Last night at the FLP event in Westerburg (Germany), GBU junior
flyweight champion Nadja Loritz and Eleonora Mistal, who was making
her debut, went six rounds, with Loritz taking the decision. “Nadja
would rather have fought 8 or 10 rounds,“ commented husband and
trainer Detlef Loritz, “in which case she might have been able to
win inside the distance, but a late addition to the program required
the limiting of her bout to six.” Despite suffering a fair degree of
punishment in the fifth and sixth rounds, when Loritz began
belabouring her about the head, Mistal showed considerable pluck,
and earned the respect of the thousand odd fans in the hall by
sticking it out to the end.
Whilst a points win may seem a poor result prima facie for a
world champion against a woman making her debut, the fact that
Loritz is also battling multiple sclerosis casts it in an altogether
more heroic light. Though undiagnosed at the time, Loritz was
already exhibiting the symptoms of the disease when she suffered her
only loss in 2003; after two years out of the sport, fighting
depression and undergoing treatment, she resumed her boxing career
in February 2005 when doctors gave her the green light.
Her comeback fight was against Elena Miftode of Romania, whom she
had KOd three years earlier in Kandel. “The competition did me
good,” remembers Nadja. “For me, it was a great joy to climb back
into the ring once more and measure myself in a real duel. I
actually felt better in this fight than in the two prior to my
diagnosis. I tried to take it easy and not tense up in the early
rounds, but I stepped up the pressure in the third and went to work
downstairs. I could tell from Elena’s reaction to the first hard
body shots that the fight wouldn’t go the distance. Miftode had
nothing to lose and everything to win, but I managed nonetheless to
break her will.” (The Romanian retired after the 5th
round).
Loritz wants nothing more than to avenge her only defeat, against
Halmich, for whom she has nothing but respect, but against whom she
feels she let herself down badly because she didn’t realize at the
time that she was ill and needed treatment. “Nadja’s going to carry
on boxing for as long as Regina Halmich is active,” says Detlef
Loritz. “She’s still hoping that Regina will grant her a rematch.”
“The gods are well pleased when they see great men
contending with adversity.”
Robert Burton (1577-1640)