Luke Campbell: 'I Was Burning up on the Inside, Getting Angry While Grieving'

 Luke Campbell, sporting a black eye from sparring, has been frustrated by lockdown and hopes promotional bluster over a fight with Ryan Garcia becomes reality. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Guardian
Luke Campbell, sporting a black eye from sparring, has been frustrated by lockdown and hopes promotional bluster over a fight with Ryan Garcia becomes reality. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Guardian
TT
20

Luke Campbell: 'I Was Burning up on the Inside, Getting Angry While Grieving'

 Luke Campbell, sporting a black eye from sparring, has been frustrated by lockdown and hopes promotional bluster over a fight with Ryan Garcia becomes reality. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Guardian
Luke Campbell, sporting a black eye from sparring, has been frustrated by lockdown and hopes promotional bluster over a fight with Ryan Garcia becomes reality. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Guardian

“It’s been a mess,” Luke Campbell says bluntly in his kitchen which spreads out into a vast living area. His home, in a suburban mews on the leafy outskirts of Hull, is as airy and spacious as boxing during Covid-19 is bleak and restrictive.

“Since November I’ve trained for two fights. Neither happened: one because I was going for a world title and the other because of the pandemic. Fights are all over the place now and people talk so much shit. Like announcing fights without any sign of them happening. It’s absolute bollocks. I enjoy training with the lads and I’m getting better. But boxing’s pretty shit at the moment.”

It’s a sign of how hard the Covid crisis has hit boxing that even the mild-mannered Campbell should talk so graphically. On Tuesday it is eight years to the day since he won Olympic gold in the ring at London 2012. Since then he has become a gritty and impressive professional who has fought twice for a world lightweight title. In September 2017 he endured a split‑decision defeat against Venezuela’s Jorge Linares, having lost his father to cancer shortly before the fight, and then last August he put up a creditable display over 12 rounds against Vasiliy Lomachenko who operates near the very top of the world’s pound‑for‑pound rankings.

Over the past six weeks, while boxing has made a low-key return behind closed doors, Campbell’s name has been used repeatedly to hype a potentially intriguing and lucrative fight against the young American Ryan García, who has a flawless 20-0 record. García is one of the rising names in US boxing partly because he has an Instagram following of almost seven million but, also, owing to his speed and power. Yet it is difficult to know whether García is actually world-class because he has not met anyone of the calibre of Campbell or Linares, let alone a master in Lomachenko.

García and his promoters, Golden Boy, have been calling out Campbell as the test he needs to prove his credentials beyond being a good‑looking social‑media sensation. The World Boxing Council also joined in the hoopla by issuing a statement that Campbell and García would fight for their interim lightweight belt. A few weeks ago the fight seemed certain but now, stewing at home with frustration as boxing’s usual bluster becomes even more meaningless, Campbell explains he has had not had a single approach from García, his promoters or the WBC.

“There’s been nothing. All of a sudden the WBC made me and García the mandatory [challengers] for the interim world title. García announced it a couple of weeks ago and I still know nothing about it. The WBC tweeted it like the fight was certain. They’re supposed to be a professional company but they don’t know nothing. They’ve announced it, saying it’s official. Well no, it’s not.”

How has Eddie Hearn, Campbell’s promoter, reacted to the speculation around García? “Eddie’s put one offer to them and they declined it. That’s the last time he talked to them.”

This seems depressingly typical of boxing. Unlike the UFC, where testing fights are made quickly and as a matter of routine, boxing remains a mess. The UFC is a dictatorship, and their MMA fighters earn less than boxers, but they supply a steady stream of compelling contests.

Campbell might feel disillusioned by boxing’s machinations, which have become even more complex during the current crisis, but he stresses his enthusiasm for meeting García. “It’s a great fight,” Campbell says. “It’s certainly a fight that excites me. But there’s a difference in someone talking it up and it being real. But me and my team are open for anything. I do what Shane McGuigan [his trainer] tells me to do. I will fight any of those guys. I’ve proved that.”

