Arab Times

Wallin out to shock Fury, Sweden on boxing map

Swedish boxer’s popularity to soar further

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SUNDSVALL, Sweden, Sept 9, (AP): The pretty Swedish coastal city of Sundsvall has had a couple of quirky brushes with elite heavyweigh­t boxing over the years.

In 1965, heavyweigh­t champion Muhammad Ali stunned the locals by visiting a newly opened boxing club as part of his promotiona­l tour of the country. Ten years later, former champion Floyd Patterson chose Sundsvall to open the first of his five burger restaurant­s in Sweden.

A generation later, one of Sundsvall’s own is hoping to write a new chapter in the city’s unlikely relationsh­ip with boxing’s marquee division.

Otto Wallin will take his first step into the big time when he fights Tyson Fury in Las Vegas on Saturday. No world title is on the line but Fury is unbeaten, himself in New York in an attempt to make a name for himself in the United States. It has gotten off to a frustratin­g start.

A fight with Nick Kisner in Atlantic City in April was declared a no contest after an accidental clash of heads in the first round, before a July fight against B.J. Flores in Tacoma, Washington, was cancelled when Flores wasn’t medically cleared to compete.

Now he is heading to Vegas for the first time in his life – as a boxer or on a personal trip – to be Fury’s final opponent before the Briton’s rematch against WBC champion Deontay Wilder in early 2020. Unless Wallin ruins those plans, that is. For Wallin, a 6-foot-5 southpaw, this marks the culminatio­n of a journey that began when he was a

In this April 13, 2019 file photo, Otto Wallin (left), fights Nick Kisner during the first round of a heavyweigh­t boxing bout in Atlantic City, NJ. Swedish heavyweigh­t Otto Wallin will take his first step into big-time boxing when he fights Tyson Fury in Las Vegas on Sept 14. A win for Wallin would be a big shock because the unbeaten Fury is the lineal champion and perhaps is the

best heavyweigh­t out there. (AP)

skinny teenager in Sundsvall and his father, Carl, showed him some boxing moves for fun in their kitchen. The elder Wallin was an amateur boxerturne­d-trainer who stayed up as a 9-year-old to listen on the radio to Johansson beating Patterson and had photos at home of Ali’s random visit to Sundsvall.

Carl would become the boxing mentor of the youngest of his three sons, ingraining strong technical traits in Otto from an early age and seeing him rise up the Swedish boxing ranks quickly after Otto began taking the sport seriously from the age of 16.

They used to talk about going to Vegas together one day, and Otto winning the world heavyweigh­t title there. Carl will never get to see that happen because he died in May after a sudden heart attack.

“It just sucks that he can’t be here,” Wallin said in a phone interview. “But it almost feels like he hasn’t left in some ways. I pretty much know what he would be saying to me and what kind of advice he would give to me.

“He would be calling me and saying, ‘Oh, I just watched Tyson Fury again and I know you can beat him. You got to trust me. As long as you move your feet, you can beat him.’”

Swedish boxers are typically good technician­s, maybe because they are judged in youth “diplomboxn­ing” (diploma boxing) competitio­ns on aspects like defense, balance and footwork as well as punches made.

Fredrik Stridh was there when Otto Wallin first came to Sundsvall’s boxing club, and could tell right away he would be a “sensation.”

“You could see he had trained with his dad before,” said Stridh, who is now a boxing trainer. “He is really technical for a heavyweigh­t. He has a good amount of speed, fast feet.”

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