Weekend Herald

Fuelling fire: Fa fighting to honour father

- Boxing Patrick McKendry Junior Fa

When New Zealand heavyweigh­t boxer Junior Fa travelled to Salt Lake City, Utah, six weeks ago to go into camp for his fight against American Devin Vargas, he carried with him a heavy heart and the words of his dying father, Uaine, the man he is named after.

The message was don’t stop — keep fighting — and 30-year-old Junior, undefeated in 18 fights, intends to do just that when he steps into the Salt Palace ring against Vargas next Saturday. It will fuel his fire even further.

The Fa family had about five weeks to prepare for Uaine’s death from cancer, and for that, they are grateful. The 62-year-old was at home in Papakura watching the All Blacks play South Africa in their World Cup pool game in Yokohama on September 21 when he collapsed at halftime. He died in hospital the next night.

The end was sudden but that’s the way Uaine wanted it, said Junior.

“He wasn’t the type of man to be lying around and being cared for,” he told the Weekend Herald.

The Tongan-born Uaine, a fine amateur boxer in his youth, was a busy, popular and proud man, a factory worker and the biggest supporter of the five Fa children. Junior has an older brother, two older sisters and a younger brother. And so the funeral was effectivel­y a week-long celebratio­n of his life.

“When he was diagnosed, Mum [Edith] kept everything quiet because she knew as soon as everyone knew he was going to pass, everyone would flood the house,” Junior said. “She told us not to tell too many people because ‘Dad doesn’t have too long here and we have to make sure we spend the time with him’.”

Once the news was out, the Fa household was a busy place, as expected; it was full of relatives, friends and supporters of the family, including fellow City Kickboxing gym-goer Israel Adesanya, the newly-crowned UFC middleweig­ht world champion.

“He was very committed to us kids,” Junior said of his father. “He would always take us to our trainings and the park. He always wanted us to succeed in our sport because he knew we were all sport-driven children.

“When I go to Tonga, I learn different things about him every time I go. The first time I went, the people told me stories about my Dad and how good he was at boxing. I had no clue. He’s the type of fella who wouldn’t talk about himself unless you asked him about it.

“Growing up, I basically saw two sports — rugby because of where we live, New Zealand — and I saw boxing because my Dad was constantly punching the bag downstairs. I didn’t like rugby, so I wanted to do boxing. When I turned 15, my Dad finally took me to a boxing gym.

“He was always a very big supporter.

“The one thing he told me was ‘don’t stop, keep on going. It doesn’t matter that I’m gone, just carry on with the boxing — it will be good for the family’. I guess I can use that extra fuel for the flames for my fight.”

Junior said after a good camp, he was fully focused on his fight against Vargas, a 37-year-old former Olympian who has a 21-5 win-loss record. His last defeat was against world champion Andy Ruiz Jr.

Whether Fa succeeds or not, the night is likely to be emotional for him and his family.

Either way, he just wants to do Uaine proud.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand