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Losing A Leg Didn’t Stop This Man From Successfully Competing In Boxing

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Losing a limb, whether because of an accident or due to combat, changes everything.

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One won’t be able to do some things that require a complete set of limbs to do. But one ex-paratrooper didn’t let a missing leg stop him from taking up boxing and even successfully competing and knocking opponents out in the ring.

Corporal Michael Lewis, 36, was in the 2 Para in Afghanistan when his right lower leg was blown off during a firefight at 4 am. He also nearly lost his left arm in that engagement.

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Meet Michael in the video below.

[rumble video_id=v5lo1g domain_id=u7nb2]

Video credit: Rumble

Although severely injured, his squadmates carried him for one mile in a stretcher in an amazing emergency evacuation. Twenty-four hours later, Michael was in a military hospital in London, alive but missing his right leg below the knee.

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That can be depressing news for anyone but Michael was a born fighter and promised he “wouldn’t go down without a fight.” Thanks to a new sports blade prosthetic called the Challenger, Michael took up boxing and thrived.

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It was difficult finding an opponent at first because nobody wanted to be seen as beating up – or being beaten by – a disabled boxer. An opponent was eventually found and although Michael lost that match, his performance convinced matchmakers that it was worth getting him more fights.

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Michael won his second match with a spectacular 98-second knockout, although he lost his third.

Michael, from Northampton, said: “There’s a window of time after a casualty where you either sink or swim. I’m a fighter by discipline, and I won’t go down without a fight.

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“My first fight was in March, which I lost because it was all new to me. The guy I was up against was experienced – and 20 kg heavier than me.

“In fact, before my first fight, I had a hard time trying to find a rival, because people either didn’t want to beat a disabled boxer or lose to one.

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“But since March, the phone just hasn’t stopped ringing. All sorts of people have called saying they would like to give fighting me a go.

“I won my second fight in June, in the first round – a knock-out in one minute and 38 seconds. I was astonished by what happened.”

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Following his injuries in Afghanistan, Michael went on a long road towards rehabilitation and was medically discharged in March 2012. Throughout that time, The Royal British Legion and Support Our Paras gave him much-needed support.

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Because of that, Michael “felt a strong sense of obligation towards doing what I can now to help these amazing charities do the amazing work they do.”

In October 2014, he started working as a fundraiser for The Royal British Legion and also assists in raising funds for the Poppy Appeal.

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Michael said: “Boxing was something new that I could learn and throw myself into. It helped with my rehabilitation and was a real challenge.

“I’ve always been fitness-minded. But when I started boxing, I would be throwing up during training sessions for the first weeks.”

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