The Freeman

In Kyiv, boxing gyms offer chance to ease war stress

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The sound of hip hop mixes with the dull thud of fists walloping heavy bags as a group of Ukrainian boxers unleash combinatio­ns, burning off weeks of pent up stress.

"With the curfew in the city and restrictio­ns on movement, we needed some place to blow off steam and discharge emotional tension," said Oleksandr, a 38-year-old employee of the Internatio­nal Red Cross in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv who did not give his family name.

"Naturally, this helps a lot," he added after wrapping up a workout involving pad work, running and several rounds hammering away at a punching bag.

Weeks after Russian forces retreated from Kyiv's suburbs, the city is slowly returning to life, where nearly twothirds of the capital's residents have returned following the outbreak of the war.

Restaurant­s are reopening and pavement cafes are once again attracting customers with the arrival of a late spring, where many appear to be ignoring the occasional air raid sirens echoing through the city.

Gyms have also begun to reopen, among them the All Stars Boxing Club in downtown Kyiv.

At All Stars, trainers put boxing enthusiast­s, fitness fanatics, and newcomers through their paces -- jumping rope, doing crunches and sparring.

For the past two decades, Ukraine has maintained a dominant presence in the boxing world, with their fighters gaining a reputation for speed, movement, and fighting IQ -- skills that also appear to have been adopted on the battlefiel­d.

Kyiv's Mayor Vitali Klitschko along with his brother Wladimir held a range of heavyweigh­t titles for years, turning the pair into superstars in Ukraine and beyond. That fame also helped drive forward Vitali's successful political career.

Oleksandr Usyk -- the world's unified heavyweigh­t champion -- briefly hung up his gloves in February to join the territoria­l defence forces before returning to train for a highly-anticipate­d rematch against Britain's star boxer Anthony Joshua this summer.

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