Criminal Damage: When loaded gloves make a dangerous sport even more dangerous

By Elliot Worsell


BACK in September 2001, Donald Trump repeatedly tapped the shoulder of Naazim Richardson inside a Madison Square Garden dressing room and, to his dismay, found his advances rebuffed. It was unusual for Trump, a notorious grabber, to be blanked, to not get what he wanted, but Richardson, otherwise engaged, wasnโ€™t in the least bit interested.

That night the coach of Bernard Hopkins ignored The Donald, setting an example his country should years later have followed, and did so because his focus and attention was fixed on the left and right hands of Felix โ€˜Titoโ€™ Trinidad. And, specifically, the two layers of tape and gauze being applied to them.

โ€œThe way Trinidad wrapped his hands was not illegal everywhere,โ€ saidย Richardson. โ€œIt was only illegal in New York. He could wrap his hands like that in other states.

โ€œHe could have been an honourable guy. They might have been used to wrapping his hands a certain way in Vegas and other places and then came to New York and it wasnโ€™t allowed. I just pointed out the fact it wasnโ€™t allowed.โ€

With Trump having now left the changing room,ย Richardsonย was alerted to the fact heโ€™d just cold-shouldered the future host ofย The Apprentice. โ€œHey, man,โ€ said a bystander, โ€œdidnโ€™t you hear Donald Trump? He was trying to talk to you.โ€

Richardson, true to form, shrugged, unimpressed by celebrity, even less impressed by the stench of foul play. โ€œAll I know is Donald Trumpโ€™s got nothing to do with these damn hand wraps,โ€ he answered. โ€œWe will all stay in our lanes and weโ€™ll be fine.โ€

Looking back,ย Richardsonย believes they wanted him out of there, out of that room, by any means necessary. Failing that, they wanted to distract him. Dazzle him. But it didnโ€™t work. Brotherย Naazimย held his ground, informed the commission Trinidad had incorrectly wrapped hands, in accordance to the local rules, and then had the Puerto Rican, undefeated in 40 fights, start all over again and rewrap, this time with one layer of tape rather than two.

โ€œBernardโ€™s safety was too important,โ€ย Richardsonย said. โ€œAs a coach, you meet their kids, their parents, their wife. I want to give them back the way they came to me. Just the same way.โ€

Britainโ€™s Glenn Catley was never the same after a WBC super-middleweight title defence against Dingaan Thobela in Brakpan, South Africa the year before Hopkins vs. Trinidad. This change had less to do with him relinquishing his title, thus pride being dented, and more to do with the sensation of being smashed around the face for almost 12 rounds by someone holding a โ€œglass ash trayโ€.

โ€œNew gloves are like new shoes,โ€ he explains. โ€œTheyโ€™re always a little tight and youโ€™ve got to wear them in a bit before using them. I used to give them to my trainer and heโ€™d wear them and open and close them for 20 minutes to make them looser and more pliable.

โ€œAs soon as Thobelaโ€™s first jab landed, I wondered what the hell he had done to his gloves. I suspected foul play. I was scared of being hit after that first jab.

โ€œNow, if youโ€™ve been boxing 20-odd years, you know what a punch feels like, whether it lands on your face, your arms or your gloves. You get a feel for these things. But Thobelaโ€™s shots were like something Iโ€™d never experienced before.

โ€œThe next day, I noticed welts all over my face. I know, as a boxer, youโ€™re going to get bruises and swelling the morning after, but Iโ€™d never experienced welts like those before.โ€

Before he revealed his suspicions to Chris Sanigar, his trainer, he simply stood before him and allowed him to draw his own conclusions. The image alone would suffice.

โ€œLook at my face, Chris,โ€ Catley said. โ€œSomething isnโ€™t right.โ€

Catley suspected Thobela had either loaded his glove with a foreign object or wrapped his hands in a way that ensured he punched harder than normal. He told Sanigar this was something heโ€™d feared as early as round one.

โ€œWhy didnโ€™t you say something at the time?โ€ asked his coach, to which Catley, a big advocate of psychology, replied: โ€œI couldnโ€™t fight with any negative thoughts in my head. I had to block it out.โ€

The price he paid was this: he got knocked out in the last round, his face was damaged more in one fight than in 29 previous fights combined, and he now couldnโ€™t even remember walking back to the changing room, much less details pertaining to the action.

Worse, he was left with the sinking feeling that if he were to speak out now, voice his concerns and suspicions, it would likely be deemed a sure-fire case of sour grapes in the eyes of those whoโ€™d seen him surrender his title.

