(APR 1) The sixth edition
of the International Women’s Boxing Hall of Fame was the largest
class, to date, numbering twelve inductees. As in past years,
the majority of honorees (in 2019 the number was seven), were
retired boxers. This is hardly surprising since athletes are the
centerpiece of any sport. This is especially true in an
individual sport like boxing.
Equally unsurprising is that the
earliest IWBHF classes featured the “bold faced type” names in
the sport, those boxers whom even the casual fans of Women’s
boxing probably recognized.
As the IWBHF inductee list
naturally expands, the names and resumes of the honored fighters
may lack the instant “l remember” recognition of the earlier
“face of the sport” inductees. But, in point of fact, these
latter inductees deserve their IWBHF honor in equal measure,
since, in truth, it was often these athletes who provided the
backbone to a sport that overcame the almost insurmountable
hurdles placed on female boxing in it’s formative years during
the final decade of the last century. That these fighters do not
immediately trigger universal name recognition is, on the one
hand, somewhat understandable.
But, in a far larger sense, their
place in the sport and the honor bestowed upon them are equally
well deserved. While well known luminaries such as Christy
Martin, Laila Ali and Lucia Rijker brought “big name” visibility
to the sport, it was fighters such as Lisa Holewyne who made the
case to the boxing public that there existed a formidable cast
of female fighters, endowed with substantial ring skills. And it
was those fighters and those skills that sustained the sport
throughout it’s nascent modern era early years.
Lisa Holewyne is prominent on any
listing of those boxers in those years and she, when we spoke
last week, reflected on what she perceives as the different
tenor in the sport, then and now. “It seems to me, thinking
back, there was a lot less talking and posturing outside the
ropes in those days than there is now in the sport. Then, it was
train, train, train then, finally, fight; then back to the gym
and ‘who’s next?’” “And the answer to that was not ‘who can we
get an easy win against’, but ‘who can we fight and move up
towards a title’”. Holewyne won the WIBF World Super Lightweight
title with a ten round decision over Marischa Sjauw in April,
2001.
“Sure, I thought about it (HOF induction), but I had put it out
of my mind,” Holewyne replies when asked about her induction
into the 2019 IWBHF class. “And, honestly, when I heard about
it, I had to pull over to the side of the road I was crying so
hard, and, believe me, I’m not a crier. Surreal may be the word
that best describes my feeling. I first got into the sport
because I was an athlete (a pentathlete at Texas University) and
I thought ‘l can do this’. And what this honor really means to
me is respect; the most important kind of respect, from your
peers. Induction into the IWBHF is, to me, the ultimate
compliment for a female boxer.”
That respect was hard earned.
Turning professional when she was 32, Holewyne compiled a ring
career of 44 bouts (25-17-2) over eight years (1998-06)
encompassing 267 rounds. These were, indeed, the formative days
of the sport, a time when records were earned as a result of
competitive matchups among quality fighters and Holewyne’s
career is a roadmap of bouts against the top names in the sport:
Christy Martin (to whom Holewyne is currently married), Mary Jo
Sanders, Marischa Sjuaw, Sunshine Fettkether and Layla McCarter.
And probably most notably, Sumya Anani who, at the time, was,
pointedly, being avoided by most of the top boxers in the sport.
Holewyne fought Anani twice.
It was that “fight
anyone/anywhere” mentality that identifies Lisa Holewyne as a
deserving recipient of IWBHF induction and puts her on the list
of building blocks for the success her sport has achieved
through the present time and seems destined for in the future.
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About the August 30th IWBHF
Induction Ceremony/Dinner:
The prestigious event will take place on Friday, August 30,
2019, at the Doubletree by Hilton Hotel, located at 5000 Sierra
Point Parkway, Brisbane, CA 94005, Phone/415-467-4400.
The DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel
San Francisco Airport North is ideally located between downtown
San Francisco and San Francisco Airport - just 2.5 miles away
their complimentary airport shuttle service - this modern San
Francisco Airport hotel boasts stunning views of the San
Francisco Bay.
The IWBHF will be in conjunction with the Beautiful Brawlers
where after the IWBHF Hall of Fame takes place on Friday---the
following day, on Saturday, August 31, 2019, the Beautiful
Brawlers will have their huge and fantastic amateur female
boxing event that have takem place annually. Online ticket
purchase will also be included for this event.