Inspirational Deirdre Gogarthy Rejoices in State of Female Irish Boxing after Statue Unvieling
If there were tears at the bus stop they were tears of joy this time.
Just over a week ago Deirdre Gogarty watched as a statue of her was unveiled in her hometown.
The people of Drogheda celebrated her trailblazing and legendary career, marking it in bronze a stone’s throw from a bus stop where she cried as the sport turned her away yet again.Â
âI remember standing at the bus stop thinking âthis is the worst day of my life,â she recounted.
However, who allowed Katie Taylor to dream, didn’t give up.
She soldiered on and was involved in what is deemed the first-ever boxing bout between two women in 1991, albeit an âillegalâ and unsanctioned fight at The Shannon Arms in Limerick.
Unable to get a boxing license in Ireland she made the difficult choice to move to the USA and turn professional to chase a World title. This move made the Louth native the first-ever female professional boxer in Ireland and led her to competing in one of the most historic female fights of all time.
Gogarty versus Christy Martin is now a fight of folklore and is deemed the spark that ignited much-needed change for womenâs boxing. Chief support to Mike Tyson versus Frank Bruno at the MGM Grand, the entertaining war was the first all-female bout to take place on a PPV boxing card.
Just a year later Gogarty, a hero to Katie Taylor, realized her dream of becoming a world champion by beating Bonnie Canino in Florida on 2nd of March 1997 for the Featherweight world professional title.
That victory cemented Gogarthyâs legacy in the sport as Irelandâs First female professional boxing world champion as well as Droghedaâs first and only professional boxing world champion.
Since retiring in 1998, the trailblazer has been recognised for her achievements by being inducted into the International Womenâs Boxing Hall of Fame in 2015.
Saturday last it was all honoured possibly where it mattered most.âBack then people saw what I was doing but there was a certain reluctance about it,” she muses before pointing out just how far the sport has come.
âSomeone once told me even if they ever allow women to box in Ireland, which they probably wonât, no one will watch it!
âWell Iâd like to argue with that! Iâm thinking of Katie Taylor filling up stadiums, Iâm thinking of Kellie Harrington winning two Olympic gold medals, Iâm thinking of the last four Olympics with Irish women bringing home three gold medals. All of that that is pretty good huh?”
Even though boxing wasn’t always kind to Gogarthy she couldn’t help but love it and was continually drawn to it and felt propelled to change perceptions on female fighting.
âPeople often ask me why I picked boxing, but I didnât really pick boxing, it picked me. I felt I had to do something to make it easier for other women to fight because I knew I couldnât possibly be the only woman in the world who wanted to box!
âBoxing is too hard of a sport to choose, itâs a calling to get in the ring and fight and that was my calling and I often thought about giving up because it was just so hard.
âSo itâs wonderful that all these other women have taken it forward and I have no doubt there will be more world championships, there will be more gold medals.â
Thanking the men that did encourage her in the early days she said: âJoe Leonard could have easily told me, âgo away, we donât want you, get out of here.â Tommy Murphy could definitely have put a stop to me coming into the gym, but he came in one day and saw me working hard and he let it happen.
âI get a little bit emotional when I look at Pat McCormack because he took me in and got terrible stick for it and theyâd say âwhy are you wasting your time on that girl? and heâd tell them â âif you had a daughter that was fighting wouldnât you want someone to teach her how to defend herself?â
Ciaran McIvor,who worked endlessly to get the statue funded and inspired the statue drive said: â…. it represents something very special, it says if you are from this town and you achieve greatness, whether it is in Drogheda or on the other side of the globe we will celebrate you no matter what sex, race, or religion you are.â
âWe all come from women and we have sisters, nieceâs daughters or granddaughters and they all have their own choices of what path they want to take. Some will like sports, some wonât, but that’s a privilege that exists for them because Deirdre walked through the doors of Drogheda Boxing Club in April 1987.â