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    Home » Jack Rafferty Boxer Illness: The Untold Story Behind His 24-Hour Death Sentence
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    Jack Rafferty Boxer Illness: The Untold Story Behind His 24-Hour Death Sentence

    By Jack WardMay 18, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    jack rafferty boxer illness
    Jack Rafferty, the boxer’s illness

    The undercard at Co-op Live on Saturday night had a subtle peculiarity. Fabio Wardley’s defense of his WBO heavyweight title against Daniel Dubois was the main event; this is the kind of bout that steals the show in any arena. However, many people in Manchester had turned their attention away from the main event by the time the lights came up on the sixth round of the welterweight fight earlier in the evening. They were staring at Jack Rafferty, who had been told he had less than two days to live eight months prior.

    He hadn’t mentioned it. Not at all. After Rafferty’s hectic 12-round draw with Mark Chamberlain in Altrincham last August, the British boxing press was aware that he had taken a long break. In September, he tied the knot. He had healed from a few camp wounds. Because Rafferty himself spoke softly and persuasively about needing rest, that was the official story, and the majority of boxing reporters accepted it. A week before the fight with Essuman, he told BoxingScene, “We’re only human at the end of the day,” which now seems like one of the year’s greatest understatements.

    Full NameJack Rafferty
    Nickname“Demolition Man”
    Date of Birth1995 (age 30 in 2026)
    NationalityBritish
    HometownLancashire, England
    StanceOrthodox
    Professional Record27-0-1 (18 KOs)
    Current DivisionWelterweight (147 lbs)
    Previous DivisionSuper Lightweight
    Current TitleWBA Continental Gold Welterweight Champion
    PromoterQueensberry Promotions
    Notable Past TitleBBBofC Super Lightweight Champion (2024)
    Major Recent FightTKO6 vs Ekow Essuman, May 2026
    Health CrisisSeptember 3, 2025 — given 24-48 hours to live
    Comeback DateMay 9, 2026
    Marital StatusMarried (September 2025)

    The Instagram post followed. Wednesday, September 3, 2025. 24 to 48 hours to live. an unspecified serious illness. A boxer lying somewhere with doctors counting hours rather than rounds, depressed and severely out of shape. The fact that British boxing came dangerously close to losing one of its more intriguing prospects without ever knowing why makes it difficult to read that post without feeling a little uneasy.

    It’s still unclear exactly what he possessed. Some have conjectured about anything from an undetected infection to a cardiac event. Rafferty hasn’t said anything, and it seems like he doesn’t plan to. Although illness is different, boxing is a sport where transparency regarding injuries is often demanded by betting markets and sanctioning bodies. A fighter who told the world he was on the verge of death has already given more than most.

    What really gets you is what he did with the time that followed. In contrast to what an undercooked, recuperating athlete usually does, he increased his weight from super lightweight to welterweight. He took on Ekow Essuman, a former WBO Global champion with legitimate credentials—the kind of opponent you would be reluctant to take on even at full strength. And from the moment the opening bell rang, he was in control. In the third, a sharp jab, precise power shots, and a nasty cut over Essuman’s left eye opened up. Essuman’s corner had had enough by the sixth round.

    Boxing has a well-known format for comeback stories, and you can sense that the sport is now aiming for it. Osteosarcoma and Daniel Jacobs. The different fighters who have battled addiction, grief, and worse. It’s okay that the story tends to reduce everything to inspiration, but Rafferty’s case has a more subdued tone. He didn’t produce a documentary. The comeback was not sold by him. He simply trained, said very little, and arrived in Manchester prepared to take on a serious welterweight.

    He keeps returning to the promise he made to his mother that he would win. You can infer from his post-fight statement that, whatever transpired in early September when the doctors were counting, that promise was significant. He might discuss it more in the future. It’s also possible that he won’t, and that makes sense. The solution was to fight.

    It’s really unclear what will happen next. Queensberry will be pushing him in the direction of a welterweight title shot, which would be the obvious course of action. However, when you witness a man who was sentenced to death stop a former world champion, the standard questions of when, who, and how much seem almost irrelevant.

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    Jack Ward
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    Jack Ward contributes to Private Therapy Clinics as a writer. He creates content that enables readers to take significant actions toward emotional wellbeing because he is passionate about making psychological concepts relevant, practical, and easy to understand.

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