One on One Interview with
Germany's Natascha Ragosina!
By Sue TL Fox
April 12, 2006
(APR 12) WBAN got an opportunity to
interview Germany's Natascha Ragosina this week.
Ragosina, 10-0-0 (7KO), will be fighting this Saturday, on April 15,
2006, and will be facing United States Carlette Ewell, 10-4-0
(8 KOs), in Magdeburg, Germany. The program will be televised on
D:SF (Astra) at 21:00 (Berlin, Paris, Madrid, Rome) and 8 pm
(London).
TL Fox: Can you tell us why you decided to get into
professional boxing?
N Ragosina:
I have always taken great
interest in sports. I used to do athletics until I was 14. Then I
started with kick-boxing, where I twice won the title of a World
Champion. Since 1997 boxing has been my passion, first as an amateur
and starting with June 2004 as a professional boxer.
TL Fox: How many amateur boxing matches did you have
before turning pro?
N Ragosina:
I have had 30 fights and I am
proud to say I have won all of them.
TL Fox: Do you find it difficult to get opponents to
fight you in Germany?
N Ragosina:
There are not so many boxers in
my weight division in Europe. I will probably soon have fought them
all (she laughs). However I remarked that ever since I've been
boxing, a lot of female boxers also started their professional
boxing career in super-middleweight here in Europe.
TL Fox: You were very
impressive when you defeated not only United States Valerie Mahfood,
but also Dakota Stone---are you wanting to fight Laila Ali?
N Ragosina:
Thank you for the compliment.
Valerie Mahfood and Dakota Stone are very good boxers and I learned
a lot out of these fights. Of course I would like to fight Laila
Ali. I think that the highest goal both for me as well as for Laila
Ali should be to compete against each other in order to determine
and to “crown” the true Queen of Boxing.
TL Fox: Is there any talk in the near future of an
Ali-Ragosina match?
N Ragosina:
I cannot answer this
question, but I think my manager Ulf Steinforth is working on it.
TL Fox: Are there other boxers you would like to fight
next?
N Ragosina:
I want to box them all who accept
my challenge. Names are hollow words, I know that there are some
good girls boxing in my weight division and I want to fight them one
after the other and to win those fights.
TL Fox: Do you box full-time, or do you work and train
at the same time?
N Ragosina:
Professional boxing is my
full-time job.
TL Fox: How does your family feel about you boxing?
N Ragosina:
My mother still has something
against it. Actually she has never been to any of my fights. I
suppose that she still thinks of me as of her little girl. She is
afraid something unexpected might happen and cannot see me in the
ring. The rest of my family is very proud of me. My biggest fan and
my greatest support in life is my son, Iwan (4 years old).
TL Fox: How long do you see yourself staying in boxing, and
what are some of your long-range goals?
N Ragosina:
My long-range goals are to always
win and to unify all titles existing in my weight division. I want
to box for as long as I feel fit to do so and for as long as I am on
the winner side. I would let it go when my condition is not so good
anymore. I would never endanger my role as a mother.
TL Fox: Have you been able to get into other aspects of
boxing, i.e., commentating, on television shows, etc?
N Ragosina:
Yes, I have been a commentator
for the Russian Amateur World Championships. I really enjoyed it. I
was also a guest in several television shows on women's boxing in
Russia, where women's boxing is becoming a popular issue.
TL Fox: Do you think that you will ever come to the
United States to fight?
N Ragosina:
Well, boxing is an international
business. Everything is possible, because boxing is popular all over
the world. I would even go fighting on the moon if that was
possible (she laughs). But I feel very comfortable in Germany and I
enjoy having such a big fan community here.
TL Fox: Is there anything you would like to tell boxing
fans?
N Ragosina:
I would like to thank them for
supporting me. It is a wonderful feeling to have so much
appreciation and recognition as a female boxer. I consider myself
lucky to have fans all over the world and such great fan communities
both in my home country and in Germany, my chosen home.
TL Fox: Any advice for other women boxers who are thinking about
getting into the sport?
N Ragosina:
I would like to tell them that
this is a major decision which will influence their lives. When one
thinks about taking that step, the goals related to it must be
clear. There are a lot of sacrifices that must be made, starting
with every-day-life comforts up to the fact that a career as a
professional boxer demands 110 % of what you can do. 100 % is not
enough, you must deliver 110% in order to come forward and to
succeed. To those who think of getting into this sport, but are only
half-heartedly committed, I would say not to start with it at all.
WBAN would like to thank Natascha for
taking time out of her busy schedule to be interviewed! Sue TL
Fox