(AUG 8) NEW YORK CITY – Back
in 2003, Irish amateur boxing star “Ireland’s” John Duddy moved
from his native Derry, Ireland, to Queens, New York, where he
became a phenom during his exciting seven-year professional
boxing career.
The combination of his
entertaining style of boxing, matinee idol looks, and warm
personality resulted in a tremendous grassroots campaign,
largely through Irish pubs in New York City, which drew fans
that nobody has come close to matching since Duddy retired from
the ring in 2019 at the peak of his popularity with a 29-2 (18
KOs) record. With the most anticipated fight between Irishmen –
Duddy vs. Andy Lee – ready to be signed, Duddy put his gloves on
the shelf because he, “no longer had the enthusiasm and
willingness to make sacrifices to honor the craft of
prizefighting.”
Duddy, who was the No. 2 middleweight in the world at one point,
was only 31 but a man of conviction. No matter how lucrative of
an offer was on the table, Duddy never looked back at his
decision, but today he’s at peace and found a new passion as the
Athletic Director of Moving Brains Foundation, training people
with Parkinson’s disease (PD) through a unique program created
by Dr. Jose C. Cabassa, Reese Scott and himself.
“I missed the routine of it all,” Duddy spoke about his life
after boxing. “Boxing was my life. I started when I was five,
but it no longer made me happy. I asked myself, is this all it
is? I loved my childhood dream and then, all of a sudden, it was
like I woke up. I remember being all alone living in North
Carolina. I liked trainer Don Turner and the three sparring
partners, but I felt alone.”
The absence of boxing for the first time in his life left Duddy
in a new position. He wasn’t training but as he says, he was
fiddling around a wee bit, as people asked him if he’d coach
them. John had several jobs outside of boxing, focusing on
becoming a professional actor, and one day in 2019 he received a
call from Dr. Jose, who had a friend in the same acting class as
Duddy, called him with ideas about John helping to train people
with PD.
“Dr. Jose said he was located right around the corner from a
boxing gym in East Harlem and the idea was to help these people
get on their feet,’ John explained. “I had learned the basics of
boxing from my father, through the Irish amateur program and
from my trainer, Harry Keith. I knew what I was talking about,
and the first step was getting them to walk up the stairs into
the ring. Dr. Jose wanted them to be challenged more than they
had ever been. They started hitting the bags, shadowing boxing,
and learning combinations. They started developing a real boxing
foundation. I had no interest in training them as regular
fighters but training them to fight that invisible person that
is holding them down. PD doesn’t go to sleep, but we slowly peck
away. They’re real champions! The goal is to make their lives
better.
“Boxing is a brutal sport with stigma. Dr. Jose said good boxing
training can really help. They’re just touching the bags. It
isn’t about landing with force; it’s about learning a technique
and having a solid base to avoid falls and losing balance. We
started in 2019, restarted in July 2021 after the pandemic, and
haven’t stopped. Our PD fighters (that’s what we call them) are
very friendly and active. Some of them love boxing. There are no
drugs to help them like activity and training. I’ve seen some
shutdown, but they come around with the help of the medical
staff who are always there. We’re teaching them to step back,
step forward, step to the right and then to the left. We never
want their feet together to give them a chance to lose balance.
They’re eager and ready to go. I love working with them. This
isn’t about beating people up like I did for years.”
Moving Brains Fight Club is a physician-monitored fitness
training program for people fighting Parkinson’s Disease (PD),
created by Dr. Cabassa, John Duddy and Reese Scott. Dr. Cabassa
is a board-certified neurologist, Parkinson and Movement
Disorders specialist, USA Boxing certified amateur Muay Thai and
mixed-martial-arts (MMA) ringside physician. Dr. Cabassa has
been treating people with PD for more than 20 years and
specializes in managing complex motor and non-motor
complications. His greatest success, he believes, has been being
part of this boxing fitness program, having doctors and athletes
working together to improve brain health.
Last year, Dr. Cabassa and Duddy formed Moving Brains Foundation
to further fund and expand the training to people with PD and
the aging community in general, given the success of the fight
club.
“Coach John Duddy is still a world champion but now in health as
the Athletic Director of Moving Brains Foundation,” Dr. Cabassa
remarked. “I’m proud to see him develop as a healthcare leader.
I met John and he was very humble and willing to try to use his
skills in a different way. Coach Reese Scott, a Mendez Boxing
trained alumnus, USA Boxing coach and already A trailblazer,
formed Women’s World of Boxing around my office. I dropped by
the gym one day and talked to Reese, called up John, got a
little funding, and the rest is history.
“Both John and Reese have fully embraced this model of working
together, taking risks but following science and seeing results.
We can not only challenge our fighters with boxing techniques on
a professional level, but also push them further with
resistance, cardio and conditioning exercises. Results have been
astounding, not only with what we see they are able to do, but
the feedback we get from family and other doctors.”
Duddy’s acting career has also taken off. He is known for his
roles in “A Bend in the River” and “Emerald City,” as well as
playing boxer Ken Buchanan in the movie, “Hands of Stone,” about
Hall of Famer Robert Duran. Legendary actor Robert De Niro, who
Duddy trained for the movie, “Grudge Match,” for which John was
a boxing technical advisor, called John about acting in “Hands
of Stone.” Duddy has also landed roles in short films, web
series, music videos and Off-Broadway theater.
Not only does his position as Athletic Director for Moving
Brains allow him the freedom to pursue his acting career, but
John also enjoys the opportunity to give back to the people he
trains, and it has him in top shape as well. He now also trains
private clients at Trinity Boxing Club in downtown Manhattan and
is forming a fitness company, Duddy Fitness, to continue
providing boxing training for fitness.
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