(APR 27) The names of the
boxers recall a different, nascent sport: Mitzi Jeter, Britt Van
Bruskirk, Doris Hackl, Bonnie Canino, Laura Serrano. Scroll
further ahead and the names are more familiar: Layla McCarter,
Melissa Hernandez, Holly Holm, Jeannine Garside, and, for a
touch of legend, Lucia Rijker. The common thread among these
poles of the sport is a 39 year old fighter who has logged over
14 years and 224 professional rounds while compiling a 28-6-2
record against just about everyone who will make the
conversation when the modern day history of Women's boxing is
written. And on May 7, in Copenhagen, Denmark, Chevelle Hallback
will do what she has done for almost a decade and a half, step
into the ring with one of sport's elite boxers, unbeaten Cecilia
Braekhus.
"My trainer hates me," are Hallback's first words when we
talked, by phone, late last week, from her home and training
base in Tampa, FL. "He's working me as hard as I've ever
trained, but I'm feeling great and the preparation for the fight
has been real good. I'm excited about this one because while
I've fought in Japan, I've never had the opportunity to go to
the European side of the world. I don't know a whole lot about
her (Braeknus), but I do know she has beaten everyone she's
fought and that's as good as it gets."
Asked about her last fight, in December, a close win over
Victoria Cisneros, who lost to Braekhus a year ago, without
winning a round, Hallback recalls, "I controlled the first four
rounds against her (Cisneros) and then just ran out of gas.
After fighting in New Mexico three times, I still didn't account
for the effect the altitude has after several rounds. I felt it
against Holm, both times, and even when I fought Garside, but it
hit me hard in the last four rounds (against Cisneros). This is
to take nothing away from Victoria, she's a tough fighter and
she was breathing the same air I was, but I just wasn't used to
it. I don't expect to run into anything like that in Denmark."
"I've heard all the talk about how a US fighter needs a knockout
to win in Europe. Look, there are homecourts in every sport and
all I can do is climb through the ropes and give it my best
effort. One thing you can't do is go into the bout thinking
knockout, because that's probably the best way not to come away
with a KO, particularly against a good fighter. If the
opportunity presents itself during the bout, of course I'll go
for it, but to think knockout from the opening bell, no way. I'm
training for ten rounds and I'm planning on going to Denmark a
week before the fight to get used to the conditions.
Can Hallback see the end of her career? "Not really," is her
quick response. "I want to keep going, keep looking for the good
fights. My body will be the judge of when to stop. When my body
starts talking to me about stopping, that's when I'll start
thinking, seriously, about it. I haven't heard anything yet. I
still have things I'd like to do in the sport, such a being the
first female boxer to have a bout on HBO. Chirsty (Martin) is
still around and I think she and I could give all those HBO
fight fans an idea of what they've been missing and just how
good female boxing can be. If not Chirsty, then maybe Layla
McCarter, who I'm pretty sure is still as slick as ever in the
ring, out there in Las Vegas. Why this hasn't happened before is
beyond me and I really wonder when some of those organizations,
who continue to profit off female boxers in this country, are
going to step up and provide some support, for female boxers,
with holdouts like HBO."
That's the kind of attitude, determination and perseverance that
has propelled Hallback through the sport of Women's boxing for
all those years and all those rounds. She's been, remarkably,
below the radar in the sport, given her talent level, and has
not received the "bold type" coverage that has been afforded
other, quite frankly, lesser talented female boxers. She started
her career (second bout) stepping in Lucia Rijker, she's had two
bouts with Holly Holm and a "fight of the year" with Jeannine
Garside, underneath the June 2008 Holm/Mary Jo Sanders fight,
and Hallback/Garside, in the opinion of most ringsiders,
overshadowed the main event by a large margin.
But this is not the stuff of Hallback's legacy. Rather it is
that she has fought so long and with such dignity and
distinction. It is that she has never ducked the good fighters;
she has, instead, sought them out. And she's doing exactly that,
once more, on May 7 in Denmark. Can she come home with a win?
It's a difficult bout, but there haven't been many years or many
bouts or many rounds when Chevelle Hallback looked for the easy
way in a boxing ring. And that's why when her body starts
"talking" to this boxer about "hangin' 'em up," I hope the sport
has the good sense to honor Chevelle Hallback in the same manner
she has honored her sport for a long time.
Bernie McCoy