Jesse Ryder: I'm fit to fight Slater

Cricket player Jesse Ryder up against blogger Cameron Slater who will fight in the feature...
Cricket player Jesse Ryder up against blogger Cameron Slater who will fight in the feature charity bout in the Super 8 Redemption night. Photo NZ Herald.
Cricketer Jesse Ryder says there is no medical reason he should not step into the ring for a charity boxing match against Whale Oil blogger Cameron Slater in Christchurch on March 28.

Ryder will be returning to the city where he was felled during a late night altercation for a fight that will take place exactly two years to the day after he sustained injuries that left him in a coma for three days.

Ryder says reports he suffered a fractured skull during the incident -- which still remain on his Wikipedia page -- were incorrect. He had instead suffered only a minor concussion. The severity of his medical situation was because he had suffered breathing difficulties during the attack, he said.

"Personally I think it might have been just a minor concussion. I think it was when I aspirated my lungs was the main reason, that was the main thing I struggled with after the incident happened. There are a lot of people saying I had a fractured skull and stuff like that but there was nothing like that.

"A lot of people have come out and said [I] shouldn't be doing it but I have passed all my medicals. I had a medical this morning and passed that. I passed all my concussions clinic neuro [psych] tests. I am happy with where I am at. If I had issues I wouldn't have taken the fight on."

The chances of Ryder receiving much damage in the ring appear slim. During a face off with Slater, Ryder was clearly taller, had superior reach, younger and in much better shape. Ryder's last boxing 'match' against a non-athlete, radio host Mark Watson, lasted just a matter of seconds.

Slater, who broke his vow not to speak to the Herald, was remarkably bullish about his chances.

"I always back myself," he said. "I am always a box of surprises."

As well as taking on Ryder, the central figure of the Dirty Politics scandal said he would be "knocking over some politicians this year". He also challenged a Herald reporter who covered the Dirty Politics affair to take him on in a boxing match.

 

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