Scantily clad in bikinis and high heels, ring girls have been a subject of debate for some time. Are they crucial to gearing up the atmosphere and glamour of the
night or just a tacky, out-dated tradition?
Ruth Addicott meets the ring girls ahead of the ZT Fight Night in Hove this month and listens to the debate
By day they have smartly dressed
office jobs in property and finance,
by night they are in bikinis, being
splattered with blood and saliva at
the ring side of a boxing match.
Meet Jenna Thompson and Claire
Groombridge, the Sussex ring girls
who put the glamour into fight night,
while the opponents square up and
throttle each other behind them.
Both Jenna and Claire will be
appearing at the ZT Fight Night at
Hove Town Hall on February 15.
The event, which used to be called
Zero Tolerance, has featured a mesh
cage and sparked its fair share of
controversy in the past. It is a mixture
of the aggression and raw energy of
hybrid boxing and kick boxing.
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The name changed, the cage was
removed - but the ring girls stuck their
heels in and stayed, despite a growing
undercurrent of hostility from some
corners of the sporting community.
Kitted out in skimpy bikinis,
skyscraper heels and fake tan, they are
essential "eye candy" to pull in the
crowds, according to event organiser
and fighter Sol Gilbert.
Others see ring girls as a gratuitous
and outdated concept, which is
degrading to women in a sport they
are now trying to excel at.
Jenna, 26, from Shoreham, first
became a ring girl when she got
involved with Cage Rage in Wembley,
learning the role for mesh-cage fights
which were broadcast on Sky TV. Now
she is a firm fixture at the ZT Fight
Nights in Sussex.
"I like the atmosphere," she says.
"It's good fun with the crowd and
everything. The worst part is getting
covered in splats of blood and saliva
when you're walking next to the ring.
I did a Cage Rage event once and
there was a guy who got punched in
the head so many times his tear ducts
were bleeding. He was literally crying
blood. There are always broken noses,
split eyebrows and split cheeks but
we know our place. They have paramedics
for that."
Apart from looking good, the main
role of the ring girls is to lead the
fighters onto the floor, get the crowd
cheering and hold up the ring cards
between each round. They then go
back in the ring afterwards to present
the medals and pose for pictures.
Claire, 22, from Hove, walks on stage
alongside Jenna. She has been a ring
girl for 12 months and has also got used
to the fighters falling through the ropes
and landing literally at her feet.
"The first time was a bit of a shock,"
she says. "We get splattered sometimes,
which is not always pleasant,
but we've got used to it. You can see
the determination and concentration
in the participants' eyes and it's nice
to see someone so involved in a sport
they love."
The worst part, according to Jenna,
is watching their friends fight - but
even she admits she's become hardened
to it now. "It's aggressive but that's
the nature of the sport, they're there to
fight," she observes.
Both Claire and Jenna were hired
by Sol Gilbert, owner of ZT Fight Skool,
who has been fighting for 17 years.
Having won a string of titles in Britain
and Europe, he knows all too well the
commitment put in by the fighters.
He puts himself through an intensive
training regime six weeks before a fight
and sleeps in a tracksuit as well as two
jumpers and a plastic sauna suit the
night before the weigh-in to ensure
he meets the correct weight.
"Your mouth's dry, your tongue is
dry, your lips are cracked and you're
thinking about the fight. It all adds
to the pressure," he says.
While he's sweating it out in a sauna
suit, Jenna and Claire have their own
regime - a spray tan and manicure to
top off their outfits. Jenna normally
wears black skin-tight hot pants, heels
and a bikini or lace halterneck top.
"We do have a style we follow:
glamorous and sexy but not too tacky,"
she says. "I work for a property
investment company in the day so it's
normally a mad rush after work. My
colleagues aren't bothered. I don't
think many of them even know."
The hot pants are enough to distract
most men from their pint and prompt
a fair amount of cheering, banter
and wolf-whistles from the crowd.
Jenna insists it's never leery (security
take care of that) and the crowd is
really friendly.
"It's always quite rowdy but I'm
usually too busy concentrating on what
I'm doing to hear what they're saying,
especially if they're all shouting at
once," she says.
Claire is also busy concentrating
(having once inadvertently held up the
card saying "Round 3" when the match
had finished - although she claims it
was Jenna who made her do it).
She's quite happy being a ring girl.
"The guys like to see women. We
may get a few dirty looks from their
girlfriends but most are fine because
they know what to expect," she says.
"Most of the blokes don't take any
notice once the match has started
anyway. I don't think it's degrading,
all we're doing is walking around."
Jenna agrees, adding she has never
come across any hard-core feminists.
"There wouldn't be any point in going
to anything like that if you didn't
agree with ring girls because that's
the way it is and has been for years,"
she says. "I'd definitely encourage
people to go if they haven't been before.
