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“He shook up the boxing world” – Quigley pays tribute to late Brendan Ingle


Jason Quigley is the latest fighter to pay tribute to the late, great Brendan Ingle, whose funeral took place in Sheffield yesterday.

Ingle was born and reared in Dublin, in Ringsend, but made his name at his Wincobank Gym in Sheffield, where he trained four world champions,

Unbeaten Quigley [14(11)-0] joined the famous gym recently and is now based in Sheffield, where he trains under Brendan’s son, Dominic Ingle alongside the likes of Billy Joe Saunders, Kell Brook, and Kid Galahad.

Quigley linked up with Ingle in December and got to know Brendan in his latter days and months. Brendan Ingle died last month at hospital in Sheffield, aged 77, after a short illness.

“I obviously didn’t know Brendan too long – only for a few months – but he and his wife would be in the gym, every morning to say hello,” Quigley said.

“Brendan would sit there and take everything in. 

“In the evening, he would call by and if there weren’t too many left in the gym, we’d have on the Dubliners. We’d have sang away while I stretched, but I only had that privilege a couple of times.

“I would have loved the opportunity to have known him in his prime.

“Brendan loved asking me about Ireland and telling me stories about growing up in Dublin. He was such a pleasant, caring and genuinely good man.”

As well as Prince Naseem Hamed and Johnny Nelson, Brendan Ingle trained other titlists, light welterweight Junior Witter and light heavyweight Clinton Woods.

Quigley said: “He shook up the boxing world.”

The Donegal fighter is currently at the start of camp ahead of a return to the ring. The Ballybofey boxer ended a one-year absence due to injury with a dominant stoppage win over Daniel Rosario in March, his first with the Wincobank.

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