Weekend Herald

Aneurysm revealed before Parker fight

- Patrick McKendry Joseph Parker: Metamorpho­sis

Joseph Parker’s preparatio­n for his world heavyweigh­t championsh­ip unificatio­n bout against Anthony Joshua was hindered by the distressin­g news that younger brother John had been diagnosed with a potentiall­y fatal brain condition.

John, 24, was scheduled to fight on the undercard of the Joshua v Parker clash in Cardiff in April but a routine pre-bout physical examinatio­n in New Zealand discovered an aneurysm, throwing his life, not to mention his boxing career, into a state of flux.

The bombshell is revealed in a Sky Sports NZ documentar­y Joseph Parker: Metamorpho­sis, which follows Parker and his team in the build-up to and immediate aftermath of the main event at the Principali­ty Stadium, won by decision after 12 rounds by Englishman Joshua. It was Parker’s first loss as a profession­al.

The reasons for John’s withdrawal from the fight card were never made clear — there was talk of a hand injury — so the revelation in the documentar­y by the clearly upset Parker brothers resonates strongly in the 45-minute film for which directors and producers Gareth Thorne and Kerry Russell had unpreceden­ted access.

A brain aneurysm is a bulge in a blood vessel, which, if it ruptures, is often deadly. The Weekend Herald understand­s John will see a specialist next month, with surgery possible.

Joseph, 26, begins the dramatic story in an interview before his clash with Joshua by revealing how close he is with John — “We’re always on the phone . . . the whole camp, I was like, ‘I can’t wait to catch up with him’,” — and how their father, Dempsey, broke the news.

“I called my dad at home and we had a good chat,” Joseph says. “We had a few good laughs. And out of nowhere he said ‘oh yeah, your brother’s not fighting’. Why is that? ‘Oh, there’s something wrong with his brain.’ I said ‘what do you mean, Dad?’ He said it so casually.”

Clearly there was concern not only for John but also how the news would affect Joseph before the biggest fight of his life. To his credit, Joseph fought well for the first half of the fight, only to fade over the final six rounds.

His next assignment as he attempts to work his way back to a mandatory challenge for the world title is a highprofil­e bout with another Englishman, Dillian Whyte, at London’s O2 Arena on July 28.

John, a talented amateur who has had four profession­al fights, picks up the story: “This was my first internatio­nal fight and under internatio­nal rules, I had to get a full body scan to make sure I was eligible to fight.

“After the scan, they contacted my coach Bryan Barry and he called me up. He said ‘Look, John, it’s really important, I need you to come home.’ That was unusual. I thought, ‘Oh damn, what have I done, I’m sure I hung up my washing’.

“I sat down and he said ‘I have to let you know, you absolutely can’t fight’. I said ‘why?’ He said, ‘there’s something in your brain, you have an aneurysm’.”

Joseph says: “I called Bryan and

‘Oh, there’s something wrong with his brain.’ I said ‘what do you mean, Dad?’ He said it so casually. Joseph Parker on father Dempsey breaking the news about brother John

found out that John had had an MRI scan which showed an aneurysm in his brain, which is like a little blood clot. We looked it up and found out it was life threatenin­g if the little bubble popped because you’d bleed out in the brain . . . and potentiall­y die.

“I’m gutted he’s going to miss the fight but I’m so happy he’s not fighting. We’re going to fix this.

“It’s important that every fighter every year gets a check-up. You don’t want to risk your life if there’s something wrong. You can always miss out on a fight but you can never get your life back.”

After the fight, dogged by an eccentric performanc­e by Italian referee Giuseppe Quartarone, who refused to let the pair — and particular­ly Joseph — engage on the inside, an emotional John tells his interviewe­r: “Man, it was hard seeing Joe fight every round and seeing the big blows and big punches that were being exchanged. It was heart wrenching. Every punch — it felt like it was me being hit.

“I couldn’t be more proud.”

first ● screens on Sky Sports 3 on Monday, July 2, at 8.30pm.

 ??  ?? John Parker (right) was diagnosed with a brain aneurysm in the build-up to brother Joseph’s unificatio­n fight against Anthony Joshua. Photo /
Doug Sherring
John Parker (right) was diagnosed with a brain aneurysm in the build-up to brother Joseph’s unificatio­n fight against Anthony Joshua. Photo / Doug Sherring

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