Ottawa Citizen

Local fighter to represent Canada at worlds

Ottawa boxer Marija Curran is ready to take on the rest of the world, one fight at a time

- GORD HOLDER

She was not like a typical new boxer because she had many years of jiu-jitsu. She understood combative sports, she understood how to use her ring.

Marija Curran has a University of Ottawa bachelor’s degree in communicat­ions and political science, and a master’s in communicat­ions from Carleton.

She’s a full-time Department of Fisheries and Oceans outreach co-ordinator with duties such as taking scientists into classrooms, working with museums and facilitati­ng Twitter chats for department scientists.

Outside of work hours, she really, really enjoys punching people. Hard, and as often as possible.

Three years into a competitiv­e amateur career, the 31-year-old is the reigning women’s national boxing champion in the 81-kilogram division and among half a dozen athletes wearing Canadian colours in the Internatio­nal Boxing Associatio­n world championsh­ips, which start Nov. 15 in New Delhi.

The point of the exercise, of course, is to fight for and win a gold medal. It could take between three and five bouts — maximum three three-minute rounds in each — over 10 days, depending on the final number of entries.

“My goal is to box my fight,” Curran said from Montreal, where the Canadians have been working out together for several days before travelling to Qatar for another preworlds training camp and finally to India a few days before the competitio­n. “Even though you can try to please the judges, ultimately all you can control is what you do in the ring.”

Curran has been proficient at doing that since entering the competitiv­e ring just three years ago.

She watched the 2015 nationals in Mississaug­a, Ont., and says she thought: I could do this. I could hang with these girls.

“And then the next year, I went to nationals (at Quebec City) and I got a silver medal,” she said.

She won her first Canadian title last year, also at Quebec City, and duplicated that feat in Edmonton this past April.

The 2017 national crown earned her a trip to the AMBC American Confederat­ion Boxing Championsh­ips in Honduras, where she earned a silver medal, and last October in Bulgaria she defeated two Russians to win a Balkan Cup title, qualifying her for these world championsh­ips.

Along the way, she also won in her second appearance in the Golden Girl Box Cup in Sweden.

“She was not like a typical new boxer because she had many (previous) years of jiu-jitsu. She understood how to fight, she understood combative sports, she understood how to use her ring,” said Jill Perry, a groundbrea­ker as the Beaver Boxing Club’s first female fighter and now president of the facility where Curran trains six days a week. “There were a lot of lessons she didn’t need to learn because she had already done that learning in a different sport, but still a contact sport.”

Born in Burlington, Ont., Curran is the youngest in a family of two girls and three boys. When her parents signed up an older brother for jiu-jitsu to “toughen him up” for rep-team hockey, 10-year-old Marija insisted on going, too.

A few years into it, she did side training in boxing to improve hand strength and speed.

Academics took priority over all that during university years, but after completing graduate studies, Curran (at 5-foot-7 feet, 178.6 pounds) wanted to get fit again and to feed her hunger for competitio­n. She considered resuming sport jiu-jitsu, but said she realized that mixed martial arts had become predominan­t and that jiujitsu was too expensive for her, so boxing became her thing.

“I would say that I was quite confident that I would go far almost right away,” Curran said. “I’ve thought I’m a strong fighter. I’m a skilled fighter, and I thought my jiu-jitsu skills would translate well into boxing, especially because I did take boxing recreation­ally.”

In that first internatio­nal assignment a year ago in Honduras, Curran lost her division final to Colombia’s Jessica Paola Caicedo Sinisterra, but only after opening eyes with a unanimous-decision victory against bigger, more experience­d Krystal Graham Dixon of the United States.

“Then I came back to the corner and my coaches were jumping up and down. They were so excited,” Curran said. “And, in that moment, I was like, ‘They really didn’t believe in me.’ They had convinced me that they believed in me, but they really didn’t.

“Now, I think I’m taken more seriously and I’m seen as a genuine medal hopeful here.”

On the down side, with experience and exposure come higher expectatio­ns and sometimes disappoint­ment, such as a loss to the host country’s Agata Kaczmarska in the preliminar­y rounds of the Silesian Women’s Open Championsh­ips in Gliwice, Poland, in September.

Curran and Perry described that bout as an opportunit­y to fight before eastern European judges who assessed boxing’s finer points differentl­y than those at home in Canada. More internatio­nally balanced judging panels are expected at the world championsh­ips.

“Every time you get in the ring, it’s an opportunit­y to learn,” Perry said. “I call it data points. I need to see things, how she reacts to a different style of attack or a different style of opponent, so that I can understand that and we can make adaptation­s to the training plan.”

Competitiv­e boxing isn’t just about bouts, obviously, and athlete and coach descriptio­ns of Curran’s six-days-a-week training regimen sound borderline extreme.

Curran: “I wake up, I go to training. Come home, shower, go to work. Go straight to training. Come home, shower, go straight to sleep.”

Perry: “We sort of joke that her life is like a Tetris game. She is always sort of, ‘How can I squeeze in another acupunctur­e or massage therapy or athletic therapy session? How can I get my training times in? If I get up at 5:30 in the morning and I do my run or do this, well, then I can meet my sport psychologi­st at 8 o’clock on Skype.’ … But I would say this: For Marija, I think she thrives on that. I think she takes pride in her really busy life. I think sometimes it’s daunting if she slows down to think about it.”

As usual, Curran has to take time off from work to fight in India, but, in that regard, Perry describes her as fortunate to have her public-service job. After exhausting vacation time, she can apply for additional leave under a government program for national-level athletes.

Perry also won national titles, but, unlike Curran, never competed in a biennial world championsh­ip because she was already past what was then the women’s age limit of 34. Now it’s 40, so 2018 may not be Curran’s last shot.

The game plan is simple. “One fight at a time because you don’t know if you’re going to make it to Fight 2, so you really just have to fight every fight like it’s your last fight,” she said. “If you don’t put it all out there, you might not get to go to Fight 2.”

 ?? OBSCURa CREATIVE ?? Marija Curran is three years into a competitiv­e amateur boxing career and already has two national titles under her belt.
OBSCURa CREATIVE Marija Curran is three years into a competitiv­e amateur boxing career and already has two national titles under her belt.

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