Business Day

Old boxers put weight behind a new mission

• Legends unite to help former pros, promising amateurs

- David Isaacson

Some 350 former boxers reconnecte­d in Pretoria at the weekend‚ trading old war stories like they used to exchange leather in decades gone by.

The gathering marked the launch of Boxing Legends United‚ the brainchild of former SA lightweigh­t champion Danny Myburgh who wants to help old profession­als and up-andcoming amateurs.

The more recent of yesterday’s heroes‚ such as former world champions Dingaan Thobela‚ Lehlohonol­o Ledwaba‚ Cassius Baloyi‚ Jan Bergman and Sebastiaan Rothmann mixed with the stars from more distant eras‚ such as Harold Volbrecht and Jimmy Abbott and amateur stalwarts Dan Bushney and the Markotter brothers‚ Kit and Pat.

They were in their element at Bernie’s Joint in industrial Pretoria‚ surrounded by vintage cars and their own classic tales.

Abbott recalled trying to spend his first boxing purse on comics. He took his cheque to a CNA‚ but before he could indulge his love for Archie‚ Jughead and various super heroes‚ his father intervened. “I wanted to buy comics‚ but my father took my cheque away‚” he said.

Abbott‚ a giant of a boxer who possessed good hand speed and a granite chin‚ was tipped for stardom as a heavyweigh­t.

“After I knocked out Kallie Knoetze [in one round] I thought

I’d become a world champion.”

But he admitted to injecting steroids for five years of his career‚ and with that he says his appetite increased and he literally ate himself out of the boxing ring‚ ballooning to 370kg.

Three heart attacks and a stroke later‚ 60-year-old Abbott is down to 170kg.

When asked who had hit him the hardest‚ he thought about the question briefly and then replied with a laugh “nobody!”

Volbrecht recalled the night Abbott beat Knoetze at the Ellis Park tennis stadium in March 1980.‚He event and was as he a spectator made his way at that to his seat he was asked by fans who he thought would win.

Volbrecht said he jokingly predicted Abbott would KO Knoetze. “I actually had my money on Kallie‚” Volbrecht said. But after Abbott had flattened “Die Bek van Boomstraat”‚ as Knoetze was known‚ the fans Volbrecht had spoken to were convinced the fight had been fixed.

Volbrecht‚ who defended his SA welterweig­ht title a record 19 times‚ presented three of his former foes with medals and then made a confession to them.

“I wasn’t a southpaw‚ I was switched by Hottie van Heerden‚” explained “The Hammer”‚ who is right-handed.

He learnt the left-handed stance as a child watching his then trainer Van Heerden who was a southpaw.

Thobela recounted how as a young amateur Kit Markotter had helped him out‚ giving him assistance and a pair of gloves.

“We had a photo taken of us together then‚ with me wearing gloves that were too big for me‚” Thobela said.

He then invited Markotter onto the stage. “I’d like to get another picture with you.”

There were many former fighters who enjoyed less fame in their careers‚ but their memories were no less valuable.

Eddie Mileham‚ who briefly held the white versions of the SA lightweigh­t and junior-lightweigh­t titles in the 1970s‚ sparred with Arnold Taylor when he was preparing for his crack at the WBA bantamweig­ht crown in 1973.

Taylor’s fitness was unmatched. Mileham remembered his stablemate running effortless­ly up the BP centre in Braamfonte­in and then still running back to the gym.

Taylor’s stamina proved critical in the fight‚ as he absorbed incredible punishment before knocking out Romeo Anaya of Mexico in the penultimat­e 14th round in November 1973.

While the vintage cars were still in good shape‚ many of the former fighters were not as slim as they used to be.

“We’re middleweig­hts now‚” joked Bergman‚ who carried one of the sharpest left hooks in SA. “The weight is round the middle now.”

 ?? /Jeff Ellis ?? Vintage: Former boxers, from left: Bennie Nortman, Dingaan Thobela, Jan Bergman and Bennie Knoetze at the Boxing Legends United launch.
/Jeff Ellis Vintage: Former boxers, from left: Bennie Nortman, Dingaan Thobela, Jan Bergman and Bennie Knoetze at the Boxing Legends United launch.

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