Alas, Catley headed back to Bristol and kept quiet. It was a silence maintained for six weeks, broken only when his uncle, calling from Wales, inadvertently kickstarted the enquiry.

โ€œHave you seen the fight yet, Glenn?โ€ the former champion was asked.

โ€œNo,โ€ went the reply. โ€œNot yet.โ€

โ€œWell, his bandages seemed ever so strange, didnโ€™t they?โ€

โ€œWhat do you mean?โ€ asked Catley, his uncle unaware of his own suspicions.

โ€œIt looked like he a mobile phone strapped to his knuckles.โ€

No sooner had he hung up the phone than Catley was sat down watching the fight on tape for the first time. It was then he identified what his uncle meant; it was then he started to understand why the next morning he saw what he saw in the bathroom mirror. โ€œHorrified but pleased,โ€ is how he describes it.

People in boxing work on intuition, a gut instinct, a lot of the time. They also become familiar with the sportโ€™s necessary routines โ€“ like hand wrapping โ€“ and take comfort from knowing a process is done correctly, often without thought, both in gyms and in dressing rooms on fight night. This knowledge, as well as a familiarity with punches โ€“ their placement, their impact โ€“ generated inย Naazimย Richardsonย a feeling of concern he couldnโ€™t shake ahead of Bernard Hopkinsโ€™ fight against Felix Trinidad.

โ€œIโ€™m a fan of boxing,โ€ he says, โ€œand I was a big fan of Felix Trinidad. He was one of my favourite fighters. He beat Yori Boy Campas, a guy I liked. If Yori Boy had known what we found out about Trinidad, maybe he wouldnโ€™t have got past him. But Yori Boy said this about Trinidad: โ€˜He might go down, but heโ€™ll get up and knock your head off.โ€™

โ€œI watched that fight and I was like, โ€˜Wow, heโ€™s punching incredible.โ€™ When you see someone hitting guys on the top of the head and on the elbows and theyโ€™re not hurting their hands, it makes you wonder. Normally you block a body shot with your elbow and the guy feels it. He then thinks twice about going there again. But Trinidad was just throwing punches at random. That caught my attention.โ€

Richardsonย stayed vigilant. Wise to it, he was, like so many in the sport, fascinated by the tale of Jack Dempsey and Jess Willard in 1919, and then haunted by the tale of Luis Resto and Billy Collins Jr and their 1983 โ€˜fightโ€™ at Madison Square Garden.

He knows dark forces like Carlos โ€˜Panamaโ€™ Lewis exist in boxing โ€“ have always existed in boxing โ€“ but struggles to remove from his mind the image of what hands soaked in plaster of Paris did to the face of poor Billy Collins Jr. The swelling. The slits for eyes. The torn iris. The busted lip. The welts.

And that was just the short-term damage. In time, plaster casts (encased in boxing gloves missing an ounce of padding) also led to blurred vision, a no-contest, a premature retirement, depression, a car crash, and the death of a 22-year-old.

For this, Lewis and Resto, the original โ€˜winnerโ€™, were convicted of assault, conspiracy and criminal possession of a deadly weapon โ€“ Restoโ€™s two fists โ€“ in 1986. They spent two-and-a-half years in jail and were banned from boxing, the only thing Resto knew, for life.

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Shane Mosley punishes Antonio Margarito during their WBA welterweight title fight on January 24, 2009 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, California (Donald Miralle/Getty Images)

Whether deformed, deceitful or distraught, these faces, once youโ€™ve seen them, are tough to forget. Redefining the phraseย win at all costs, they offer an indication of when boxing, inย Naazimย Richardsonโ€™s words, moves from competition to violence: โ€œI donโ€™t consider boxing violence. Violence is when you violate the rules. When the rules are agreed upon and followed, itโ€™s just a contest. When you violate the rules, though, it becomes violence.โ€

Thatโ€™s why, eight years after Trinidad and Trump,ย Richardsonย was again causing a scene in a dressing room, moments before a fight, only this time with a far greater sense of anger and urgency.

โ€œOh, this situation was different,โ€ he says. โ€œAntonio Margaritoโ€™s hand wraps were illegalย everywhereย in the world.โ€

Asked to oversee the wrapping process on behalf of Shane Mosley, his latest fighter,ย Richardsonย was suddenly among Margaritoโ€™s team, quarrelling, jostling, his mind a mess of conflicting thoughts, flooded with icky memories and dรฉjร  vu. He had to act. It was his job to do so.

