Las Vegas Review-Journal

These boxers fight with cords wrapped around their fists, and crowds love it

- By Mark Rivett-carnac New York Times News Service

KANO, Nigeria — Tijjani Zakari stepped into a dusty boxing ring in northern Nigeria and wound thick, threaded cord around his right fist and forearm. For this fighter, the wrap was more battering ram than padded glove.

Zakari squared up to his opponent, squatting low with his bound arm cocked at his side. Less than a minute after the opening whistle, he landed an echoing blow that floored his opponent. A thousand spectators roared. He had won.

This is dambe, a generation­s-old, West African-style of boxing originally practiced by the Hausa people. It is making a comeback in Nigeria.

Two groups are cultivatin­g this fighting style, with the hope of taking it abroad. One is a grassroots league of dambe clubs, called the Nigeria Traditiona­l Boxing League Associatio­n. The other, Dambe Warriors, promotes the sport online and in live events.

The groups are taking different approaches, but both face the difficulty of preserving dambe’s traditions while appealing to a wide audience and reckoning with the sport’s brutality.

“This is a long journey,” said Faruk Bello, the league’s president and one of its founders, “but we are so determined.”

In dambe, a boxer wraps his stronger arm in cord for striking, the “spear.” He uses the other arm for defense, the “shield.” The goal is to knock over an opponent within three rounds.

With roots in military practices, dambe grew into an event to celebrate harvests, naming ceremonies and funerals, said Aliyu Muhammad Bunza, a professor in the department of languages and culture at Federal University Gusau in Nigeria. Boxers fought for fame, representi­ng their towns and fighting clans.

Today, a patchwork of dambe associatio­ns hosts weekly fights for entertainm­ent across the country, but the sport is most popular in the north.

With its popularity have come questions about its safety.

Some believe dambe is too dangerous in any form. Split brows, broken noses, smashed teeth and knockouts are common. The destructio­n is written in scars on the faces of fighters who have spent years in the ring.

“It’s too brutal,” said Femi Babafemi, an amateur boxing coach. “Those that are doing it are really endangerin­g their lives.”

Still, dambe has become a fulltime job for many fighters. Fans, ring owners and wealthy patrons support their favorite fighters. One establishe­d boxer, Auta Nafiu Abdullah, who has fought for seven years, said he earned, on average, about 100,000 Nigerian naira (about $275) a month.

The fights are frenetic and perilous.

Boxers gather in fighting clans around a sand pit, taunting rivals and breaking suddenly into combat. Today, they head-butt and kick as well as punch. All the while, singers and drummers play mesmeric songs to embolden fighters.

Bello, who started watching dambe 40 years ago, said he started the league in 2017 with fellow enthusiast­s because he had grown fed up with what he saw as the declining quality of the sport.

The league founded six clubs and designed a season of weekend tournament­s in which teams pit their best boxers against one another.

Playing for a club appealed to Garkuwa Maichaga, who followed his brother into dambe at age 10. He joined the league after more than 20 years of navigating the dambe circuit alone, which he described as tiring and expensive.

Along with a regular season, the league drafted a complete set of rules. It consulted with historians, fighters and fans to codify generation­s of tradition while introducin­g new regulation­s to rein in the sport’s wilder tendencies.

The league standardiz­ed uniforms, limited rounds to three minutes, created a system for scoring fights and even included a code of conduct for spectators that threatens rowdy fans with a red card and expulsion.

“We want one day to have a convention­al dambe whereby all countries of the world will be participat­ing,” Bello said.

Four new clubs joined the original six in the second season. And the league reached out to groups in Niger to establish ties across the region.

“From Africa and on to the West,” Bello said. He believes that with the right support, dambe will make the leap from regional martial art to Olympic sport. And he dreams of one day taking an exhibition fight to Las Vegas.

But to create broad appeal, the league is gradually banning some customs that may prove difficult to export.

For example, fighters wear amulets for protection and intimidati­on. They also rub a herbal mixture into rows of half-inch incisions cut up and down their arms, believing it to strengthen punches.

For added safety, the league hired a doctor to monitor fights. It is reaching out to sportswear manufactur­es to create a glove that mimics the traditiona­l hand wraps, only without the flesh-tearing cords. Weight categories will be added next season. So will health insurance and ambulance support, if the league can bring in more money.

Without sponsorshi­ps, the league relies on selling tickets — usually less than 500 naira each — to fund the clubs. And its board members work day jobs to help finance operations.

The pair behind Dambe Warriors, Chidi Anyina and Anthony Okeleke, share the same passion for growing the sport but see it as both an athletic pursuit and a spectacle. Drawing on their media and digital background­s, they promote dambe through Youtube and live events, while recasting it for a modern audience. The vision is to become “the UFC of Africa,” said Okeleke, referring to the Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip.

Today, the pair’s Youtube channel’s 21 videos have racked up 13 million views and more than 50,000 subscriber­s. The data revealed that more than 90 percent of the views came from overseas, mainly the United States, Brazil, Indonesia, India and the Philippine­s.

But as they look abroad, they are encounteri­ng a problem similar to the one facing Bello and the league.

“We are having to battle between keeping that whole traditiona­l essence of the game of dambe and selling it to a global audience,” Anyina said. “It’s not like we have easy answers.”

They are determined to preserve the spectacle of dambe — the sand, the hand wraps and the way boxers spray mouthfuls of water on each other to cool off — but believe adding a clearer scoring system and fight schedule will help outsiders engage.

“We’ll try to just balance the new, modern structure to their unique style,” Okeleke said.

Jirgi Bahago, a boxer who has fought for 15 years, said that since the Lagos event, he had received more calls to compete than ever before. And Aminu Kaura Goje, owner of a dambe ring where Anyina and Okeleke have filmed fights, said the pair had introduced a new audience to the sport by putting it online.

The sport is still teeming with potential, Anyina and Okeleke said, listing opportunit­ies that they are pursuing, including broadcast deals, brand partnershi­ps, merchandis­ing and documentar­ies.

“It’s way bigger than us,” Okeleke said.

 ??  ?? Spectators watch a dambe boxing match in April in Kano, Nigeria.
Spectators watch a dambe boxing match in April in Kano, Nigeria.
 ??  ?? The referee, left, awards a point to the dambe boxer in blue during a Nigeria Traditiona­l Boxing League match March 18 in Nasarawa State, Nigeria.
The referee, left, awards a point to the dambe boxer in blue during a Nigeria Traditiona­l Boxing League match March 18 in Nasarawa State, Nigeria.

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