The gloves are toff

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By Dan Bell BBC News

Much is made of young boxers punching their way out of poverty. So what drives a chartered surveyor in his 30s to step into the ring and slug it out?

In the ballroom of the Royal Lancaster Hotel in Hyde Park, beneath rows of glimmering art-deco chandeliers, a ship broker and a chartered surveyor are about to have a fight.

A crush of gorgeous society blondes, with slick-haired, dinner-jacketed boyfriends, have turned their backs on half-eaten creme brulee and half-drunk £300 wine, and are standing on their chairs, screaming.

The air over the boxing ring in the centre of the room is a haze of sweat vaporised by the heat of a dozen spotlights. This is the main event, the fight everyone has been waiting for. BOXING AND ITS VIP LINKS The rules of modern boxing were drafted in 1867 under the patronage of the 9th Marquis of QueensberryIn the US, an upper-class clientele was first drawn to the boxing scene in the late 19th CenturyThe rich and famous can often be seen ringside at big fights

The scene is a world away from working-class lads punching their way out of poverty.

Princes William and Harry are in the audience - one of the promoters is a friend of William's from Eton - and the two men about to throw punches at each other have more wealth and status than most aspiring boxers could ever dream of.

White collar boxing started in Wall Street about 10 years ago and has since taken off in London's Square Mile. But why do they do it? These contenders already make a healthy living in their day jobs, so why would a ship broker and a chartered surveyor choose to punch each others' lights out?

Old score

The near-keening pitch of the crowd is a clue - there is the sheer thrill of fighting in front of an audience.

But for one of tonight's fighters, 6ft 4in, 15st 7lb, Ollie "The Berkeley Bomber" Slack, this fight is also to settle a decade-old score.

Slack is returning to the ring for the first time in yearsA week before the fight, at his training gym, Slack recount his journey back to the boxing ring.

Fitzroy Lodge Boxing Club in Lambeth is wedged beneath a railway arch clattering with trains overhead. Inside the air is thick with heat, noise and adrenaline. Frank Sinatra blares out over a trainer barking orders at his fighters, the constant crack of skipping ropes on the wooden floor and the abrupt hiss of boxers exhaling with their punches.

In the changing room, Slack is dripping with sweat as he describes how in 1999 he was a Cambridge boxing blue who lost. Now 33, he has not fought since. He shakes his head at the memory of defeat in front of friends and family. It still cuts deep.

"It was like bereavement, I know that's a strong word, but it's very hard to comprehend if you weren't there on the night, what kind of passions were involved," he says.

"There were 1,000 people who had spent £20 on tickets, I had rugby mates, school mates, family, everyone was there for me."

But there is a deeper reason behind Slack's decision to step back in the ring. It's the reason that initially made him want to box, and spurs many fighters on - to see what he is made of.

Can't run

"No one can ever know unless they've done it, what it's like to stand in the ring and the bell goes, and the ref goes: 'Box'," he says. "There is a realisation that there is nowhere else to go and all the training runs, all that technique, you've got to put all that together in a very small window. I think many people are terrified of life and they question their manhood and they get into the ring to deal with those fears Slack's trainer Glenn Charles

"You can't jump out of the ring. You can run away from a street fight, but you can't jump out of the ring."

He is drawn to boxing because he sees it as the ultimate test. When the bell goes a boxer is alone with nothing to defend himself with but his strength and his wits.

Slack - whose nickname comes from the Mayfair home of his employer - is being prepared by his trainer Glenn Charles, 51, an ex-cab driver from Stepney with a salt-and-pepper crew cut and a hoarse East End accent. How does he feel about what some might see as a posh boy slumming it?

"The wonderful thing about boxing is that you are stripped to your bare bones. It's very humbling because everyone who has ever participated in boxing, there is always someone better. That's a great lesson in life."

"I think many people are terrified of life and they question their manhood and they get into the ring to deal with those fears."Boxing has often been cited as a way for wayward youngsters to channel energy

Back at the fight, Slack is about to do just that. He stands in front of his heavyweight opponent, 6' 2", 15st 7lb, James Mathias.

The cocktail dresses and un-buttoned flat-front shirts are crushed three-deep against the ropes. The two big men stare at each other and then the bell goes. They size each other up, locking stares and throwing jabs. Neither seriously makes it through the other's guard.

But in the second round the pace quickens, the blows spraying sweat from their faces. Then comes the final round. Back in his corner Charles holds Slack's head between his hands and looks him in the face. Slack nods.

The two fighters launch themselves at each other, throwing hooks and crosses. They clinch and break. Slack charges after Mathias, spit dripping from his gum shield.

Then they clinch again and Mathias shoves his opponent on to the canvas. He springs back to his feet, shaking his head, daring the referee to call it a knockdown.

Suddenly it's the final bell. Mathias struts across the ring, certain he's won it.

"Ladies and gentlemen," shouts the compere. "We have a decision, it's unanimous. The winner of the heavy weight contest, in the blue corner, is... Ollie 'The Berkeley Bomber' Slack!"

Charles looks over his shoulder and says, dead pan: "It went alright, didn't it?"<hr>

Add your comments on this story, using the form below.

My husband Andy "the Saint" Sayers has just completed his first white collar boxing event - it was amazing and he raised loads of money for charity. Joanna Sayers, Oakham, Rutland, UK

It is a way of doing something "real", a physical struggle for survival. I rode my motorcycle once through a tropical thunderstorm, lightning all around me, viscious wind gusts, rain pouring down, knowing there was a tornado warning in effect. It was a real struggle to stay on the road, I was cursing to myself, I was scared, I was tired, I had to work very hard both mentally and physically, but once I cleared the storm, there was this huge sense of accomplishment, of having beaten the elements. Arjen, Miami, FL, USA

Slack's suggestion that a boxing match is more dangerous than a street fight is ridiculous: "You can't jump out of the ring. You can run away from a street fight, but you can't jump out of the ring." A street fight has no rules, there's certainly no referee and unlike a boxing ring (which you can walk out of), running away in a street fight is likely to result in being attacked from behind.DS, Croydon, England

It's the physical side of it, something primal. We never have to do anything this physical to get by these days and the adrenaline rush is unreal!Miles Hayler, Leamington, UK

Based on yesterday's Magazine article about the use of the word "pikey" I would imagine the BBC would also be considering rethinking the use of all class-based slander. To my surprise the headline of "toff" is used the very next day. Now I have no problem with such names but the hypocrisy is startling.James, Tunbridge Wells

It doesn't matter how you dress it up, boxing is still a brutish and degrading exhibition. The report is wickedly biased; it glorifies and glamourises violence. I believe that most of us will think these men and their audience deserve nothing better than contempt and ridicule.Nobby, Chatham

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