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Nova Scotia Olympic boxer Wyatt Sanford announces he's going pro

2 months ago
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Nova Scotia Olympic boxer Wyatt Sanford announces he's going pro

Amateur boxers typically participate in tournaments as part of national or international events like the Olympics or Pan Am Games. Professional boxers train for single fights to win money. Sanford, who is from Kennetcook, N.S., has joined Quebec-based promotional company Eye of the Tiger Management.’The Kennetcook Kid’ won bronze in the 63.5-kilogram weight class at the Olympics last […]

Amateur boxers typically participate in tournaments as part of national or international events like the Olympics or Pan Am Games. Professional boxers train for single fights to win money. Sanford, who is from Kennetcook, N.S., has joined Quebec-based promotional company Eye of the Tiger Management.’The Kennetcook Kid’ won bronze in the 63.5-kilogram weight class at the Olympics last summer to become the first Canadian boxer to win a medal at the Olympics since Halifax-based David Defiagbon took silver in 1996.”But I’m hoping that we can get some fights in Halifax as well and get to that Nova Scotia crowd and that pride out in the arenas and cheering,” Sanford said. “I’m not 100% sure what’s coming up soon. I believe we’ll be back in the ring,” he said. “Where in the pros, we know who we’re fighting and we can get to be the best we can be while focusing on a straight game plan and strategy not just for one or two days before, but we can focus on it for weeks before,” he said. “Not only is Wyatt Sanford a recruit with immense potential, but he is also a local boxer who developed entirely within Canada’s amateur boxing system.”

Hopes for a hometown fight

“When we were training for the Olympic Games, we’re not training for one person, we’re training to be the best that we can be,” Sanford said.  “We are beyond proud to have signed the first Canadian Olympic boxing medallist in over 28 years,” Marc Ramsay, director of recruitment for Eye of the Tiger, said in a news release.He has no pro fights on his schedule yet, but said he hopes to share some news soon. He said he would love to fight in Nova Scotia, though. 

Wyatt holding his phone during a Zoom interview from a gym.
Wyatt Sanford, who is from Kennetcook, N.S., told CBC News about his decision to go pro while training with Canadian boxers in Montreal last week. (CBC)

Sanford said he believes he’ll continue to fight at the super lightweight class but could drop down to lightweight.”I like how they look after their athletes,” Sanford, 26, said. “Boxing is a kind of a rough business where people aren’t always looking out for everyone’s best interest.”Nova Scotia Olympic boxer Wyatt Sanford has announced he’s turning pro after landing on the podium in Paris last summer. Sanford said he began to seriously consider making the jump to the pros after Paris. 

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