Teenage talent highlights highs, lows of grassroots boxing in UAE

Arjun Singh is one of the rising stars in the UAE’s grass roots boxing scene. (RBO)
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Updated 03 January 2022
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Teenage talent highlights highs, lows of grassroots boxing in UAE

  • National title holder Arjun Singh stars at recent Dubai fight night but finding success has not come easy

RIYADH: On Oct. 16, Arjun Singh was on the bill of Amir Khan’s Crypto Fight Night at La Perle in Dubai.

It was easily the biggest bout of the young British-Asian boxer’s career, and he came up trumps, defeating UAE national team fighter Mohammed Alattas.

Singh is only 14. One of the rare rising stars in the UAE’s fledgling grassroots boxing scene, he took up the sport as an eight-year-old after moving to Dubai from Birmingham, in England where he was born and raised.

He said: “It was mainly to grow my confidence. Boxing was on the rise, and it was a popular sport to do. I just wanted to join in and now look where it has taken me, winning a national championship.”

Singh had won a UAE under-13 national title in early 2020, just before the start of the coronavirus pandemic. The virus outbreak could have disrupted his progress at such a vital stage in his development, but he has managed to maintain a strict training regime, balanced with his schoolwork.

“I was training five to six days a week, and even on my off days I still go for a run. I always try to finish my schoolwork in school so that I’ve got the rest of the day for boxing.

“I do stretches first. Do my footwork for around 10 minutes and start skipping to get warmed up. And then we’ll just do some pad work or go into the bags and then after that, if there’s 20 minutes left, we’ll just go upstairs and do some cardio or fitness-related work, then abs at the end,” the NAS Dubai school student added.

He noted that his family, particularly his father, had given him “amazing” support, and along with many friends had been ringside as he walked out for his fight at La Perle.

“It was kind of surreal to be honest. When I was walking out, I didn’t even realize there were so many people watching. But then the adrenaline just rushed through me, and I was just focused on one thing and that was my opponent. Before the fight you get nervous but then during it you just focus on one thing and that’s winning,” he said.

Then came his big moment, the official announcement.

“When it went to points, I was kind of nervous that I wasn’t going to win, but then I heard it was a unanimous decision and I heard my name being called out. I looked over and could see all my friends and family just cheering for me which was kind of amazing,” he added.

One of Singh’s favorite boxers is the Ukrainian Vasyl Lomachenko, who he admires for his movement in the ring, but the youngster has special affection for a fighter much closer to home.

“To look at and to idolize it is probably Hamzah Sheeraz, because he comes to the gym, and I would always see him in the ring, working with his team. And it’s always good to pick out the little stuff that he does.

“He always gives me advice on how to go about life, and how to find balance in boxing and your life. He tells me when to run, and how far to run. And also, his team has been giving me nutrition advice,” he said.

While Singh has all the facilities that he could ask for, he pointed out that maintaining a high standard of boxing was increasingly difficult due to there not being many other fighters in his age group.

“Hopefully, sparring wise, it gets better, but at this point it’s like a drought. There are no sparring partners. I have a couple of sparring partners that come from the UK. And whenever I go to the UK, I could be sparring every week or so. But in Dubai it’s like once a month, and that’s against kids older than me, not even in my weight category. So, we have to go a bit slower, which isn’t good for me.”

When he does get the opportunity to return home, he trains at Birmingham’s Eastside Boxing Gym, a hub for talented amateurs.

“It’s amazing to be honest, the sparring there is actually really, really good, and the amateurs they have brought up are amazing,” Singh added.

He has been mentored by Eastside’s Paul Soggy and David Coldwell and is now getting similar backing in Dubai.

His trainer, Waleed Din, said: “The plans for Arjun are to get him as many fights as possible and as much sparring as we can. There are not many people in this region who can compete with Arjun, so we will have to travel. Trips abroad are essential for his growth.”

Michelle Kuehn, founder of the Real Boxing Only gym, where Singh trains, is a keen supporter of grassroots boxing and of developing young careers such as his.

She said: “I think he needs what every amateur boxer needs in the UAE. They need a grassroots movement, and they need boxing growing from the bottom up. And that means more individuals who are active in the sparring and fighting scene. The bouts are not available for amateurs now. The UAE Boxing Federation is doing as much as it can, but it’s still a new sport here and that takes years to develop.

“There are a few key gyms in Sharjah as well that are really contributing to that. And my goal for the gym, and a few others that I would like to work with, is to give the boxers the opportunities they need,” Kuehn added.

Before the coronavirus pandemic, RBO held Fight Club DXB nights every Saturday, with the focus being on giving participants the chance to spar. It is something she hopes to bring back in partnership with other gyms “at least two to three times a month.”

