Geel_jire Posted August 16, 2008 TALK about shadowboxing. In the center of a flyblown gym, where the musk runs strong and the weak are not welcome, Bashir Ramathan bobs and weaves, his tattered gloves punching furiously, trying to find their target. Blows rain down on his arms, his chest, his sweat-beaded face. But his fists keep flying — all completely in the dark. “You better watch my hook!” he warns. “It’s fast! It’s sharp! Watch out!” Mr. Ramathan is completely blind, and he is a middleweight boxer. It sounds improbable, and dangerous, but it is his way of dealing with his disability. This husky, bearded bricklayer from the Ugandan slums is fearless, calling out all the other boxers in the gym to go toe-to-toe with him — as long as they wear a blindfold. On a recent day, another fighter, and a quite chiseled one at that, tied a sweaty T-shirt over his face, and he and Mr. Ramathan duked it out for several rounds, trading some serious head-snappers. There were some wild whiffs, too, and at one point, the two boxers were back to back, punching like crazy in the absolute wrong direction. Mr. Ramathan said he tried to home in on smells and sounds, like the squeak of the shoes and the huff of his opponent’s breathing. “Bashir fights with his brain,” explained his coach, Hassan Khalil. “He has the talent,” said Monica Abey, a young female contender who has trained with him. BUT this Ugandan Rocky story is not about boxing, really. It is about how a man who unexpectedly lost his sight 12 years ago has gone from a sullen figure sitting in a one-room shack waiting for some orphans to boil his next bowl of gruel to an inspiration across his country. the rest of the article: Nytimes Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Buuxo Posted August 17, 2008 There were some wild whiffs, too, and at one point, the two boxers were back to back, punching like crazy in the absolute wrong direction I couldn't help laughing at this. But good on him for trying. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites