Former England cricketer Andrew Flintoff has announced his intention to become a professional boxer and make his debut in Manchester in November.
The 34-year-old Flintoff is planning to fight in a
heavyweight bout at the city's MEN Arena on November 30, although he must first
be granted a license by the British Boxing Board of Control.
Flintoff is being trained by former world featherweight
champion Barry McGuigan and McGuigan's son Shane, and his preparations are set
to be turned into a two-part television documentary.
Flintoff said: "This is an amazing opportunity to try a
sport that I love, to be tutored by a man I respect and admire and, at the age
of 34, the chance to become a professional sportsman again.
"It's a huge challenge – probably the biggest I have
ever undertaken, especially in such a short time-frame.
"I have a long road ahead and a lot of work in front of
me. The stakes are high."
McGuigan added: "It is an enormous undertaking to have
a professional fight having no experience whatsoever. It is even more demanding
when you're a legend in another sport.
"The pressure for Freddie, myself and my son is
phenomenal given the little time we have. But I'm convinced Freddie will make a
successful pro debut as a boxer."
Robert Smith, the general secretary of the British Boxing
Board of Control, said Flintoff had not yet applied for a licence, and the
Board had not received an application for the show in question.
However, the license application process normally lasts
anything up to six weeks, giving Flintoff enough time to apply in the near
future and fight – if his application is successful – on the November date.
Smith said: "Andrew Flintoff has not applied, nor has
he been interviewed by anyone from the British Boxing Board of Control.
"An application can take three to four weeks or longer
depending on the circumstances. He will have to pass medicals and there are
measures in place to see whether an applicant can actually box."
Flintoff's preparations for the fight are to be documented
in a two-part programme called 'The Gloves Are Off ...' to be showed on Sky 1
and the bout at will also be shown on boxing channel Box Nation.
Flintoff would not be the first professional sportsman to
undertake a boxing career with no experience. Former Sheffield United
footballer Curtis Woodhouse made his boxing debut in 2002 and has won 16 of his
20 contests.
Smith added: "It is quite unusual. We haven't had many
people apply with no experience at all, but there is a history of footballers
and rugby league players taking up boxing, and Curtis Woodhouse has done so
very well."
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