Los Angeles Times

Boxers’ brains remain at high risk

Despite its physical toll, the sport lacks national regulation­s, monitoring of fighters.

- By Lance Pugmire

LAS VEGAS — When Gennady Golovkin and Canelo Alvarez step into the ring on Saturday night at TMobile Arena in Las Vegas, observers will be expecting two fighters to provide the kind of head-rattling finish fans crave.

Boxing’s most dramatic moments can be the ones that involve the gravest physical damage. The absence of national regulation and monitoring of the unforgivin­g toll exacted on the human brain is a moral conundrum the sport continues to wrestle with.

“It’s one of the reasons boxing is such a guilty pleasure,” said Lou DiBella, a veteran New York fight promoter and former HBO executive. “Our greatest warriors are the guys you can most identify with having damage.”

DiBella said he’s conf licted by showcasing the ongoing performanc­es authored by brave fighters while knowing the regula-

tion of their health and safety leaves much to be desired.

He’s watched in sadness as his former middleweig­ht champion Jermain Taylor has spiraled from knockout losses to multiple arrests.

After previously working with the late Sen. John McCain to craft the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act and testifying to Congress about needed improvemen­ts years ago, the Harvard-educated DiBella said the sport requires help.

That could be provided, advocates say, by a national commission to institute consistent monitoring of fighters’ neurologic­al exams and cognitive skills starting before their pro debuts, or a federal law requiring states to institute consistent medical tests in order to stage combat fight shows.

“It’s barbaric when you look at the state of health and safety regulation in boxing to think there are no standardiz­ed tests or regulation­s across all 50 states,” DiBella said. “In a number of states, all you need to fight is an eye test and an HIV test, and there’s guys fighting on club shows who’ve been knocked out 10, 15, 20 times who are getting approved.

“There’s no concussion protocols like the NFL has adopted,” in pulling a player off the field. “To stop the action and look at a fighter — at first I thought it was ridiculous — you’ve got to do that. It might save lives. But there’s no standard anything.”

Dr. Bennet Omalu, who first establishe­d chronic traumatic encephalop­athy in examinatio­ns of the brains of late NFL players, said he’s come to believe “no one under 18 should box,” to avoid punishment to the developing brain.

California’s commission has pressed for national standards to address dehydratio­n. New York has toughened its health reviews following the severe brain damage suffered by heavyweigh­t Magomed Abdusalamo­v in a 2013 bout at Madison Square Garden, a case that resulted in the vegetative fighter’s family winning a $22 million settlement from the state.

“These issues are deep-seated. Commission­s don’t talk to each other and share informatio­n [on fighters] as they should, and while we’ve tried to ramp up our medical protocols in New York, such as having ringside physicians assessing the fighters between all rounds, how others do it ranges from A to Z,” said Dr. Nitin K. Sethi, the chief medical officer of the New York State Athletic Commission.

In a 2015 fight in Fairfax, Va., Puerto Rico’s Prichard Colon sustained numerous punches to the back of the head, causing a brain bleed. He has been in a vegetative state since. Last year in Iowa, Rancho Cucamonga’s Daniel Franco returned to the ring less than three months after a knockout loss, was knocked down once, then knocked out for good in the eighth round and required life-saving brain surgery to emerge from a coma.

“If a guy’s knocked out, we need to consider if the length of suspension should be longer than 60 days. … New York stops a lot of fights now, and I’ve made a conscience decision not to argue with them anymore because I’ve seen too much happen,” DiBella said. “We, as boxing fans, will say, ‘Oh, that guy quit like a dog,’ or, ‘That guy gave up.’ They’re in the ring, we’re not.

“If you see a guy realizing he has a head injury, or feeling weak or abnormal and that makes the guy quit, then God bless him, because it’s not about living to fight another day, it’s about living another day, and how you live all your other days.”

World Boxing Council President Mauricio Sulaiman is proud that his organizati­on’s original $1 million donation to the UCLA neurologic­al department in 1978 led to a $50 million government grant that has prompted “a revolution” of safeguards including shortening title fights from 15 to 12 rounds, staging day-before weigh-ins, improving gloves and encouragin­g the use of electrolyt­es.

Sulaiman says experts are close to suggesting, among other recommenda­tions, a frozen helmet that boxers can wear between rounds to reduce brain swelling.

Those pressing for more safeguards confront the sport’s culture, including relentless work in sparring sessions.

“What happens in the gym is like Las Vegas — it stays in the gym,” Sulaiman said.

“They keep registries of rounds sparred in Japan. And there should be limits on it.”

On Sept. 30 in Ontario, a ring war is expected between Oxnard’s former welterweig­ht world champion Victor Ortiz and La Verne’s John Molina Jr. (30-7), who has three knockout losses..

Molina sounds a familiar refrain when asked if he’s paused to consider the risk of his work.

“The moment I think about that, it’s time to hang it up,” Molina said.

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