Transcript
TEXT ON SCREEN: FOR MANY BOXERS, WHEN THE PUNCHES STOP, THE REAL FIGHT STARTS.
IRAN BARKLEY: You were searching for something. You were searching for survival. I was a puncher. I didn’t try to, like, be a fighter. I was into boxing and I was staying away from the gangs.
TEXT ON SCREEN: IRAN “THE BLADE” BARKLEY IS A FORMER WORLD MIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMPION.
IRAN BARKLEY: Growing up in the Bronx, I had to be my own blueprint. When I won my first real good fight, threw a big party, spent money, spent money, spent money. I was that kid that I never had nothing, but when I got something I shared. It was a good thing and then it was a hurtful thing, too.
TEXT ON SCREEN: IRAN WENT BROKE. BY 2010, HE WAS SLEEPING IN THE SUBWAY.
IRAN BARKLEY: The friends and the family that I got, they had apartments. But I wouldn’t go to them. My sisters and my brother, I didn’t even want to burden them.
TEXT ON SCREEN: THE FOUNDERS OF A NONPROFIT CALLED RING 10 HEARD IRAN HAD FALLEN ON HARD TIMES AND TRACKED HIM DOWN.
IRAN BARKLEY: I was down in the subway, just riding the trains. They took me to the restaurant to eat. They rescued me.
TEXT ON SCREEN: BECAUSE BOXING LACKS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF OTHER PRO SPORTS, RING10 WAS CREATED TO HELP STRUGGLING EX-BOXERS.
LIKE WILFRED “THE RADAR” BENITEZ, WHO LIVES WITH HIS SISTER YVONNE IN PUERTO RICO.
YVONNE BENITEZ: I liked to see him fight. But I was worried so he won’t get hurt. You understand? Him or the other person.
TEXT ON SCREEN: WILFRED IS A THREE-TIME WORLD CHAMPION. AT AGE 17, HE BECAME THE YOUNGEST CHAMPION IN BOXING HISTORY.
YVONNE TO WILFRED (TRANSLATED FROM SPANISH): Girlfriend, no. I’m your sister.
YVONNE BENITEZ: I think it was in 89-90, he used to keep on talking the same thing – repeating.
TEXT ON SCREEN: WILFRED IS BELIEVED TO SUFFER FROM CHRONIC TRAUMATIC ENCEPHALOPATHY, OR CTE, ONCE SIMPLY KNOWN AS BOXER’S DEMENTIA OR BEING “PUNCH DRUNK.”
YVONNE BENITEZ: My mother always used to say that if she passed away her worries was what’s going to happen with him. And I always told her that I was going to be there. I see him like that and I suffer.
TEXT ON SCREEN: TODAY, RING 10 IS ENLISTING FORMER BOXERS TO TAKE PART IN HEAD TRAUMA STUDIES. THE ISSUE HAS GAINED MORE ATTENTION SINCE BEING LINKED TO FOOTBALL AND OTHER CONTACT SPORTS.
IRAN BARKLEY: Sometimes I get a little forgetful. But, it’s not often. I mean, it happened. I got hit in my head a couple of times, but I don’t think about it because I don’t want to think about it.
TEXT ON SCREEN: IRAN SAYS HE WANTS TO GET BACK IN THE RING TO FIGHT HIS OLD NEMESIS, TOMMY HEARNS.
YVONNE SAYS WILFRED HAS MEMORIES OF HIS LIFE IN THE RING.
(END)
Boxers Confront Brain Injuries, Their Most Challenging Foe
For many boxers, once the punches stop, the real fight starts.
Research has shown that the violence inherent in boxing poses severe and lasting health risks from brain injury. As part of a Retro Report on what this might mean to the future of other contact sports, including professional football, we met with two fighters who are grappling with the aftermath of a life in the ring.
- Producer: Matthew Spolar
