By Shaun Brown
Last Saturday night (December 2) Jordan Gill defeated Michael Conlan emphatically in Belfast. However, had it not been for the help of a friend, Gill may not have been here at all.
Speaking to Boxing News, the 29-year-old looked back at his recent win, as well as his heartfelt post-fight interview, and opened up about one of the lowest moments in his life.
BN: How are your lumps and bumps after your fight against Michael Conlan on Saturday?
JG: Nothing too heavy. Iโve been a lot worse in the past. Being up at 130[lbs] makes it a little bit easier to make the weight and I think when youโre not as gaunt in the face you donโt get as marked up, so I donโt think I took too many clean [punches]. I feel all right.
BN: How much did it help moving to super-featherweight and being able to add on those extra pounds?
JG: It made the world of difference. I said during fight week, โLooking back I shouldโve moved up two or three years ago minimum.โ I can still make 130 but Iโm a bit too dead, miserable and my punch resistance isnโt there. At 130 I feel sturdy, I can push people about and land [punches] with intent.
BN: Did the fight play out as you expected?
JG: He had a new trainer, but I knew Mick is Mick and at 32 years old youโre not going to change too much. I knew heโd be skating around, but I expected a bit more resistance. We got the job done.
BN: He was fighting at super-featherweight for the first time. How did his punch power feel?
JG: He never once troubled me; not even the body shots he was landing. I was soaking them up and it didnโt take anything out of me at all. With the crowd behind him, cheering him when heโs landing on the gloves, I expected him to go harder. I knew because heโs inefficient with his work it would tire him out. It was just a matter of waiting. I hurt him early in the fight anyway, so I knew Iโd get him again.
BN: Going into the fight did you think to yourself that if you lost your career was over?
JG: Yeah, 100 per cent.
BN: How did you cope with that then?
JG: It took the pressure off really. With this [new] gym [opening] and a couple of other businesses running, I donโt need to box. I do it because I enjoy it. The opportunity come up and it was a no-brainer. I didnโt feel any pressure at all. He had the crowd. No-one expected me to win. I thought fuck it letโs have it. Last dance.
BN: How did the idea of opening your own gym Box Cross come about?
JG: A friend of mine whoโs been a long-time sponsor showed interest in opening a gym nearby, quite local. He had a little setup in his garden, and it was getting a bit too busy. The council wanted to shut him down, so he showed interest in opening his own gym up and I said, โWhy donโt I come in as a partner?โ Iโve got a name in the local area, and I thought itโd be a good investment opportunity [and I] had a little bit of money laying around. Me, him and his business partner have all gone in, so it splits three ways equally. Iโm really excited. Itโs a massive unit. Weโve done it out so itโs the most Instagrammable place. Got the rings, got the bags, cross-fit section, weights section, all machines, all state-of-the-art, brand-new stuff.
BN: Do you hope to open more gyms in the future or is this a one-off?
JG: We want to get it all over the place and have a chain going. I think Peterborough is the next step probably next year.
BN: You gave a very revealing and honest post-fight interview in the ring. Did you expect to say what you did or did the words just pop out?
JG: It just automatically popped out. Nothing was prepared or rehearsed. I said what was on my mind; I wanted people to resonate with it and understand. When youโre given a platform, I think itโs important to prove to people that youโre human. Youโve got two arms and two legs, you have your doubts and your bad days like anyone else. Hopefully, it resonated with people. Iโve had a lot of messages saying, โYou inspired me.โ You know what men are like; men donโt talk; we just crack on and get on with it. In the summer I was on the brink. To turn my life around the way I haveโฆ if I can do it, anyone can.
BN: The moment you spoke about, when you were in a field during the summer drinking a litre of vodka, was all of it completely out of character?
JG:ย Yeah, Iโd never drank in my life until I was 28 years old. Until 2023 Iโd never touched alcohol. Iโd make a good Muslim, but I love a bacon sandwich. I hit rock bottom really.
BN: What was it that stopped you from ending your life?
JG: There was a girl I was seeing at the time. Iโd split up with my wife. The girl I was seeing at the time, and whoโs a friend, had my location saved on her phone. She came and saved me. It wasnโt nothing that stopped me. She came and saved me. My mind was made up; thatโs what I was going to do that day.
BN: You described the Conlan fight as a potential โlast danceโ. Winning means an extension to your career. So, next year is it all about even more big fights?
JG: Thatโs it. You get into boxing to become a world champion. The career Iโve had – Commonwealth, European, three WBA International belts and up at a new weight – I feel like itโd be an injustice if I didnโt fight for a world title in my career. All I want is a world title shot.