The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Pull-out considered prior to tragic fight

Trainer had concerns over boxer Mike Towell’s headache pains

- JAKE KEITH jkeith@thecourier.co.uk

Boxer Mike Towell’s trainer allegedly considered withdrawin­g him from his final fight due to health concerns, an inquiry into his death has heard.

Chloe Ross, Towell’s girlfriend and mother to his four-year-old boy, told the fatal accident inquiry her mother had a conversati­on with one of Mike’s trainers, Jamie Coyle, in the weeks before the September 29 bout.

The 26-year-old said: “He (trainer Jamie Coyle) said ‘I’m a bit worried about Michael’s headaches. I am thinking about pulling him out of the fight.’

“This was a couple of weeks before.” She said she was unsure whether the conversati­on took place before or after Towell had visited A&E complainin­g of a severe headache on September 11.

Text messages between Towell and close friend Ross Geddes were also read out at the inquiry at Glasgow Sheriff Court.

They revealed the boxer himself was worried about his headaches and hoped for a brain scan at a GP appointmen­t the day after his visit to A&E.

Ms Ross said she was also concerned about the headaches as Towell was reportedly refusing to spar for fear of the pain returning.

She said: “You couldn’t go into a fight and not spar.

“I don’t know much about boxing but I know you need to spar.

“He said his trainers were keeping an eye on it. He said he was starting to feel better.”

Earlier, the inquiry heard Mr Towell had suffered two seizures in 2013, and had been advised to stop boxing and driving, as well as being signed off work.

However, he had brushed off the episodes and refuted a suggested diagnosis of epilepsy, as well as declining further tests after an MRI scan proved inconclusi­ve.

Mr Towell died in hospital after being removed from the ring at the end of a televised fifth round loss to Welshman Dale Evans in Glasgow on September 29 2016.

Questioned by solicitor Mark Fitzpatric­k on behalf of NHS Tayside on her recollecti­on of the May 2016 discussion with doctors, Mr Towell’s mother, Tracy Towell, said she was present but said: “I don’t remember that conversati­on.”

Mrs Towell was also questioned by Mr Fitzpatric­k about her account of a visit to Ninewells accident and emergency unit on September 11, a few weeks before his death.

He had been taken to the hospital by a friend after a sparring session in which he could only last three rounds at his training centre at 1314 Boxing Club in Stirling.

Mrs Towell said her son had a severe headache and was in “agony” and “clearly in distress” while waiting to be seen by doctors.

She said he had a jumper wrapped round his head while sitting on the ground.

She added he was “begging” for a brain scan but was advised to see his GP the following day, where he was prescribed aspirin.

Becoming visibly frustrated, Mrs Towell declared: “If you had fallen over on the pavement outside and split your head open, you would be given a scan but you come in after three rounds boxing with a headache and you don’t?

“I never took him out my sight. He was so bad.

“He was begging for a scan. He said ‘this isn’t normal – there’s something wrong with my head.’”

He “refused” to spar after the incident for fear the headache would return, according to Mrs Towell, and did not enter a ring again until his televised bout on September 29.

Evidence will continue tomorrow from Richard Smith, general secretary of the British Board of Boxing Control.

 ?? Picture: SNS Group. ?? Mike Towell had been advised to stop boxing and driving, an inquiry into his death heard.
Picture: SNS Group. Mike Towell had been advised to stop boxing and driving, an inquiry into his death heard.

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