A story I read....

Post Reply
cocka09
Super Welterweight
Posts: 210
Joined: 14 Aug 2014, 08:27

A story I read....

Post by cocka09 »

I read a story online a number of years ago about a retired boxer who developed a personality disorder and would train everyday for a fight that had happened many years before. I cannot, for the life of me remember his name - I know it's not much of a description but would anyone have any idea on who this guy was?

Thanks
Rexob
Middleweight
Posts: 6025
Joined: 20 Mar 2014, 15:17

Re: A story I read....

Post by Rexob »

Sounds like Bruno?
Cygnus475
Welterweight
Posts: 271
Joined: 27 Feb 2016, 16:33

Re: A story I read....

Post by Cygnus475 »

Hell of a way to stay in shape, your mind tricking itself into thinking you have an important match coming up. :D
klompton
Heavyweight
Heavyweight
Posts: 2738
Joined: 07 Jul 2003, 02:27

Re: A story I read....

Post by klompton »

Ad Wolgast
misterpunch
Light Heavyweight
Posts: 1252
Joined: 13 Jan 2012, 17:48

Re: A story I read....

Post by misterpunch »

yep ad wolgast - his trainer/manager was protecting him from returning to the ring with dementia
klompton
Heavyweight
Heavyweight
Posts: 2738
Joined: 07 Jul 2003, 02:27

Re: A story I read....

Post by klompton »

It was California promoter Jack Doyle, he supported Wolgast for a while out of charity.
doug.ie
Heavyweight
Heavyweight
Posts: 812
Joined: 24 Mar 2009, 12:57

Re: A story I read....

Post by doug.ie »

funny. i was posting about this on facebook earlier.

this is what i quoted..

In 1918, former World Lightweight Champion Ad Wolgast escaped from the hospital where he was being held and lived for a time in the mountains of North Carolina, where he was eventually “discovered” and given over to the care of Jack Doyle, a boxing promoter from Vernon, California. Doyle offered to let Wolgast live and train with him, with the stipulation that Wolgast would never again be allowed to enter a prizefighting ring, and as a result, Wolgast spent the next seven years (from 1920 to 1927) diligently training every day, skipping rope, running, and shadow boxing for a fight that never came. Wolgast trained from sun up to sun down, and would retire exhausted each evening with the belief that his title shot was always a day away. For close to seven years, this ritual went on, with Doyle offering encouragement and keeping Wolgast preoccupied and singularly focused, in a sad re-embodiment of his former self.

(by Aaron Lloyd)
Post Reply