McGuigan and Campbell are an excellent combination – as proved against Lomachenko. While the result was rarely in doubt, and the scorecards gave the Ukrainian a lopsided victory, Campbell was always competitive. “I actually hurt him in the first and the seventh,” Campbell insists.

“The scorecards were shocking because that was a very competitive fight. But he’d always do enough at the end of the round to win it.”

His intensity, allied to his sound boxing skills as a southpaw and an Olympic champion, helped Campbell during the traumatic build-up to his first world title challenge against Linares. “My dad had been diagnosed with cancer [in 2014],” Campbell says. “It hit me massively. I found myself crying behind my gloves when training. In sparring I just wanted to get hit to cover up the pain of my dad.”

Was his father in bad shape when Campbell left for America in the autumn of 2017 to fight Linares? “Everyone nicknamed him Titanium Man,” Campbell says wryly. “He had been on his deathbed three times. The doctors would say he’s got minutes left and so I’ve said goodbye to my dad lots of times. But he’d bounce back every time. So he seemed OK when I was in the States. But then my older brother rang me one evening in Miami. I knew it was bad news because it would have been around one in the morning at home.”

The devastating news of his father’s death hit Campbell hard. “My mum said: ‘Your dad would’ve wanted you to carry on.’ So that’s what I did but I should’ve pulled out. I was having panic attacks in those last two weeks before the fight. It would happen whenever I thought that my dad’s not here any more. It’s a different kind of grief when you lose a parent. I just wanted the fight out the way so I could breathe and mourn my dad. When the fight started I went down early. It was a flash knockdown and I wasn’t hurt. I just thought: ‘You’re embarrassing yourself. Get up. Let’s go to work.’”

Many ringside observers, including one of the three judges, thought Campbell won the fight. The deciding scorecard was 114-113 in Linares’s favour. “I thought I won seven clear rounds so it was hard to take,” Campbell says. “I flew home on my own but I didn’t really want to go back because I knew it was his funeral the next day. That Christmas was really hard. I was burning up on the inside, getting angry while grieving.”

It will be three years next month since his father died and Campbell seems at peace now. He explains that his dad, who had worked for years as a miner, never watched him box live. “He had eight discs taken out of his spine because of the damage done when he worked underground. It left him a bit hunched and weak. Maybe he felt vulnerable because my dad was a strong guy before it all happened. He didn’t like seeing himself that way as he was a proud man, and when he went out he wanted to feel good and look smart. So he never came to the fights but he was always there in spirit and watching on TV. He always told me the same thing: ‘Come out like a lion and you’ll be an Olympic and world champion.”

Campbell has completed the first objective and he will fight on in pursuit of his dad’s second prediction. But the worrying impact of boxing, especially on his family, is plain. Campbell has been with his wife Lynsey since he was an amateur boxer and she never misses a fight. “But she’s always really nervous. Nowadays she always gets ill after my fights because of the nerves. She is wiped out because it’s so hard for her to watch. She feels helpless.”

Their two sons have also begun to worry. “They found out that a couple of boxers died last year,” Campbell says. Last year was especially dark for boxing because five professional fighters lost their lives in the ring. “My eldest son [10-year-old Leo] said to Lynsey: ‘I don’t want my dad to die.’ Lynsey said: ‘That’s why he trains very hard. So he doesn’t get hit and he’s one of the best in the world.’ They would be happy if I were to retire so I chatted about it. I said: ‘I’m not ready yet, son. I’ve got a few big performances in me.”

Campbell understands their concern. “Massively. It’s dangerous, innit? And you’re not just thinking about yourself when you’ve got a family. I don’t want to get punched in my face for the rest of my life but I still have massive passion for the sport. I strive to be the best day in, day out.

“I’ve got a very smart wife who invests our money so well. I’m switched on but she’s very clued up. I’ve never spent a penny of my boxing money. We’ve just invested it so I’m in a position where I’m lucky. I don’t need to work [in an ordinary job] so I’m 100% focused on boxing.”

