Herald on Sunday

Take it on chin

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Kiwi sports fans fell in love with Joseph Parker because of his humble attitude during his ascent of the world heavyweigh­t boxing rankings.

That culminated with him winning the WBO heavyweigh­t belt in front of thousands of fired-up home fans on a stunning Auckland night in late 2016 — in the process becoming the first New Zealand or Pasifika fighter to win a major heavyweigh­t championsh­ip.

And now as Parker — and his promotiona­l team Duco Events — look at ways to resurrect his internatio­nal reputation after his second successive loss last Sunday, it would be wise for them to remember just how easy it is to lose support.

That Parker lost at London’s 02 Arena last Sunday to British heavyweigh­t Dillian Whyte wasn’t surprising. Whyte won by a unanimous points decision — and became the first boxer to knock Parker to the canvas during his pro career.

But what is surprising, is the considerat­ion Parker and his camp are giving to appealing the decision.

Parker’s camp claim the bout would have been a draw had English ref Ian John-Lewis spotted a second-round headbutt which could have led to points being taken off Whyte.

But that’s sport — something full of potential.

For those who didn’t watch the fight, it’s hard to argue that Parker wasn’t the second best fighter in the ring. And again he highlighte­d long-held questions over whether he has the power to be a truly great heavyweigh­t — and whether his team have the nous to get the best out of him.

Kiwi sports fans love winners. They also love athletes who try their best and proudly wave the national flag on the internatio­nal stage, even if they ultimately come up short.

What they don’t love is a bad loser. Particular­ly ones who appear to be making excuses for obvious failings.

And that’s something Team Parker should be considerin­g.

History shows that as quickly as New Zealanders can fall in love with someone on our sporting fields, it takes just one stupid decision to see that support evaporate.

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