Rosie Eccles puts challenging four years behind her to win boxing gold for Wales

Eccles had endured a controversial split-decision defeat to England’s Sandy Ryan in the Gold Coast final in 2018

Mark Staniforth
Sunday 07 August 2022 08:49 EDT
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Rosie Eccles (blue) stopped Australia’s Kaye Scott to claim boxing gold (Peter Byrne/PA)
Rosie Eccles (blue) stopped Australia’s Kaye Scott to claim boxing gold (Peter Byrne/PA) (PA Wire)

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Four years of bad luck melted away for Rosie Eccles at the NEC in Birmingham as the Pontypool 26-year-old served up an emphatic second-round stoppage of Australia’s Kaye Scott to claim Commonwealth Games gold in the women’s light-middleweight division.

Eccles had endured a controversial split-decision defeat to England’s Sandy Ryan in the Gold Coast final four years ago and subsequently missed out on a place at the Tokyo Olympics when her body was attacked by a mystery virus and she was denied a second chance by the coronavirus pandemic.

“I’m always a very optimistic person, but even I started thinking I was suffering a bit of a boxing curse,” said Eccles. “I was starting to think it just wasn’t going to happen.

“Things kept coming up out of the blue – I got to the first qualifier and got attacked by a virus, then I was denied the chance to go to Tokyo. To come through all of this and win gold is just amazing.”

Eccles forced Scott, a former world medallist, to take a standing count in the opening round and piled on the pressure in the second, dealing out two more counts that convinced the referee to step in and stop the contest.

“I think I can take my silver medal out of its box now,” added Eccles. “I’ve kept it there for four years, even when I visit school, but now I can say I will get it out because it’s a part of my story, and I can look on it with pride.”

Four years of hard work paid off for Rosie Eccles (Peter Byrne/PA)
Four years of hard work paid off for Rosie Eccles (Peter Byrne/PA) (PA Wire)

Victory was all the more impressive for Eccles, who is small for a light-middleweight, and will benefit more from the equivalent category at the Paris Olympics, where the upper weight limit is four kilograms lighter.

“Paris is definitely the target now and I will be more powerful at the lighter weight,” added Eccles. “I’m always quite humble, but I think my time has come. You haven’t seen the best of me yet.”

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