The Star Late Edition

Many golden moments for Berman

-

RODNEY Berman wasn’t to know it at the time, but the three-round tear-up between Charlie Weir and Bushy Bester 39 years ago yesterday was the beginning of a love affair that would endure for decades.

It was also the beginning of Golden Gloves, a business dynasty that has gone from strength to strength. As the anniversar­y approached last week, Berman reflected on an extraordin­ary four decades in boxing. There have been plenty of highs and lows and time has given him the one luxury he never had at the start: perspectiv­e.

“I was such a greenhorn at the start; I really had no idea,” he said. “But what an adventure. My prevailing feeling is sadness, though. So many people who were there at the beginning are no longer with us – Charlie, Billy Lotter, his trainer, Maurice Toweel, my first mentor, Bushy.

“More latterly, great fighters like Corrie Sanders and Johnny du Plooy are gone. They all helped put Golden Gloves on the road.”

The flipside, however, is how top fighters like Brian Mitchell, Vuyani Bungu, Welcome Ncita and Mbulelo Botile thrived.

In the early years, Golden Gloves was somehow able to navigate its way through the dark years of apartheid when SA was the skunk of the world.

Berman even managed to maintain strong links with the black-led Internatio­nal Boxing Federation when there was strong pressure on them to cast off any SA links.

The promoter even chucked in his lot with the Boxing Coordinati­ng Council, in defiance of the SA National Boxing Board of Control, and refused to abandon his black fighters, even with apartheid at its peak.

One of his constant allies was matchmaker Ruben Rasodi, who was with Golden Gloves virtually from day one.

Another was Mzi Mnguni, the patriarch of boxing in the Eastern Cape.

One of Berman’s proudest moments came just a few years ago when the community of Hammanskra­al, represente­d by Dikebu Golden Palace, presented him with a green jacket.

“I’ve received many honours, but that was the most touching,” said the man who remains as lively today as the day he started.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa