logo
WA Sports Minister Rota Saffioti will not overrule bare knuckle boxing competition amid health concerns

WA Sports Minister Rota Saffioti will not overrule bare knuckle boxing competition amid health concerns

News.com.au03-06-2025
The West Australian government has been warned by concerned health advocates that it will be responsible for any deaths if a bare knuckle fighting event goes ahead in Perth.
WA Sports Minister Rita Saffioti has declared she will not intervene to stop the Promotion Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship from coming Down Under if it's given the all clear from the state's Combat Sports Commission (CSC).
'The event has to be sanctioned by the Combat Sports Commission … there's two stages of this,' she said.
'This was the first, whether the sport can be allowed in the state, and that was something that has been signed off by the previous minister.
'And then there's the actual event … what the proponents have to do is put forward to the CSC what is involved and then the commission either approves or doesn't approve it.'
Ms Saffioti said she was aware that although not everyone enjoyed combat sports, it was more important to ensure the sport could be regulated.
'If you don't regulate, then things go underground and it's much less safe for the competitors,' she told Perth Today's Simon Beaumont.
'It's not my cup of tea, but similar to the discussion and the debate around cage fighting or the octagon, MMA and UFC, similar arguments were put forward … but all I can do is take the advice of the board and the team that's been appointed to give me this advice.
'I take the advice of the Combat Sports Commission seriously. They've gone in, they've created some additional regulations in relation to safety.'
'As I said, it's now up to the promoter of the event to make sure they satisfy all the regulations and rules that the Combat Sport Commission have put in place.'
Regulations imposed include the presence of medical practitioners onsite and ringside.
'The advice is that they believe with the level of regulations they've imposed that it can be undertaken safely in WA,' Ms Saffioti said.
Health advocates warn that a death during the event will leave the state government with bloody hands.
In 2021, American bare knuckle fighter Justin Thornton died in hospital more than six weeks after suffering a horrific knockout.
Just 38, Thornton collapsed after taking several vicious blows to the head and face during the first round of a championship fixture in Mississippi.
His injuries left him partially paralysed, requiring assistance breathing, and he suffered an infection in his lungs and spinal cord.
Australia Medical Association WA president Michael Page told 7News that the government was only 'taking the advice that they want to take'.
'They're not taking any advice from society, they're not taking advice from us, they're not taking any advice from anyone in our community,' he said.
'Our government has the ability to stop this from happening and if there is a death during the event then of course that falls at the feet of our government that's made this decision.'
The event, pending approval, is set to go ahead on July 19.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Australia's amazing bowling line-up dominate top 10 Test rankings after West Indies rout
Australia's amazing bowling line-up dominate top 10 Test rankings after West Indies rout

7NEWS

time27 minutes ago

  • 7NEWS

Australia's amazing bowling line-up dominate top 10 Test rankings after West Indies rout

The Australian bowlers' destruction of West Indies in Kingston has resulted in five of their record-breaking attack now flourishing in the top 10 of the ICC's Test bowling rankings. Scott Boland's three wickets in each innings at Sabina Park, including a hat-trick as Australia sealed their whitewash three-Test triumph by, incredibly, bowling out the home side for 27, has ensured the veteran paceman moves up six places into a career-best sixth place in the rankings. The late-blooming 36-year-old, who never lets Australia down whenever he gets the chance with his 62 wickets at 16.53 apiece, has joined captain Pat Cummins (third), Josh Hazlewood (fourth), Nathan Lyon (eighth) and Mitchell Starc (10th) in a rare single-country domination of the bowling table. Boland's PB is quite staggering with respected sports reporter Harrison Reid noting that: 'The sixth best bowler in the world isn't in his own country's best four.' The ICC said you would have to go back to 1958 to find a similar domination of the table. A historical rating showed that England had half-a-dozen bowlers in the top 12 back in 1958, including the likes of Jim Laker, Tony Lock, Freddie Trueman and Brian Statham. Still, though, top of the current pile remains the uniquely brilliant Indian quick, Jasprit Bumrah, whose seven wickets during their defeat by England at Lord's this week enabled him to stay 50 points ahead of Australia's World Test final tormentor, South African Kagiso Rabada. Meanwhile, Joe Root's knocks of 104 and 40 in the enthralling third-Test win have ensured he goes back to the top of the batting rankings, a week after his fellow Yorkshire star Harry Brook had gone to No.1. It's the eighth time Root has taken top spot and, at 34, he's the oldest No.1 batter since Sri Lanka's Kumar Sangakkara was leading the way back in December 2014 at the age of 37. It's not looking so healthy for the Australian batters on the world stage, after some of their top-order struggles in the Caribbean, with only fourth-placed veteran Steve Smith in the top 10 with a ranking of 816 compared to Root's 888. Travis Head is the next best Aussie in 11th place on 740.

Andrew Johns gives Kalyn Ponga blessing to leave, real problem at Knights ‘rats nest'
Andrew Johns gives Kalyn Ponga blessing to leave, real problem at Knights ‘rats nest'

News.com.au

time27 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Andrew Johns gives Kalyn Ponga blessing to leave, real problem at Knights ‘rats nest'

