Bullet Proof
Boxing News|September 26, 2019
Shawn Porter has lost his two biggest fights. He tells Chris Walker how those cruel losses made him feel and explains why defeat will never define him
Chris Walker
Bullet Proof

SHAWN PORTER sought comfort in his father’s arms. For the previous 10 weeks, the man now holding him close had been anything but gentle. He drove his son through physical and mental torture in preparation for another fight. But the early morning runs, the barely tolerable diet and relentless sparring had all been for nothing. Porter’s world title was now the property of Kell Brook and his undefeated record was gone.

The 2014 defeat was hard to take because the journey that came before was far from easy. Today, Porter is a prominent member of the sport’s talentladen welterweight division but for so long he had been an anonymous figure. Sitting at the back of boxing’s classroom while other pupils vied for the teacher’s attention, Porter instead preferred to wait patiently for the end of term exams.

In December 2013 he outpointed the revered Devon Alexander to become the IBF champion. Suddenly, people started to take notice. His subsequent mauling of Paulie Malignaggi raised further eyebrows considering the Brooklynite was then regarded among the sport’s the most durable fighters. Porter became known as the “Monster”. A monster who was expected to be too strong for Kell Brook.

“I don’t like to lose,” Porter tells Boxing News. Looking back on his first defeat is perhaps not a conversation he wants to have as he prepares for

Saturday night’s unification showdown with Errol Spence Jnr. But the Ohioan draws inspiration from how defeat made him feel.

This story is from the September 26, 2019 edition of Boxing News.

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This story is from the September 26, 2019 edition of Boxing News.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.