(MAY 2) Blame Hollywood
legend Clint Eastwood for denying women’s boxing fans the most
intriguing matchup in the history of the sport.
That, actually, and a balky Achilles tendon.
It’s not like Christy Martin and Lucia Rijker didn’t know – or
talk, a lot – about each other. The flame was hotly burning for
a possible women’s mega-fight between the two less than a year
after Martin’s headline-grabbing win over Deirdre Gogarty in
1996.
“When I walk away, I don’t want people to say ‘Christy was good,
but she didn’t fight so-and so.’ If Rijker is a fight the
public’s interested in seeing, I’m sure it will happen,” said
Martin, barely a year after appearing on the cover of Sports
Illustrated. "I spoke to Don (King) about it. He promised me it
would be made. Bob Arum and Don King are both interested in
making money.”
Which, perhaps, is why it’s at least mildly surprising the fight
never took place, then or ever. At least one person, Rijker’s
manager Stan Hoffman, reported in early 1998 that there was in
fact a $1.5 million offer on the table. Exactly from whom, and
where, was left unreported.
“Christy Martin was the Jackie Robinson of women’s boxing, but
Lucia Rijker is the Babe Ruth,” Hoffman once observed.
And, while the fact remains it would have been the biggest
single payday in women’s sports history, the money to be made by
promoters for such a showdown would still have been peanuts to
Arum and King, who were paying their male headliners like Mike
Tyson and Evander Holyfield tens of millions for just one per
pay-per-view bout back then.
While Martin had been fighting, and often, since 1989, Rijker
was just emerging on the pro boxing scene in 1996, after a
spectacular career as a kickboxer. She started her boxing
travels with five straight wins – all by knockout or TKO – in a
span of exactly 12 months. In 1997 alone, she fought six times
with only one going the distance (against Dora Webber).
In a burgeoning sport where many women’s fights still looked far
too much like a glorified Toughwoman sideshow, Rijker and Martin
brought the skill and explosive power that fans yearned for.
There was never any doubting Rijker’s power. (Or, Martin’s for
that matter.)
“She can hit,” said Gariel Ruelas, a WBC super featherweight
champion, in a 2005 interview, and a frequent sparring partner
for Rijker“When she hit me, it felt no different from if it was
a man hitting me. The last time I sparred with her was maybe
two, three years ago. She hit me with an overhand right – I
still remember it.”
Added another male sparring partner, James Toney, “She’s a hell
of a puncher.”
“A knockout is always a power trip,” Rijker once observed.
“You’re standing … she lays on the floor.”
The two would-be rivals had just a handful of common opponents
including Melinda Robinson and Andrea DeShong, who handed Martin
her only early-career loss. Both stopped the veteran warrior
(Martin in a rematch); Rijker did it inside three rounds while
Martin needed to push into a seventh round before the TKO.
DeShong said picking a winner between the two wasn’t hard.
“She”ll knock Christy for a loop,” Deshong said after a loss to
Rijker in the fall of 1997. “She doesn’t punch as hard as
Christy, but she’s a much better boxer.”
Perhaps the fight might have come off if a pair of same-day
meetings had turned out a little differently in 1996. Rijker met
with both promoters on the same day – King earlier in the day
and Arum later – electing to sign on with King’s rival.
“Arum offered me a better contract,” Rijker explained. “I
wouldn’t leave his office until he looked at a tape of me
fighting. When he did he said, ‘Oh my God, this girl can fight.’
He was like a little boy. I wanted to work with somebody who
believed in me.”

