Sitting ringside during a night of professional boxing isn't for the squeamish. Or those worried about bodily fluids.
Nearly every bout in a recent 10-fight card at the Minneapolis Armory exposed fans along the ring apron to showers of sweat and an occasional spatter of blood. And, up close, the sport has a soundtrack all its own.
"Huh, huh, huh," grunted Joey Spencer, a 19-year-old super welterweight from Linden, Mich., each time he threw a fist at Texas' Osias Vasquez.
"Oosh, oosh, oosh," exhaled welterweight Darwin Price of Houston, punctuating every hook and jab before he stoppedLuis Eduardo Florez of Colombia in the sixth round of their fight.
For the first time in decades, big-time boxing's sounds and sights, glitz and tackiness have returned to prime time in Minneapolis, due in large part to the sparkling rebirth of the Armory.
Before April of last year, when the meticulously renovated arena at 500 S. 6th St. renewed its relationship to boxing, this onetime home to Minneapolis Lakers basketball and pro rasslin' hadn't hosted a fight since 1979.
For years, boxing in Minnesota had been on the ropes, due to a dearth of quality fighters and attractive venues outside of tribal casinos. No more, said Sankara Frazier, who trains Minneapolis fighter Ve Shawn Owens at the Circle of Discipline. The professional cards being promoted here by Premier Boxing Champions suddenly make Fight Night feel like a major event again.
"It's a step up, it's the big stage," Frazier said, pointing to the Fox Sports television cameras and more than 4,000 fans. "I don't care who you are, it has an effect."