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| Thursday, 19 December, 2002, 12:42 GMT BBC attacked over celebrity fight ![]() Bovey, left, and Gervais: "Too old", say boxing officials Boxing officials have urged the BBC to drop a televised charity boxing match featuring Ricky Gervais amid fears it is dangerous and will tarnish the sport's image. The British Boxing Board of Control has written to director general Greg Dyke asking him to rethink plans to broadcast the fight. A one-hour programme showing The Office star Gervais and Anthea Turner's husband Grant Bovey in the ring is due to go out on BBC Two on 29 December.
The two men attempt to go for three 90-second rounds, with the winner's purse of �5,000 going to a charity of his choice. The BBC defended its decision to broadcast the show, and said the pair - both aged 41 - went through arduous fitness and training procedures to shape up for the bout.
General secretary Simon Block told BBC News Online: "The BBC have acted like naive schoolteachers. "It's like taking a party of kids off into the Cairngorms in T-shirts and sandals and then the weather changes - if nothing goes wrong it's fine, but you shouldn't dream of embarking on this without proper forethought."
"For boxing to take place without the controls we exert isn't healthy for the game," he said. "The BBC don't know whether there was any underlying health condition in these two men. We would never license anyone to box in their late 30s or older." Mr Block added: "We work very hard to try to maintain and improve the image of the sport, and we don't think this helps." He said he had complained privately to senior BBC executives about a previous celebrity charity boxing encounter, involving Les Dennis and Bob Mortimer, in aid of Sport Relief in July. The programme drew six million viewers.
But the BBC insisted the safety of Gervais and Bovey has "always been paramount". "That's why all the training and the bout itself have been held under tightly controlled circumstances," said a spokesman. He said advice had been taken from Dr Sandra Scott, the official medical adviser who has seven years' experience with the British Boxing Board of Control. Safety measures Dr Scott also took "full advice" from the Chief Medical Officer of the Amateur Boxing Association. Each boxer had to have a full medical by an independent doctor who agreed that they were both "fit to box" even before they started training, the spokesman said. He added that the fight was attended by two doctors, an anaesthetist and MediAid paramedics recommended to attend by Dr Scott on advice from the ABA. "Safety measures were added with only three rounds, one-and-a-half minutes long with one and half-minute gaps between (rather than one minute gaps). "The contenders were fully protected with 16oz gloves rather than 10oz, and protective headgear," he added. | See also: 05 Nov 02 | Entertainment 30 Jan 02 | Entertainment 29 Aug 00 | UK Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Entertainment stories now: Links to more Entertainment stories are at the foot of the page. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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