The two were finally signed to meet in the summer of 2005,
unabashedly riding the coattails of Eastwood’s Academy Award
winning “Million Dollar Baby.” Despite the one-time dream
matchup finally coming to fruition, Martin was not the first
choice for Arum’s movie-inspired spectacle, Laila Ali was. Ali
was asked to drop about 10 pounds in order to make the fight
happen.
“We had people contact Laila and her husband,” Arum confirmed.
“Once I ran into resistance, I thought Christy was a great
option. Lucia agreed to fight her.”
Rijker’s relative inactivity, after her sizzling start in boxing
didn’t help the cause of securing a bout with Martin earlier in
her career. Nor did Arum’s eventual infatuation with Mia St.
John as a boxing attraction either. By the time Rijker surfaced
for a fight in 2002 against Carla Witherspoon it had been more
than 2 ½ years since her previous bout.
Martin, though, was still very much on her mind.
“What I’d like to do is get back in the ring and show that I’m
willing to fight for nothing to get Christy,” she said. “It’s up
to her. She keeps hiding in the lap of Don King. She holds on to
her status so badly. She doesn’t care about the sport anymore.
There’s a time to come and time to go. If I walk away and I
haven’t gotten that fight with Christy, I’ll feel incomplete.
She should too.”
For a flickering moment, in early 1997, it looked like a deal
had been struck to match the two on a card in Nashville, Tenn.
Of course, it never happened. Other than 2005, it was the
closest they would get to actually stepping between the ropes
together.
Not that they didn’t have at least one infamous scuffle,
however. Rijker made her presence known at a Martin press
conference on Feb. 27, 200 before her matchup against Belinda
Laracuente. The two ended up trading blows.
“How do I know the brawl...wasn’t choreographed? No TV cameras
were in position to film it,” Los Angeles Times report Randy
Harvey wrote.
It was far more than a shoving much. Rijker connected with a
punch, according to newspaper reports, as did Martin in return.
Said Martin: “If that the best you can punch, you’re in for a
long night (if we ever fight).”
That it took Hollywood to make the fight happen didn’t really
matter to fans. Had Eastwood put his boxing drama on film say in
1998 or 1999, the two would have written a different story.
Instead, he was in the midst of a string of mediocre box office
"hits" like Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil", "True
Crime" and "Space Cowboys".
And it didn't really matter, much, to most fans the two
prizefighters were both 37, and well past their prime. A long
simmering score was about to be settled.
“Numerous women told me they cried during the movie. That gave
me the idea that female prizefighting had arrived,” Arum said.
Even boxing’s most popular curmudgeon, the lovable Bert Sugar,
was looking forward to seeing Rijker in the ring again.
“Put it this way, she’s better than any of the male
heavyweights. To me, most women look like their going down in
quicksand while swinging pots and pans,” he said in vintage
Sugar-ese. “The whole thesis of this fight is that they have
Hollywood-ized Lucia into a very scary person.”
It’s actually not clear just how big an event it would have
been. Even Arum was unsure that by the time it was finally going
to happen, while it still made some boxing sense, that it made
much business sense at all.
“If I lose some money, it’s not the worst thing in the world,”
Arum said. “I think it helps with my obituary.”
The timing coincided with the movie’s release on DVD.
“I would not be telling the truth if I didn’t say that, without
the movie, we wouldn’t be doing this,” Arum said. “The movie
highlights women’s boxing and made it seem very exciting.
Clearly, it was the impetus for me to put on this event. I
didn’t think there was much future in women’s boxing. After
seeing that film, I had second thoughts.”

It didn’t hurt, either, that Rijker was cast as the movie’s
villain, Billie Blue Bear.
“People walk up to me and say ‘how could you?’ They really think
I’m that person in the film,” she recalled. “Watching the film
for the first time, I was sitting in the back and cheering for
myself, then I stopped. Because all around me, everyone was
pointing at the screen shouting, ‘you bleep.’ At first, during
the filming, I tried to hold back. But then, you know, I
didn’t.”
Rijker had her own reasons for signing, besides the purse, which
provided the perfect big screen tie in. Each fighter was
guaranteed $250,000, with the winner collecting an additional
$750,000, thus becoming a true million dollar baby.
“Karma wise, it was meant to be. Nobody ever rubbed me the wrong
way the way Christy did. Sumya Anani is a very nice lady and
wonderful athlete, but she doesn’t do that for me. Christy
Martin does. She started this by trashing me. I just couldn’t
let it go.”
Added Martin, “I don’t think that Bob Arum would have had the
interest in this because he didn’t have a hook for it. Timing is
everything.”

Photo credit: Mary Ann Owen
Less than two weeks out, Rijker’s Achilles ruptured, and she
never fought again. The night women’s boxing fans had waited
almost a decade to devour was gone. The “Million Dollar Baby”
had in a blink become the “Million Dollar Bummer.”
“I’m so disappointed. We worked so hard. It was like somebody
hit me with a baseball bat in the stomach,” Martin said. “I know
of some people who had made plans to go to Las Vegas Saturday.
One of them said to me, “Christy, why don’t you still come out
to Las Vegas and shadow box with with a cardboard of Lucia in
front of Mandalay Bay? Just to get it out of your system?’ The
problem with that is I won’t be getting paid.”
Everyone was disappointed, despite all the reasons the fight was
about eight years too late. Even Rijker’s trainer for a time,
the legendary Emanuel Steward – who was no fan of women in the
ring – yearned for the fight.
“I don’t want to think that someday Lucia will be walking with
her kids and someone will point to her and say, ‘There goes the
greatest female fighter whoever lived, but she never had a
defining fight.’ That would be so sad.”
Indeed.