‘There’s just one Ricky Hatton’ was the mantra that echoed all through the Manchester legend’s boxing profession. There was just one Ricky Hatton, and maybe there might ever solely be one.
Nobody earlier than had injected the identical type of vibrant pleasure into British boxing as Hatton did.
He was a nationwide treasure, adored by the sporting public like Henry Cooper and Frank Bruno had been, however he was additionally a real world-beater.
When he toppled Kostya Tszyu to turn out to be the IBF super-lightweight world champion he beat one of many pound-for-pound greats to turn out to be the very best fighter within the division.
He was a power of nature in that combat. Hatton was the underdog however he pressured Tszyu out of the competition. He wouldn’t be denied on that night time – his biggest, however one in all many magical moments in his profession.
His capacity and accomplishment, a two-weight world champion who fought the easiest of his technology in Tszyu, and each Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao, was simply part of what made him particular.
One other half was his type of boxing. Within the ring he mixed sustained aggression, heartfelt dedication, depraved physique punching and maybe underappreciated intelligence. It made for pleasure each time he stepped via the ropes. Hatton felt it was his responsibility to entertain, and he did so each time.
His implacable buzzsaw assaults had been a part of his preventing type however his character outdoors the ring was wholly totally different. Each tribute made to the person recognises his heat and kindness. There is a purpose for that. It was real and he was real. His sense of humour was ever obvious pre- and post-fight.
Accessible, affable, approachable, he by no means misplaced his connection to his supporters. His reputation unfold throughout all Manchester, throughout the nation and finally went world.
He famously took over Las Vegas with a legion of followers when he fought Mayweather and Pacquiao.
The depth of his assist was legendary. He made unforgettable ringwalks to Manchester Metropolis anthem Blue Moon, headlined at his soccer membership’s house floor and, with Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua following after him, ushered in a brand new period of stadium-fillers in trendy British boxing.
His lasting legacy will likely be what he meant to so many individuals.
Hatton was a novel mixture of the extraordinary – his feats within the ring distinctive – and the bizarre. Everybody might relate to him. He lived like a monk in coaching camp however ate with gusto outdoors of it, drank with pals and supporters alike and was exuberant firm for anybody.
“I was a world champion that was one of us,” he mentioned himself.
You could not put it higher.
His story, from carpet fitter on a Manchester council property to changing into a bona fide world champion, is a boxing fairytale. But in addition a cautionary story for the game. For all his accomplishments and his unparalleled reputation, he struggled, particularly after retiring from competitors.
Parting with coach Billy Graham and tensions inside his household troubled him. He was open about his difficulties with despair and dependancy.
An envoy for the psychological well being charity Marketing campaign Towards Residing Miserably, he spoke frankly about his psychological well being and he did so to assist others.
“As fighters, we tell ourselves we’re strong – we train, we sweat, we take hits, we get up. But sometimes the hardest fight happens in silence, in the mind,” Amir Khan wrote.
“Mental health isn’t weakness. It’s part of being human. And we must talk about it. We must reach out. We must lean on each other.
“We misplaced not solely one in all Britain’s biggest boxers, however a buddy, a mentor, a warrior, Ricky Hatton,” Khan continued.
“Ricky, thanks for every thing. To your fights, your moments of glory, your grit. Thanks for pushing us, exhibiting us what’s attainable.
“To everyone reading this: if you’re hurting or struggling, you are not alone. Talk. Reach out. Because we need more light, more compassion, more understanding.
“Relaxation properly, Ricky. You will all the time have your house within the ring of our recollections.”
After boxing, he operated as a promoter and labored as a coach. The lure of the ring nonetheless lingered. He misplaced a 2012 comeback combat, took half in an exhibition together with his buddy and fellow boxing legend Marco Antonio Barrera in 2022 and was aspiring to field once more later this 12 months.
“That adrenalin rush, the roar from the crowd, that nervousness as you’re making your ringwalk. It’s the most nerve-wracking thing of any fighter’s preparation before the fight. But when it’s gone you miss it,” he as soon as mentioned.
He did all of it, although, and he actually did it his approach. On his life-style, the fluctuating weight that noticed him lean into the ‘Ricky Fatton’ nickname, whereas he would not suggest it, he mentioned: “I don’t think I would change it.
“As a result of I believe that is what folks beloved about me.
“I worked hard all my life to have the fanbase that I did, I had the fanbase I did because I was exciting.
“I wish to suppose they’ve beloved my fights through the years.”
They loved the fights, definitely. But they loved him.
Only 46 years old, Hatton was a father and a grandfather.
In the estimation of his former promoter Frank Warren, Hatton was a modern great.
Warren wrote: “A wonderfully proficient fighter who impressed a technology of younger boxers and followers in a approach only a few had finished earlier than because of each his character and the leisure he offered within the ring.
“From making his debut in Widnes in 1997 to then go on to win one of the most historic fights in British boxing history against Kostya Tszyu in Manchester, Ricky will rightly go down as one of the modern greats of this sport.”
There was just one Ricky Hatton. After all there’s just one Ricky Hatton.