How can you know you're not going
to like it, unless you've been?"
Try and get some serious background
on the role of ring girls and
you struggle. With website after site
offering pictures and videos, there's
plenty of material. But after wading
through the "Hottest" ring girls, "Big
Mama"-style ring girls or, for those
wanting an eyeful "Stockton's topless"
ring girls, it's easy to see why they
get the flak they do.
Tiffany Williams, British Full
Contact Ratings Flyweight champion
and an instructor at Kicks Martial
Arts Centre, in Lewes Road, is one of
a number of women involved in the
sport who question the need for
ring girls. She points out major Thai
boxing events abroad are just as
popular without them - so why should
they be necessary in Britain?
Tiffany cites the example of Bangkok
and Thailand generally, where Thai
boxing fights are held almost every
night of the week in packed stadiums
with a total absence of ring girls.
"Over the years I've attended many
shows, either as a fighter, corner
woman, or as a spectator. Originally,
all the major shows I attended had
ring girls but over the past few years
this has definitely changed," she says.
"The absence of ring girls does not
seem to affect the number of spectators
or their appreciation of the event and
it definitely doesn't affect the quality
of the fights."
Personal trainer Sam Foster is also
against the idea of ring girls, claiming
all they do is make women feel even
more insecure about their bodies.
She coaches women of all ages who
often have very low self-esteem and
poor opinions of themselves, affecting
their relationships, career prospects
and social lives.
"Encouraging a sexual image of
women in sport only re-inforces the
insecurities normal' women may
have," she says.
"It sets an unrealistic expectation
of what we should look like in both
men's and women's heads. I don't
think it's the most respectful thing
to do but, then again, if you decide to
flaunt your body for the pure attention
of men then you're not too bothered
what women or their wives or girlfriends
think."
Other women who take the sport
seriously have an entirely different
take, however.
Vanessa Lavender, a black belt
in karate believes ring girls are
"decoration" and shouldn't be
mistaken for anything else.
"It can be a bit squirm-making
at times but they perform a function.
It's possibly an outdated and
embarrassing one from a female point
of view but it's an institution that's
been going on for such a long time,
I don't think they should be lambasted
for what they do," she says.
Vanessa points out ring girls are
no different to the cheerleaders you'd
find at basketball games or bikini-clad
models draped over a Ferrari at a motor
show. "I have much more of an issue
with that," she adds. "Mainly because
I can't see the car. Ring girls wouldn't
put me off going to an event like this."
Donna Poplett set up Fight Skool
in Hove with her partner Sol in May
2003, after coming back from a training
holiday in Thailand.
She still trains in Thai boxing twice
a week and was partly responsible
for introducing the ring girls to the
ZT Fight Night in the first place. She
feels they bring glamour and extra
entertainment for the guys.
Donna claims the event isn't just
for men, asserting that while a lot
of people associate fighting with
a brutal mentality, there's no attitude
or bravado on the night.
The crowd isn't made up of thugs,
Sol adds, but professional businessmen
- solicitors, doctors and councillors.
Although the majority of women
in the crowd are girlfriends, he says
it's a 40/60 split. It may have been
condemned in the past as "the human
equivalent of cockfighting", but times
are changing, he says, and they are
even getting a growing number of
calls from groups of girls wanting
VIP tables.
Sol, who claims women are "just
as bloodthirsty as the guys", is even
planning to introduce a female fight
at the next event.
"We have a very strong following
of girls coming to train and I'd like to
see more women competing," he says.
"It's not just a man's sport, they
have a lot to offer. Not only are you
getting a good workout, you're learning
how to defend yourself. At the end of
the day, it's a horrible world out there
and being able to stand up for yourself
is essential."
While the ring girls and women
who train to fight at the gym are
a world apart, Sol says they have an
understanding. He doesn't believe the
ring girls put women off, whether
they're spectating or taking part.
"There are feminine girls and
masculine girls and they respect
each other's boundaries," he says.
"Claire and Jenna are very sexy ladies,
they've got very good bodies. At the
end of the day, the fight is a public
facility and there's a demand for it -
let the public make up their mind."
As much as they love the night and
respect the opponents, nothing could
convince either Jenna or Claire to get
in the ring and fight themselves.
"I couldn't stand anyone punching
me," says Claire. "I'm too much of
a girl. I leave that to the men."
Jenna agrees: "I'd definitely
encourage people to go but I don't think
it's a women's sport, it's far too
aggressive. I'd be afraid of breaking
a fingernail," she muses.
Harvey Marketing Events will be
hosting ZT Fight Night at Hove Town
Hall, Norton Road, Hove on February
15. For tickets, call 07775 513307
ZT Fight Skool is at Unit 2 Hove
Business Park, Fonthill Road,
Brighton BN3 6HA. Call 01273 202226
or visit www.ztfightskool.com
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