โ€œShane did everything asked of him for that particular fight and was so ready for it,โ€ he says. โ€œIย knewย he could beat Margarito. But after I found the piece of cast in the hand wraps, I thought they were going to lock him up. I thought the fight was going to be off. I was like, โ€˜Oh man, Iโ€™ve got this kid ready to go and Iโ€™ve just ruined the opportunity for him.โ€™

โ€œThe commission, though, stepped up and asked me to give them the piece of plaster he had in his hands. I said Iโ€™d only give it to Shane Mosley or his lawyer.

โ€œI didnโ€™t want to give it to someone and then two months later, when the investigation is launched, they look in the box and thereโ€™s two cotton balls. Everybody would be like, โ€˜Well, did you know Brotherย Naazimย had a stroke (in 2007)?โ€™ Theyโ€™d make out Iโ€™d lost it a little bit.โ€

Margarito, throwing the same two hands but without the support of sulfur and calcium, elements found in plaster of Paris, struggled getting to grips with Mosley in Los Angeles and was eventually hammered to defeat in the ninth round.

To the surprise of many, it was โ€˜Sugarโ€™ Shane, the fleet-footed virtuoso, who stood his ground and landed the bigger, heavier, more harmful blows, all the while Margarito, a machine taken apart and put back together again, sans batteries, cowered like a child admonished by a parent. (As for the salt, the California State Athletic Commission then revoked his boxing license.)

โ€œI donโ€™t know if he lost confidence,โ€ recallsย Richardson, who watched Margarito wrap his hands three times. โ€œI just think that night Shane Mosley would have beaten him with those pieces in his hands. But you canโ€™t take those chances.

โ€œI felt bad for Shane and Bernard in those situations because I didnโ€™t want people to think they wouldnโ€™t have beaten Margarito and Trinidad if it wasnโ€™t forย Naazimย messing with the hand wraps. I felt as though the work we did before exposing the hand wraps was going to make us victorious regardless.โ€

Glenn Catley, meanwhile, armed with photos, canvassed opinion at a British Boxing Board of Controlโ€™s awards dinner and then, encouraged by a groundswell of support, lobbied a complaint at a WBC convention in Mexico City.

โ€œOff the back of the photos,โ€ he says, โ€œthey set up a separate hearing six weeks later in Paris, which we all had to attend โ€“ me, Chris, Thobela and his trainer, as well as the WBC representative. Thobela, of course, denied all knowledge, but the WBC deemed something wasnโ€™t right.

โ€œWhat they offered to do was make me the mandatory challenger with a 60/40 purse split โ€“ normally the split is 75/25. Now that, to me, is an admission of guilt. They also recommended the suspension of the referee, Eddie Cotton, and the inspector on the night, Houcine Houichi.

โ€œIn the end, Jose Sulaiman, the WBC President, overturned the suspensions of both officials, but allowed the rest to stay in place. It was all an admission that theyโ€™d dropped a b****ck.โ€

According to the report, Houichi went to Thobelaโ€™s dressing room to sign his bandages but neither Thobela nor his trainer were ready. He then went to Catleyโ€™s dressing room and signed the championโ€™s bandages. Finally, on returning to Thobela, he realised the South Africanโ€™s bandages had already been signed, presumably by the referee.

โ€œItโ€™s not Eddie Cottonโ€™s job to sign bandages,โ€ says Catley. โ€œEddie Cotton, however, says he witnessed Houichi sign both sets of bandages and that there was no chance of any wrongdoing. One of them, in black and white, has lied. Their reports contradict each other.

โ€œWe were both left unattended for forty minutes. Thatโ€™s not supposed to happen. We pay the WBC a portion of our purse so that the inspectors stay with us for the duration of the night, to the point where theyโ€™re even watching us do our urine samples.โ€

Later, Catley tried suing the WBC. He felt he should be reimbursed the sanctioning fees heโ€™d been made to pay to guarantee some duty of care from officials. A strong case. Or so he thought.

โ€œThe case wasnโ€™t against Thobela,โ€ he says. โ€œAside from photos, Iโ€™ve got nothing physical or tangible to prove his wrongdoing. Itโ€™s his word against mine.

โ€œNo, my case was against the WBC because their incompetence cost me my title, a lot of money and prematurely terminated my career. They ruined me.

โ€œThat Thobela fight finished me. Truth be told, I slipped into a depression. Iโ€™ve got reports that state I was going through depression and that it was brought on by what happened in South Africa.

