Sunday Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Curtis: I get knocked down, but I get up again... you’re never gonna keep me down

44 defeats from 45 fights... the Mancunian who feels like a winner every time he loses

- BY MATT BOZEAT

HE does the Muhammad Ali shuffle, and he’s the greatest. The greatest at losing, that is. Curtis Gargano, 33, from Manchester pays the bills by boxing – but the bottom line is that winning is not his forte.

Light heavyweigh­t Gargano has lost 44 of his 45 profession­al fights – and drawn the other one.

“Every time I fight, I win,” is how Gargano sees his career.

“That’s because I’m getting paid and it gives my kids a more comfortabl­e life.”

Gargano has two children, Isaac (seven) and Penelope (three), and said: “Doing what I do means I can look after them.

“My girlfriend Leanne goes off to work and I drop the kids off at school, then go to the gym.

“I pick the kids up from school, make their tea, and then I go to work on Saturday night.

“I’ve got a fight every week until Christmas, because I want a good Christmas for my kids.

“I’m doing it for them. I’m not trying to make a reputation for myself.

“I want them to have a good life. “People are embarrasse­d to call themselves a journeyman, but I’m not.

“It’s a tough job, a really tough job.” The job is to be a punch bag for up-and-coming prospects week in, week out.

And to do that job, Gargano needs a tight defence, a granite chin and a box of tricks to get himself through fights.

He sticks his chin out at opponents, lifts his arms in the air, and does his version of the Ali shuffle. “I call it ‘The Truffle Shuffle,’” the 5ft 8in fighter said, “because I’ve got a bit of a belly on me.

“I want to confuse my opponents and entertain the crowd as well. They are paying my wages and I want them to enjoy it.

“Fans come up to me after fights and ask for photos. They love watching me.”

Boxing is in Gargano’s DNA.

His late father, Des, was also a journeyman who fought modern great Prince Naseem Hamed during a 123-fight career, and it was his death from cancer aged 49 in 2010

I get to pick up my kids from school, make their tea... then, on Saturday night, I go to work...

I’m getting paid, and it gives my kids a more comfortabl­e lifestyle.

that brought Gargano back to the gym after a wayward decade or so.

He said: “I was a good amateur as a teenager.

“I was knocking people out – and then I went off the rails and didn’t box for 12 years.

“Losing my dad made me get back in the gym.

“I turned pro at 30 wanting to be a journeyman. I’m a fighter, I want to have fights.”

Gargano says that he trained himself for his first 20 fights, but for the last year he’s been with Joe

Pennington, a veteran of the fight scene in the city.

“Curtis is skilful, very skilful,” Pennington said. “But he can be lazy.” Gargano conceded: “I have let myself down a couple of times. I should be beating some of these kids.

“I want wins for my dad and for my kids. I’m getting wiser, stronger and fitter. The wins will come. I’m going to knock someone out soon.”

 ??  ?? NO-WIN SCENARIO Proud journeyman Curtis Gargano boast can
just one draw on his 45-fight record... so far
NO-WIN SCENARIO Proud journeyman Curtis Gargano boast can just one draw on his 45-fight record... so far
 ??  ?? PICTURES EXCLUSIVE Matt Wilkinson/ Focus Images Ltd
PICTURES EXCLUSIVE Matt Wilkinson/ Focus Images Ltd

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