Bristol had plenty of very rough areas in the 90s/00s, and Sanigar did manage quite a few world-class fighters - Dean Francis, Scott Dann, Glenn Catley, Lee Haskins, the Selby brothers. The heyday seems to be a good few years ago now though.peter barlow wrote: ↑06 Nov 2021, 06:46Would there be much happening in Bristol itself mate? Two of the bigger cities that stood as not being mentioned much are Bristol and Edinburgh. Big enough populations. Never been but my impression is there a bit touristy/posh and full of university students.dookus wrote: ↑05 Nov 2021, 15:55Yeah very good points. Mostly it's small towns and villages, not many boxing gyms, and people don't have £40 to spend on tickets for small hall shows anyway. Nearest promoter of note is Chris Sanigar 150 miles away in Bristol.peter barlow wrote: ↑05 Nov 2021, 15:28
I wouldn't be that familar with it but I wonder does it lack large enough urban centres. May also be again a lack of good or many boxing gyms. No football team of note either.
It's quite hard to penetrate rural areas too. I'm from rural area in Ireland, boxing would be more popular here plenty of clubs in small towns and villages. But it's hard to keep the lights on, the numbers wouldn't be there. And anyone moving up to any standard would need better gyms and training elsewhere.
I know Josh Taylor is from near Edinburgh. He's a Hibs fan and wants to fight at Easter road. Wonder why his fights are mostly in Glasgow not Edinburgh though.
I do get the impression though that Bristol's been gentrified much more than other cities in the last ten years, mostly by uni / media types fleeing London, so maybe it's no longer the kind of place that would support much of a boxing scene. Bear in mind in the South of England it's no. 2 after London (450,000 people) which still makes it considerably smaller than most of the Midlands / Northern cities.