Daily Dispatch

It all fits like a glove for Mexican fight craftsman

Reyes does it his way for world’s best

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IN A boxing world often dominated by promoters, selfpromot­ers and glitz – exhibit A, Mayweather v McGregor – Alberto Reyes likes to do things the oldfashion­ed way: his company still makes gloves by hand, just as it did for Muhammad Ali.

The Mexican craftsman is the owner of Cleto Reyes boxing gloves, a family firm founded by his late father in the 1940s whose clients have included such legends as Ali, Manny Pacquiao and even the fictional Rocky Balboa.

Reyes likes to tell the story of the best publicity his company ever received, when it made the gloves for one of Ali’s last fights: his 1978 match to reclaim his heavyweigh­t title from Leon Spinks.

It was the kind of free advertisin­g that is hard to imagine in this age of mega-bouts like next month’s “Money Fight” between boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr and mixed martial artist Conor McGregor.

“They had a contract with a different company to supply the gloves, but Ali said, ‘I don’t fight if it’s not with Cleto gloves,’” Reyes, 65, said in his Mexico City office.

The fight promoters agreed to let Ali use his favourite gloves, on one condition, Reyes said: he had to put tape over the label.

But once inside the ring, the fighter known as “The Greatest” asked his trainer, Angelo Dundee, to take off the tape.

The photo of a sweat-drenched Ali fending off a punishing swing from Spinks – the name “Cleto Reyes” visibly stamped on his glove – was published around the world after the former champ, then aged 36, seized back the heavyweigh­t title belt from his 25-year-old opponent. That particular pair of gloves was made by longtime Cleto Reyes employee Ruben Albarran, today aged 64.

“It was one of the first pairs I made,” he said at one of the company’s two factories on the outskirts of Mexico City.

“When I saw the fight, I was so excited for the company. Then I saw the picture in the newspaper.” Albarran grew up with dreams of becoming a boxer himself, but when he was 15 years old, his father told him he was crazy, he said.

So he went for the next best thing, in his eyes: a job making gloves at Cleto Reyes.

It is nearly the same story as that of Alberto Reyes’s father, Cleto Reyes himself. As a young man in the 1930s, he idolised Mexico’s thenemergi­ng boxers like Juan Zurita and Rodolfo Casanova.

In those days, amateurs were allowed to get in the ring and try their luck – and Reyes, whose day job was making baseball gear at a local factory, did just that.

“He lasted three rounds,” said his son. “The trainers told him, ‘Go to the gym, learn how to hold your hands. You’ve got potential and you’re brave.’”

Reyes was traumatise­d for life. But he used his experience stitching baseball gear to patch up his damaged gloves after that fight.

Soon he was making his own gloves – and gained the notice of his idol Zurita, who used Cleto Reyes gloves in a 1945 championsh­ip bout against American boxer Ike Williams. Word spread from one boxer to another that Cleto Reyes made an exceptiona­l pair of gloves.

And the list of famous clients grew: Joe Louis, George Foreman, Sugar Ray Leonard, Mike Tyson, Evander Holyfield, Lennox Lewis, Oscar de la Hoya . . . even Sylvester Stallone as “Rocky.”

Alberto Reyes says the company has never paid a fighter to wear its gloves.

“They use them because they feel safe, because they know they’re going to score a knockout,” he said.

The firm’s artisans start by selecting the best-quality leather.

Then they painstakin­gly cut it, sew it and stuff it with foam and horsehair. It is an old-school exercise in craft, using oldfashion­ed sewing machines.

A profession­al pair of Cleto Reyes gloves costs $75 (R976).

“They’re comfortabl­e on the hands, which take less damage,” said top-tier trainer Ignacio Beristain, who has coached Mexican champions including Juan Manuel Marquez and Ricardo Lopez.

Cleto Reyes gloves are a source of pride in Mexico. The factory walls are covered with pictures of presidents, celebritie­s and boxing legends wearing them.

Public health officials here recently unveiled a new campaign to fight breast cancer – donning bright pink pairs of Cleto Reyes gloves.

“It’s a pleasure to work for a company that is internatio­nally recognised,” said Albarran, who now stitches one of the firm’s other products: punching bags. — AFP

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