Paul Gallen has defied the odds and his critics but it’s time to retire from boxing

At 40 the body doesn’t do the things the mind wants it to. In boxing the biggest challenge is walking away. Paul Gallen has defied the odds and critics. But it’s time to hang up the gloves.
Paul Gallen, it’s time to hang up the gloves.
We watched Gallen get old in the ring in Newcastle during his defeat to Kris Terzievski.
Sitting ringside, some of the body shots Gallen absorbed sounded like a metal pole being whacked against a wet yoga mat.
As the fight wore on through rounds six and seven, with Gallen swinging hooks wildly only to have Terzievski take a quick step to his right and land flush straight lefts to his face, the frustration was clear.
Gallen, mouth gaping, wore the expression of a man wondering: “Why on Earth am I still doing this for?”
But only a man of Gallen’s immense heart could have rallied anyway, and threaten to steal victory with a ninth-round onslaught as Terzievki clung and ran for survival in equal, desperate measure.
It was typical Gallen. He threw the two initial damaging shots with his back against the ropes, with Terzievki standing over him.
Back against the wall. That is how Gallen has preferred it throughout his rugby league and boxing careers.
A thudding close shot to the body followed by a searing uppercut. Terzievki’s knees buckled, Gallen sensed an opportunity, the raucous crowd willed the killer blow.
But as Gallen stated afterwards, he simply could not find that next gear, like he has so often in a 21-year professional sporting career.
So now, what is there left for Gallen in the sweet science?
We know the highly-sought fight against Sonny Bill Williams won’t happen.
NRL enforcer Junior Paulo was ringside offering himself as Gallen’s opponent in October. But they’ve already fought once, and does Gallen really need that payday?
He’s already made more than $5 million from the sport, has extensive media commitments, has invested his money wisely and runs profitable businesses. So no, the money can’t be the lure for one final swansong.
It can only be Gallen’s insatiable lust for a challenge.
He’s fought for the Australian heavyweight title twice, and suffered his two losses in those bouts.
Against Justis Huni, Gallen was rapidly outclassed and stopped late.
He’d hoped the lesser-profiled Terzievski would shrink under the bright lights of the biggest stage in his career.
Yet Terzievksi was Ray Charles to the glare for the first eight rounds, playing all the right keys, a sad melody about the fading sun on Gallen’s career.
Afterwards, Gallen said he’d felt better in sparring against another southpaw prospect, Jackson Murray, and hoped Terzievski would fight Murray next.
That is the other side of Gallen that is underappreciated. He has put a spotlight on fighters who otherwise would be stuck on lowly produced, lesser attended events.
He bought Tim Tszyu through his undercard to become the biggest star in Australian boxing, and on Wednesday did the same for Nikita Tszyu and Harry Garside.
With Terzievski, Murray, Huni, Joe Goodall, Demsey McKean, Willis Meehan and Teremoana Junior, the Australian heavyweight division has never bee so lush with prospects.

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