Anthony Joshua, who also won Olympic gold in 2012, has earned multimillions in and out of the ring. But Campbell feels no resentment towards the heavyweight with whom he is friendly. “That’s the problem in life nowadays – too many people look at what they haven’t got. I just think: ‘I’ve got a beautiful wife, family, good friends, beautiful home. I don’t need anything. I won’t change nothing.’

“If someone had said to me 15 years ago you could be the most successful amateur in Great Britain history, Olympic champion and then one the best lightweights in the world, would you take it? You kidding me? Of course I’d take it.”

The Guardian Sport



Inter Looking to Power Back up Ahead of Champions League Match at Barcelona

 Inter Milan's Italian coach Simone Inzaghi reacts during the Italian Serie A football match between Inter Milan and Roma at the San Siro stadium in Milan on April 27, 2025. (AFP)
Inter Milan's Italian coach Simone Inzaghi reacts during the Italian Serie A football match between Inter Milan and Roma at the San Siro stadium in Milan on April 27, 2025. (AFP)
TT
20

Inter Looking to Power Back up Ahead of Champions League Match at Barcelona

 Inter Milan's Italian coach Simone Inzaghi reacts during the Italian Serie A football match between Inter Milan and Roma at the San Siro stadium in Milan on April 27, 2025. (AFP)
Inter Milan's Italian coach Simone Inzaghi reacts during the Italian Serie A football match between Inter Milan and Roma at the San Siro stadium in Milan on April 27, 2025. (AFP)

Strange things happen when Inter Milan plays Barcelona in the Champions League semifinals.

The last time the two teams met in the final four of Europe’s elite club competition, in 2010, Barcelona had to make a 15-hour journey by bus to Milan after an ash cloud caused by the eruption of the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajokull shut down air space.

Barcelona lost that first leg 3-1 and a stout defensive performance by Inter in the return match saw it advance to the final 3-2 on aggregate — where it beat Bayern Munich to clinch a historic treble under Jose Mourinho.

Inter is hoping it won't have to make a similarly arduous journey after an unprecedented blackout brought much of Spain and Portugal to a standstill Monday.

Power had almost fully returned to Spain early Tuesday morning and Inter’s charter flight was still scheduled to take off for Barcelona at 5 p.m. local time ahead of the first leg of their semifinal on Wednesday.

Barcelona’s 17-year-old star Lamine Yamal said he was caught at the team’s training grounds on the outskirts of the city when power went out just after noon on Monday.

“The truth is that we didn’t know what to do. I was with my teammates all day at the training center,” Yamal said on Tuesday. “The blackout made us all very nervous. But of course, now we are only thinking about the semifinal that we are very motivated to play.”

Inter coach Simone Inzaghi will be hoping his team can power back up for the game as well.

Inter heads to Barcelona following a dire run of results that has seen its dreams of another treble evaporate.

For the first time in more than 13 years, Inter has lost three straight matches without scoring a goal.

Since a 2-2 draw against Bayern in the Champions League quarterfinals, the Nerazzurri have lost 1-0 to both Bologna and Roma in Serie A and 3-0 to AC Milan in the second leg of their Italian Cup semifinal.

That has also seen them been leapfrogged at the top of the Serie A table by Napoli, slipping three points behind the new league leader.

“The three defeats hurt and we’re not used to this, we have to look at ourselves and try to recover our physical and mental energy,” Inzaghi said.

Those three games, however, had something in common: Marcus Thuram was missing.

Thuram, who has been out with a left thigh issue, has scored 17 goals and provided nine assists across all competitions for Inter this season.

Without the France forward, Lautaro Martinez has appeared fatigued attempting to carry Inter’s attack. And Marko Arnautovic, Thuram’s replacement, has been ineffective.

Thuram has returned to training and could even start on Wednesday.

“We’ll head to Barcelona and we will play them with respect, not fear,” Inzaghi added.