Patrick Day death: You can say ‘it’s boxing’ but it is so hard to justify, says Eddie Hearn

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Promoter Eddie Hearn broke down in tears in paying tribute to American fighter Patrick Day, and said boxing must unite to make the sport safer.

 

Day died at the age of 27 on Wednesday, four days after suffering a brain injury in a 10th-round stoppage defeat by Charles Conwell in Chicago.

 

The bout took place on a bill promoted by Hearn’s Matchroom Boxing USA.

 

After becoming upset, Hearn told IFL TV: “You can say ‘it’s boxing’ but it is so hard to justify.”

 

He added: “It has been a rough year for the sport. We need to make sure we get together as a community. We keep trying to evolve, we keep trying to make the sport safer.

 

“There are so many things we can look at as a community, particularly [brain] scans. One of the issues is the frequency of scans in my opinion. You can have a yearly scan but sometimes it doesn’t take into account the fights you have had since that scan.”

 

 

‘Indefensible’ boxing saves lives too

 

Day’s is the fourth death in boxing in recent months, following the passing of Russian Maxim Dadashev, Argentina’s Hugo Santillan and Bulgaria’s Boris Stanchov.

 

Bunce said: “I have been ringside in the last 30 years for half a dozen deaths and maybe 12 or 15 other fights where boxers have been rushed to emergency procedures.

 

“I have been in waiting rooms, I’ve been there when doctors have told loved ones that their son, husband and father has died. I have been there when guys have been given no chance and pulled through after six or seven weeks in a coma.

 

“I have studied it. It’s an odd business and I love it. It’s what I do for a living but at the same time it is a sport that is indefensible. But, at the same time, boxing and boxers make perfect sense to me.

 

“I have wracked my brains to come up with anything that can make boxing safer. In Britain, the British Boxing Board of Control (BBBofC) has the world’s finest safety measures yet we still have deaths. It is that simple. There is nothing that can be done.

 

“It’s when you go and meet people at a gym in the worst part of a city and you take their testimony of how this sport has saved their life. That may sound like cliched rubbish, and I understand how it looks, but that is the bottom line.

 

“Unless you are in the business, you can’t understand it. But I am not defending it, it is impossible to do so.”

‘The sport cannot be 100% safe’

 

Bunce questions whether the idea of scanning fighters before each fight is viable given the costs involved but says clamping down on white collar boxing events – where competitors pay to fight – would be a step forward.

 

BBC boxing correspondent Costello also said the cost of head scans at every fight night would prove an issue, and that fighters policing their own health can be key.

 

Costello said: “If they feel rough, have headaches, then don’t fight. Unfortunately they get this buzz, this addiction and this opportunity they have to change their life. Sometimes it can be the ending of a life.”

 

Day’s fatal bout was sanctioned by the State of Illinois commission and Hearn praised the speed with which oxygen was administered and how Day was treated before being rushed to hospital.

 

The BBBofC – which sanctions the majority of fights in the UK – has stringent rules in place stating a fighter must pass an annual medical – which includes an MRI scan – and also ensures fight nights meet rules.

 

The organisation’s chairman, Robert Smith, told BBC Radio 5 Live: “We work very hard to make the sport as safe as possible but, as I have always said, we cannot make the sport 100% safe.

 

“The medical provisions changed over the last number of years have been immense. But when a boxer gets in the ring, he understands the risk and that doesn’t make it right when things go wrong.

 

“Every boxer will have an annual medical which will cover your brain scans, MRI, bloods, physical examinations, eye tests etc. Before every bout you are medically examined to make sure you are fit. After the bout you are examined again and if a doctor has any doubts he can put conditions

on you boxing again in the future, so it’s very strict.

 

“Ultimately, it is very difficult to stop these things happening. If you think about the amount of contests and tournaments that take place throughout the world, the number of incidents is relatively small. That doesn’t make it right.”