RIP Roger Barlow
Posted: 13 Jul 2018, 10:07
Former England amateur star Roger Barlow passed away last month in his home city of Coventry at the age of 68. He had suffered from dementia.
Roger made the trip to the inaugural European juniors in Hungary in 1970, picking up a fine bronze medal at light-heavyweight, and he went on to win full England vests before turning pro in 1971 with proud Welshman Eddie Thomas, who refused to toe the line with big London promoters and built his fighters on soulless dinner shows, which is where Roger, by now growing into a dangerous heavyweight, found himself tucked away.
This suited the aloof Ken Buchanan but the bubbly, crowdpleasing Barlow liked the roar of the fans and the isolation clearly affected him. He got off to a disastrous start, losing two of his first three outings but then settled down and put together an exciting 10-fight unbeaten run to secure showdowns with fellow heavyweight threats Eddie Neilson and Neville Meade, both of whom overwhelmed him in brief but explosive thrillers. Meade, of course, went on to win the British heavyweight title.
Roger took a few years off and then tried again, winning two comeback fights in the Midlands before Steve Fenton embarrassed him on a first-round knockout in Coventry in 1978 and Roger, still only 28, decided enough was enough and he proved a popular landlord in the city for many, many years.

Roger made the trip to the inaugural European juniors in Hungary in 1970, picking up a fine bronze medal at light-heavyweight, and he went on to win full England vests before turning pro in 1971 with proud Welshman Eddie Thomas, who refused to toe the line with big London promoters and built his fighters on soulless dinner shows, which is where Roger, by now growing into a dangerous heavyweight, found himself tucked away.
This suited the aloof Ken Buchanan but the bubbly, crowdpleasing Barlow liked the roar of the fans and the isolation clearly affected him. He got off to a disastrous start, losing two of his first three outings but then settled down and put together an exciting 10-fight unbeaten run to secure showdowns with fellow heavyweight threats Eddie Neilson and Neville Meade, both of whom overwhelmed him in brief but explosive thrillers. Meade, of course, went on to win the British heavyweight title.
Roger took a few years off and then tried again, winning two comeback fights in the Midlands before Steve Fenton embarrassed him on a first-round knockout in Coventry in 1978 and Roger, still only 28, decided enough was enough and he proved a popular landlord in the city for many, many years.
