http://www.rte.ie/radio1/doconone/d...chael-gomez-bernard-dunne-boxing-mexican.html Michael Gomez: The Irish Mexican Michael Armstrong was born on the side of a road in Longford. His father who was blind was driving his mother to the hospital, when he crashed and Michael was delivered there and then. Years later when he won a boxing title, the Sky Sports TV interviewer asked him; "You were born on the side of the road, brought up in care homes - it's some story?" "That's not a story", Gomez replied, "That was real life." After living in Dublin, the family moved to Manchester where Michael lived in a succession of care homes. At the age of seventeen, he became a professional boxer but there was one problem - there already was a boxer with his name so he choose 'Gomez' after his hero Wilfredo Gomez, who also threw a powerful uppercut. At the time, in the Manchester boxing scene, Gomez alongside Ricky Hatton, was seen as future world champions. There was an air of expectation as crowds of supporters, dressed in sombreros and ponchos, turned up at his fights. Michael Gomez would fight forty eight times in a spectacular and wild career that made him a legendary figure in the Irish boxing world. Over those years he was stabbed, killed a man, was accused of throwing fights, flat lined for forty seconds and struggled with alcohol and drugs problems - all that time boxing professionally at an elite world level. In this weeks 'Documentary on One' The Irish Mexican, former world champion Bernard Dunne travels to Manchester to interview Michael Gomez, where for the first time, he tells his story of how he would heavily binge, drinking a bottle of whiskey a night and taking cocaine and then go into the ring and fight.( (Apart from the Michael Gomez v Peter McDonough fight, all commentary courtesy of Sky Sports) Produced by Ciaran Cassidy and Bernard Dunne. Sound Supervision by Mark Dwyer. First Broadcast 5th July 2014 An Irish radio documentary from RTÃ Radio 1, Ireland - Documentary on One - the home of Irish radio documentaries.
And he's terrible at throwing fights. See round 5 [video=youtube_share;dNUjIWLarPM]http://youtu.be/dNUjIWLarPM[/video]
His fight with Alex Arthur was his finest moment imo. Top fight and its a bit of a shame Arthur bottled the rematch but Gomez was as tough as they come and prob would have made him quit again.
Oddly he reckons the Arthur fight was the end of him. The only fight he ever gave everything for and really showed what he could do. The documentary is amazing. You really couldn't make that **** up.