Decades in the rugby league wilderness have seen Knights fans acclimatise to spending the majority of their seasons crying in the bathtub. But for a club that lives with a gentle hum of peril in its ear even at the best of times, 2025 has been a season that has surpassed most by sinking beyond the gurgler and down in to the stink. Not only is Newcastle moored at the foot of the table with an attack backfiring on all cylinders, rumours are now circling that Kalyn Ponga's mooted release to rugby and Adam O'Brien's uncertain future as coach are both about to receive the dreaded full support of the board. FOX LEAGUE, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every game of every round in the 2025 NRL Telstra Premiership, LIVE with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer. Andrew Johns has given his blessing for Ponga to leave the Knights — either to join another NRL club, play rugby union or sign up to the breakaway R360 league — insisting he would say 'thank you' to Ponga for his service. 'I give him a big thank you for coming to the club and if he wants to move on, I say thank you for what you have done for the club,' Johns told the Freddie and the Eighth podcast. 'He has carried the club. He signed after the three wooden spoons in a row and that year, the Cowboys got to a grand final. 'Look, he got signed for big money but struggling clubs have to pay overs for a marquee player. 'He has attracted players to the club, he has attracted sponsors, I would imagine his social media reach would be huge. 'So I would say thank you to Kalyn for what you have delivered to the club. Thank you very much. If you want to move on, so be it. 'No animosity whatsoever.' But with everyone rubbernecking at McDonald Jones Stadium as it burns, one factor has been conveniently lost like a red-headed middle child in a shopping mall. When Dylan Brown was announced in April as Newcastle's new signing for 2026, the club couldn't have dreamt of the impact his signing would immediately make. That's because everything at Newcastle has gone so belly-up since he agreed to terms that the only explanation is he signed the deal in puppies blood with a dodo feather. Not only has the club gone in reverse on the paddock as it suffers a calamitous injury toll, it's now about to swap out a marquee player for a new coach who'll be walking in to a rats nest as his predecessor departs with a seven-figure payout. And while Brown has played no direct role in this cursed period for the Knights, never fear: he'll have plenty of chances to personally contribute when he arrives. Not only is the Eels five-eighth about to hoover $1.3m a year from the club's salary cap for an entire decade, he's supposed to do so while playing in the foreign position of halfback. This would be fine if he wasn't a robust running playmaker who deals more in muscle than minutiae, but he's not — and that's why signing him to play as a librarian is the cardboard straw of popular and practical decisions. 'He is not a Nathan Cleary or a Mitchell Moses, who are dominant halfbacks that go pretty much everywhere and do all the kicking,' club legend Johns warned on WWOS' Immortal Behaviour in April. 'He's not that dominant voice. He's not a dominant halfback, it's not Dylan's nature.' Of greater concern, Brown was supposed to subsidise his logbook on the L-Plates playing alongside Ponga, but now he'll either be busy in France or learning to scream 'through the gate sir!' in Japanese. Add the fact the new arrival is playing for a coach he didn't sign for in a team missing the generational talent he was promised, and you can already hear the decade of blame he'll cop for going viral leaving a toilet cubicle and not being Gary Johns' son. Even Brown himself thinks his deal is already a lemon, with the Kiwi international reportedly knocking back an offer to join the Knights early in favour of somewhere safer for his ego, like playing reserve grade in front of 35 people and an Otto bin. All in all, the new recruit shapes as the face of Newcastle's next lap around its möbius strip of pain, a club that as rugby league's Boom peaked in the late 90s and burst in the early noughties. While inarguably an upgrade on the ghastly Nathan Brown years, O'Brien's era will be remembered for making up the numbers in finals before switching his halves pairings so frequently that it became a game of three card monte where everybody won except Newcastle. A new coach will at least provide fans with a psychological band-aid before another decade of a salary cap weighed down by one reluctant saviour and a smattering of journeymen and mulleted locals. As for Ponga, it can only mean two things when rumours emerge of his interest in rugby: either the Knights are struggling, or it's Tuesday again. The club might as well get his dalliance over and done with by allowing him to finally embark on the rugby league 'gap year' he's craved: A stint in French rugby, six games in Japan and then an unsurprising return with the Roosters. - Dane Eldridge is a warped cynic yearning for the glory days of rugby league, a time when the sponges were magic and the Mondays were mad. He's never strapped on a boot in his life, and as such, should be taken with a grain of salt.

Defence Minister says China could spy on Aussie ships in days ahead
Defence Minister says China could spy on Aussie ships in days ahead

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Defence Minister says China could spy on Aussie ships in days ahead

The Deputy Prime Minister says China is not spying on Australian war drills but could not rule it out from happening in the days ahead. Richard Marles, who is also the Defence Minister, said on Today that he was certain ongoing Australian war drills were not being spied on 'right now'. The Australian Defence Force (ADF) is participating in Talisman Sabre military exercises that include more than 30,000 military personnel from Australia, the US and 19 partner nations. The exercises began on Sunday and will run until August 4 across Queensland, Western Australia, NSW, the Northern Territory and Papua New Guinea. Mr Marles was asked on Today whether he was aware if warships were spying on the war games. 'They're not, but they have in the past,' he said. 'But it might happen over the coming days and weeks. That's what's happening.' Labor MP Pat Conroy said on Sunday – when he was acting as defence minister – the ADF was prepared for China to observe the military exercises. 'People observe these exercises to collect intelligence around procedures, around the electronic spectrum and the use of communications, and we'll adjust accordingly so that we manage that leakage,' Mr Conroy said. 'I think it'll be a two-way process, but when we conduct these exercises, we're always cognisant that they're being observed by people who want to collect information about how we work with our allies, how we communicate with our allies and partners, and you manage that accordingly in a sensitive way. 'That's what the Australian people would expect our Australian Defence Force to do, and we'll continue to do that. 'But again, I'll say the Chinese military have observed these exercises since 2017 and it'd be very unusual if they didn't do that this time.' Chinese spy ships were spotted at the last Talisman Sabre exercises in 2023. Mr Marles said the Australian Navy was in the vicinity of China, and the 'fundamental point' was the countries should engage in accordance with the 'rules-based order'. 'The reason we have used that as our baseline is because we are much more often in the vicinity of China than China is in the vicinity of Australia,' he said. 'And the reason for that is because that's where our trade routes are. 'That's where our sea lines of communication are.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store