Currently, disruptions remain, and the national championships, which were supposed to be held in December, were cancelled.

She said: “So if Arjun isn’t fighting at the nationals, where is he fighting? There just isn’t enough competition. He should be fighting three times a month. That’s how it works in the rest of the well-established boxing countries. That’s how you get the experience you need, that’s how you get better. And it’s something that we’re really going to focus on in 2022.”

Though Kuehn’s gym has been a training base for many professional boxers in recent years, she believes that attracting big names for one-off fight nights is not a sustainable way to grow the sport in the UAE.

“You can come at the top all you want, but they just leave and go home. They don’t live here. There are a few pros that live here, but even they, how many times are they going to fight each other?

“It costs money to be a pro as well, and you have to get sponsors and you don’t get paid that much, especially if you’re not fighting anyone of significance. And the ones that are significant don’t live here. They live where the training is, which is in the UK or the US,” she added.

For now, she will continue to support Singh in every way she can at her gym.

Kuehn said: “I will push for him to fight a lot in the next two years. He’ll probably need to go to the UK and to fight, he’ll need to get into tournaments there. And I’ll be looking to build tournaments here for him. And then I would say he should go pro quite young and get into the really, really big fights.

“He’s got a skill set. He’s got the power. He’s got the family backing. He’s got the gym behind him.”


Former cricket captains urge Pakistan to ensure better medical care for Imran Khan in prison

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Former cricket captains urge Pakistan to ensure better medical care for Imran Khan in prison

  • In a letter to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, 14 former captains, including India’s Sunil Gavaskar and Kapil Dev, called for Khan to be treated with “dignity and basic human consideration”
  • “The conditions of his imprisonment over the past two and a half years have caused us profound concern,” the cricketers wrote

ISLAMABAD: More than a dozen former international cricket captains have urged Pakistan’s government to ensure better treatment in prison and medical care for former cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan, citing concerns about his eyesight, as his party demanded Wednesday he be shifted to hospital from prison.
In a letter to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, 14 former captains, including India’s Sunil Gavaskar and Kapil Dev, called for Khan to be treated with “dignity and basic human consideration,” expressing concern about reports that the vision in his right eye had worsened in detention.
“Recent reports concerning his health — particularly the alarming deterioration of his vision while in custody — and the conditions of his imprisonment over the past two and a half years have caused us profound concern,” the cricketers wrote.
There was no immediate official response from Islamabad, but authorities have said that Khan is getting better facilities at the prison, a claim endorsed by Khan’s attorney Salman Safdar, who met with him recently.
Political allies of Khan and lawmakers from his opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party on Wednesday ended a dayslong sit-in outside parliament after doctors reported significant recovery in his right eye and no issues with his left.
Khan, 73, led Pakistan to the 1992 Cricket World Cup and later served as prime minister from 2018 until his ouster in 2022. He has been imprisoned since 2023 after he was convicted of graft and other offenses.
Khan, who has faced multiple trials since then, has said all the charges against him were politically motivated.
Concern about Khan’s health grew in late January after he was taken to hospital for eye treatment. Safdar, his lawyer, said last week that Khan had lost about 85 percent of the vision in his right eye.
Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said a day earlier that such claims were “propaganda.” Other government officials, citing doctors who treated Khan, said the vision in his right eye had improved significantly, although Khan’s family and his personal physician say they can only confirm his condition once they are allowed to see him.
According to Australia’s The Age newspaper, signatories include former captains Ian Chappell, Clive Lloyd, Allan Border, Michael Brearley, David Gower, John Wright and Kim Hughes, among others who played against Khan. “Many of us competed against him, shared the field with him, or grew up idolizing his all-round brilliance, charisma and competitive spirit,” the letter said.
The group also urged Pakistan to allow “immediate, adequate and ongoing medical attention from qualified specialists of his choosing.”
Several former Pakistani cricketers, including Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis and Shoaib Akhtar, have also expressed concern publicly after former India batter Ajay Jadeja encouraged Pakistani players to speak out.
Khan made his international debut in 1971 against England and became captain in 1982. Widely regarded as one of cricket’s finest all-rounders, he retired soon after leading Pakistan to its only World Cup title in 1992. He founded the PTI party in 1996 and rose to power in 2018.
Khan was removed from office in April 2022 through a parliamentary no-confidence vote and later jailed after court convictions. He alleges his removal resulted from a US-backed conspiracy involving political rivals and Pakistan’s military, claims denied by Washington, the military and Prime Minister Sharif, who succeeded him.
Despite his imprisonment, Khan remains a central and influential figure in Pakistan’s politics.