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Britain’s Blackwell hospitalised after sparring

By AFP
27 November 2016   |   1:19 pm
Former British middleweight champion Nick Blackwell, who nearly died following a fight in March, has been hospitalised after being taken ill following a sparring session, British media reported on Sunday. Blackwell, 26, retired from competitive boxing earlier this year after he suffered a bleed on the brain and had to be put into an induced coma following a defeat by compatriot Chris Eubank Jnr. Having since recovered, he retains a trainer's licence and the Daily Telegraph said he had undergone a surgical procedure following a sparring session this week. "What we understand is that Nick Blackwell sparred, he was taken ill and taken to hospital where he is in a stable condition," British Boxing Board of Control secretary Robert Smith told the Telegraph. "He should not have been boxing. I'm sickened by it. It's a very tough sport and the doctors here did a wonderful job to save his life. "He made remarkable recovery and for somebody to go and do what he's done, for what I thought was a very sensible young man, is just beyond belief." Announcing his retirement in April, Blackwell had said: "I can't put my friends and family and self through that again, but I'll still be involved (in the sport).
Nick Blackwell

Nick Blackwell

Former British middleweight champion Nick Blackwell, who nearly died following a fight in March, has been hospitalised after being taken ill following a sparring session, British media reported on Sunday.

Blackwell, 26, retired from competitive boxing earlier this year after he suffered a bleed on the brain and had to be put into an induced coma following a defeat by compatriot Chris Eubank Jnr.

Having since recovered, he retains a trainer’s licence and the Daily Telegraph said he had undergone a surgical procedure following a sparring session this week.

“What we understand is that Nick Blackwell sparred, he was taken ill and taken to hospital where he is in a stable condition,” British Boxing Board of Control secretary Robert Smith told the Telegraph.

“He should not have been boxing. I’m sickened by it. It’s a very tough sport and the doctors here did a wonderful job to save his life.

“He made remarkable recovery and for somebody to go and do what he’s done, for what I thought was a very sensible young man, is just beyond belief.”

Announcing his retirement in April, Blackwell had said: “I can’t put my friends and family and self through that again, but I’ll still be involved (in the sport).”

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