had not touched alcohol for weeks). In reality, he had been training very hard with one of Canada’s best fighters.
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At the end of the third round, my concentration slipped. There were about 30 seconds to go, I knew I was in the lead in points.
Despite my sensory deprivation, or possibly because of it, I had been boxing well throughout the fight, steadily scoring points with left jabs and combinations. I relaxed.

As my mind wandered, the colour returned to the room. In that split second of time, again less time than it takes to finish this sentence, Jeff had crossed the distance between us and was thundering punches into me. The grey curtain dropped back instantly. I moved. As I moved I could hear the crowd roaring.
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I admire Trudeau for working so hard to become good at boxing. I respect Trudeau for confronting that “shiny pony” image that gives off to many Canadians. For in confronting it, Trudeau understood the dark secret at the heart of Canada’s psyche: we adore fighting.

Forget that self-image Canadians have of themselves as decent United Nations peacekeepers, slightly boring, but dependable. In our communal soul, there is a dark corner that is forever Don Cherry. Susanna Moodie wrote about it as one of her first impressions on coming to Canada in the 1830s. Our very nation was formed in the trenches of the First World War and the heroism at Vimy Ridge. There our reputation as brutal fighters was the stuff of horrific legends.

As for our national games, hockey and lacrosse, there are simply no other sports that allow, even encourage, participants to stop, fight and then carry on playing. It is unheard of in anywhere else in the world. In Canadian-made sports, it is simply shrugged off as part of the action.

Perhaps, then, Canadian society is a mirror of boxing: lots of good manners and decency on the surface, but scrape away the layers and you will find a brutal, animalistic streak at the centre of its soul.

Of course, this is not true for all Canadians and certainly not all of the time. But it is powerful force in the Canadian soul that you ignore at your peril.

The boxing crowd was like that last Saturday night. In other sports, you stick with your team win or lose. Fight fans are not like that. They love their winners. When Brazeau entered the hall before the fight, nearly everyone there loved him. When he left after being defeated there were few people who shook his hand.
At some level, I think Trudeau knew that and realized he could never have a successful career as a politician unless he took on that visceral Canadian sense of thuggishness and won it over along with the crowd.
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After the fight was over, Jeff came immediately over to me and shook my hand. I had won, but we had trained together, liked each other and promised that, whatever the result, we would drink whiskies to toast each other’s relatives who had died from cancer.

We did. And it was for me the best part of the evening.

Follow Declan Hill on Twitter @declan_hill

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“He was my friend, faithful and just to me…”

Thursday, April 12th, 2012

andrew markus

In the next few weeks, my research team and I will be launching far more blog entries than we have previously posted. There will be both articles and videos/photos. The blog will continue to focus on sports corruption and match-fixing, however, it will also include articles on a range of subjects from the Afghan War, social media in journalism and the Cuban/Canadian boxing worlds. There is no better way to start this new phase then a note about my former college advisor, mentor and friend – Dr. Andrew Markus.

I have many strong memories of Andrew. I would never have got my doctorate without his care and gentle advice. Despite our near constant banter, I tried at all times to listen carefully to him when he spoke to me. College life was a wonderful series of social and sporting opportunities. But after a couple of years, I remember Andrew taking me aside and saying, ‘Declan, I hope you don’t mind, but I think you have a choice. You can either have a lot of friends or you can get your doctorate. Now, I am not trying to say which one is better, but I think you should think about this situation carefully.’ Two weeks later, I left Oxford to write in an isolated apartment for nine months where I finished both my doctorate and the book. I remember before a college ball Andrew was determined that I should be able to tie my own bow tie (‘the mark of a gentleman’) so after lunch we commandeered the ladies washroom in the old College Observatory and spent forty-five minutes carefully tying and re-tying the bow. Much of the delay was caused by our laughing too hard to be able to concentrate. I remember the walks through the gentle Chiltern Hills around Oxford in the early spring when the ground is covered in bluebells. I remember his quiet support, concern and fury when I was stuck in an academic imbroglio. I remember reading concerned notes from him when I was in Iraq. It was late at night and we could hear the mortars striking the American base in Kirkuk in the distance, but his voice and care were so strong it was as if he were in the room with me.

I respect Andrew for many reasons. He was a surrogate father to me at an important time in my life, and he was also one of the last of that generation of English men who really were gentlemen (unlike those ‘Top Gear’ like buffoons that now so populate English public life). In his manner he was an old-school blend of Rex Harrison and Jack Hawkins. He was like his close friend Sir Richard Doll, the founder of our College, the soldier of Dunkirk, the prominent epidemiologist and anti-nuclear protestor. They both had great manners and courtesy. They were both part of the original group who had founded Green College. They both wanted the college to have high academic standards but also be a welcoming, friendly, non-hierarchical place. So my recollections of Andrew’s care are not unique. There are hundreds of students who share similar memories of his kindness in a university that can be very intimidating.

Along with the College and his students Andrew had a wide range of interests. He was Chairman of the Oxford branch of the Friends of the Welsh National Opera. Travel and photography were two other great passions. I cherish the photos that he would take be it from Roman archaeological sites or the great buried cities of medieval Ethiopia or an African safari. But his chief pride and joy were the stories of his family and the latest yarns from his grandchildren.

I received the news on Easter Sunday that Andrew had died the night before from advanced cancer. For those of you who knew about my latest boxing adventures it was, in part, motivated by trying to share the pain of a good friend. I write, in part, because as a medico, Andrew was never a big fan of boxing. I simply did not know how else to share something so painful and intense with him. I wish I had told him that, but knowing Andrew he would have laughed at me and told me ‘to come off it’.

Last month, I flew over to see Andrew and Patricia at their beautiful house in Thame. He was in good spirits and good shape. We spoke over lunch and we hoped that we would be able to go on another walk through the bluebells that cover the Chiltern Hills in the early spring. Sadly, it was not to be. There will not be another walk in the hills with Andrew, and I will miss it greatly.

Declan Hill, April 2012

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Declan Hill on Examiner.com

Monday, February 13th, 2012

Article featuring Declan Hill and match fixing in the MLS: MLS confronts match fixing

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Declan Hill interview on RedNation online

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Declan Hill interview on RedNation online

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Declan Hill in Origo Sport (Hungary)

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Declan Hill article in Origo Sport (Hungarian language)

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Declan Hill and SportAccord

Saturday, January 14th, 2012

Lausanne, 11 January 2012 – Today, SportAccord kicks off its Global Programme to Stop Match-fixing in Sport at http://integrity.sportaccord.com.

The Programme aims to raise awareness about what is responsible sports betting behaviour and to help athletes and officials from having match-fixing destroy their careers and sports.

World experts have contributed to the Programme, including Dr. Declan Hill, author, journalist, academic and recognised integrity expert

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Declan Hill in “The Australian:

Saturday, January 14th, 2012

Declan featured in “Olympics the target of match fixers” from The Australian newspaper.

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Declan Hill in the Wall Street Journal

Saturday, January 14th, 2012

Declan Hill mentioned in the Wall Street Journal

“High Tide: From Mob Money Laundering To A UK Phone-Hacking Scandal Arrest”

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