โ€œWhen I boxed Eric Lucas the second time, he stopped me โ€“ something he didnโ€™t come close to doing first time around. It was all because I was a shell of a man. I woke up the morning after that Lucas defeat and just didnโ€™t care. All I wanted to do was grab my money and go home to my kids. I wasnโ€™t devastated, I was depressed. And those two things are very, very different.โ€

Catley wasnโ€™t alone. Thobela, too, lost every one of his final seven fights and retired in 2006. He, like Margarito, a Mexican whose entire body of work has been called into question, found it difficult to thrive amid the scrutiny and the tightening of the rules.

As for Margarito, the big asterisk against him concerns a career-defining eleventh round stoppage of Miguel Cotto eight months before he and his coach, Javier Capetillo, were rumbled byย Richardson. At the time, this display, some ten years ago, was widely celebrated, the crowning moment in a hard-fought career, and captured the Mexican at his relentless best.

Now, however, Margaritoโ€™s magnum opus is the boxing equivalent of a Milli Vanilli performance, or an episode ofย The Cosby Show, only tougher to watch.

โ€œWeโ€™ll never know,โ€ says eagle-eyeย Richardsonย when asked if Margarito illegally wrapped his hands for the Cotto fight. โ€œItโ€™s a fantasy matchup. We canโ€™t measure it.

โ€œItโ€™s like a guy walking in on his wife cheating on him. Sheโ€™ll jump up and say itโ€™s the first time. Sheโ€™s not going to say, โ€˜Iโ€™ve been doing it for years.โ€™ He wonโ€™t say heโ€™s been wrapping his hands like that all the time and just happened to get caught that one time.โ€

You go back to the signs, I suppose. The facial damage, for instance, that stayed with Cotto and flared up in most of the Puerto Ricanโ€™s subsequent fights. The handsome, chiselled features hammered like plasticine into something grotesque and shapeless. The helplessness in his eyes. The lips so swollen theyโ€™d no longer touch. The swabs entering his nostrils white and coming out red.ย Blood red. The way heโ€™d then blow that misshapen nose before the start of every round and cross his chest with his right glove, hoping for some divine intervention, a place to escape, help.

โ€œThe thing that made me suspicious was how Margarito seemed to punch harder late in the fight,โ€ย Richardsonย says. โ€œSomeone like Gennady Golovkin can punch but I donโ€™t know how late he can punch.

โ€œVery few fighters who arenโ€™t explosive can still punch hard late in a fight. Shane Mosley was dangerous late in the Margarito fight but heโ€™s explosive. In a 12-round fight, Shane can explode and hit you with something at any moment and knock you out. He does that when youโ€™re both tired.

โ€œMargarito, though, was never explosive. He was methodical. Most methodical guys slow down as the fight goes on. But he was methodicalย andย punching harder as the fight got late. I was like, โ€˜How is this motherf**ker punching harder in the eighth round than he did in the first round?โ€™

โ€œWell, he had a cushion and had the piece of cast inserted in the cushion. As the cushion mashes down, it gets to that cast. By the ninth or tenth round heโ€™s punching on that cast now. Thatโ€™s what youโ€™re feeling hitting your elbows and the top of your head.โ€

In the case of Cotto and Margarito, boxing, a sport youโ€™d be hard pressed to ever call fair, did the right thing and settled the situation in the best way possible. The pair fought again in 2011, this time with stricter parenting, and Cottoโ€™s revenge beating was so thorough it rendered Margarito unable to continue beyond the ninth round.ย Richardson, ostensibly the reason for the heightened security, nay, the reason for the rematch, was back at MSG, where it all started, to watch justice prevail.

โ€œWhen they fought the second time, I was still suspicious,โ€ he says. โ€œCotto hired me to watch Margarito get his hands wrapped. I told Cotto, โ€˜All you had to do was stay standing in the last fight and you would have beaten him. So you know you can beat this guy. Even if he has the plaster in his hands again, you can beat him having had that knowledge and been there before.โ€™

โ€œAt first Margaritoโ€™s people were like, โ€˜Hey, we donโ€™t care who watches us wrap his hands.โ€™ But when they flew me down there last minute and I got to the door, they went off. They went crazy. They appealed to the New York commission and wouldnโ€™t let me watch him wrap. โ€˜We donโ€™t want him in our room!โ€™ they said. โ€˜We donโ€™t want him in here!โ€™

โ€œI was like, โ€˜Yeah, I wouldnโ€™t want me in there, either.โ€™โ€

In life, knowledge is power. In boxing, itโ€™s also protection.

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