New York Post

SMOKIN' JOES PUT UP DUKES

Global battle of Bravest in MSG ring

- By STEFAN JEREMIAH

He’s getting ready for combat — of a sporting kind.

An Army veteran who was inspired to serve after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks will put some serious brawn into the Bravest this week when he steps into the boxing ring at Madison Square Garden.

Victor Woods, 34, will duke it out in the super heavyweigh­t division, representi­ng the Bronx’s Ladder 17 Green Berets at the FDNY’s first-ever Internatio­nal Battle of the Badges.

“You’re always gonna have this heightened sense of drive, a hypervigil­ance, and every day you gotta find somewhere to put it,” Woods told The Post last week about how his years in combat with the Army helped fine-tune his athleticis­m.

On Thursday, Woods and 12 other Bravest fighters will square off against other firefighte­rs and cops from as far away as Ireland and the UK. Proceeds will go toward the Tunnel to Towers Foundation, the nonprofit named after FDNY firefighte­r Stephen Siller, who died in the attacks.

It’s a battle the 6-foot-1, 235pound, Brooklyn-born father of two has spent months training for, sparring as many as five times a week despite his long hours at the firehouse and amping up his cardio conditioni­ng so hard that he gave himself stress fractures in his legs.

“Getting ready for the fight has been an everyday thing. Even on my off days, I would be doing stretches with resistance bands, really pulling my tendons on my arms, getting everything loose,” said Woods.

Woods earned his street smarts splitting his childhood between Park Slope and the Red Hook housing projects — but 9/11 shaped his future.

“It had bearing on everything that I do,” said Woods, who was in seventh grade when the Twin Towers fell.

“We lived on the fourth floor in this apartment in Brooklyn and when you looked out the window, all you saw was where Manhattan used to be, it was a cloud of smoke.”

“I couldn’t wait to go,” he said outside Victory Boxing gym in Midtown, where he’s training. “As soon as I turned 18, I was outta there.”

Woods, who was deployed twice in 2011 and 2017, worked as a combat engineer with the 668th Engineer Company.

He spent most of his time in Afghanista­n clearing routes and scouring for IEDs, or improvised explosive devices, planted along roads by the Taliban.

Lost ‘my brothers’

“I’ve been in six IED explosions, two of them were pressure plates,” Woods recalled. “So basically the truck drives over it and the truck goes up. I lost five of my brothers in 2012 [from IED attacks]. I still have a bracelet that I wear for them.”

While home in 2013, Woods struggled with post-traumatic stress disorder — he recalled a time he and his wife, Stephanie, were sitting outside on the balcony of their Rockaway home when an electrical box suddenly exploded nearby.

“I spilled my beer all over her, I dragged her, tried to put her in the house,” he said. “I went into the bathroom and broke down. I can’t believe I just did that in front of my wife.”

Stephanie was key in helping Woods connect with a therapy program tailored to veterans.

“It took me a long time after this last deployment to transition and I have to definitely credit my wife to that,” he said. “She put in the work to help me finally get comfortabl­e at home.”

Woods’ amateur MMA fighter cousin, meanwhile, turned him into a gym rat as another way to heal.

“It was just basically to get in shape at first but I kinda fell in love with moving and stuff,” he said.

In 2015, Woods fulfilled his other dream, joining the FDNY and finding a lifelong brotherhoo­d with his fellow firefighte­rs.

“This place is like a second family to me. I love going to work now,” he said.

In fact, his Ladder 17 brother, Mark Pachto, has been coaching the heavily tattooed Woods, taking time out of his own busy schedule to support him.

“He’s got a hell of a right hand. He’s really got power in both hands,” said Pachto.

“Couple of times hitting the body bag kinda took the wind out of me. I’m feeling it. Honestly, I know he’s gonna win, I’m very confident in my guy, everyone’s behind him.”

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 ?? ?? WARRIOR: FDNY firefighte­r and Army veteran Victor Woods is prepping for big Thursday bout with tutelage of coach and Ladder 17 brother Mark Pachto (below left) at Victory Boxing in Midtown.
WARRIOR: FDNY firefighte­r and Army veteran Victor Woods is prepping for big Thursday bout with tutelage of coach and Ladder 17 brother Mark Pachto (below left) at Victory Boxing in Midtown.

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