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Jake Paul admits proposing to Jutta Leerdam was more nerve-wracking than any fight and he needed help of strong whiskey
Jake Paul admits proposing to Jutta Leerdam was more nerve-wracking than any fight and he needed help of strong whiskey

Scottish Sun

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Scottish Sun

Jake Paul admits proposing to Jutta Leerdam was more nerve-wracking than any fight and he needed help of strong whiskey

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) JAKE PAUL revealed proposing to his partner Jutta Leerdam was more nerve-wracking than any fight - and he needed strong whiskey in his corner. The sports power couple went official in April 2024 and have gone from strength to strength since. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 8 Jake Paul says proposing to his partner Jutta Leerdam was more nerve-wracking than any fight Credit: Instagram / @jakepaul 8 He popped the question in St. Lucia Credit: Instagram / @jakepaul 8 The two have been dating since April 2024 Credit: Instagram / @jakepaul 8 He admits no fight was as daunting as popping the question Credit: Esther Lin Paul popped the question in March during a romantic getaway in St. Lucia - getting down on one knee behind a beautiful lake background. And the YouTuber-turned-boxer - who has 11 wins in his 12 professional fights - admits no opponent has struck the same fear into him. After requiring some Dutch courage, he said: "By far I was way more nervous to propose than than for any fight. "So yeah, to all the men who are getting ready to propose, some whiskey before it's very helpful." READ MORE IN BOXING IT'S ALL GLOVE Jake Paul leaks AJ's DMs goading him about being KO'd as trash talk hots up Cruiserweight Paul began dating champion speedskater Jutta just months after his first and so far only loss - a split-decision defeat to Tommy Fury. And he revealed how the Dutch Winter Olympian helped him overcome the setback in the ring. The boxer became an uncle in September when brother Logan and Danish supermodel fiancee Nina Agdal welcomed baby daughter Esme into the world. Paul plans for kids of his own but has warned he will wait for Jutta to compete at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy. 8 CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS The newly-engaged enjoy a long-distance relationship due to their training schedules - pitting them over 4,000 miles away from each other. Jutta, 26, is coached in her homeland of the Netherlands while Ohio-born Paul, 26, has relocated to Puerto Rico where he has a custom £3million gym. Jake Paul leaks 's***-talking' private messages with Anthony Joshua goading him about being KO'd as trash talk ramps up He has his team out with him in the Caribbean island - where he also lives in a £13m mansion - including the famously tough conditioning coach Larry Wade. Paul revealed: "His track workouts are absolutely brutal, long runs, sprinting. Not a lot of breaks. It's hot in Puerto Rico and muggy. "So you really find out who you are, like I said, in those moments and I just have that voice while I'm running that's wanting to quit but you just have to push through that. "And I think that's the art of fighting and in the ring you have those moments where your body is telling you to give up but you just have to push to the next round and keep going." Paul returns on June 28 in California against former middleweight world champion Julio Cesar Chavez Jr, 39, live on DAZN PPV. And he will do so back at cruiserweight having gone to heavyweight in November for his controversial clash with Mike Tyson - who made a comeback aged 58. Paul had hoped to capitalise on the 100 MILLION viewers he had tune in on Netflix by holding shocks talks to fight either Canelo Alvarez, 34, or Gervonta Davis, 30. But when both collapsed, he turned to Chavez, the son of Mexican icon Julio Cesar Sr who was also beaten on points by Canelo in 2017. Paul said: "I wanted the hardest and the biggest fights, which was first Canelo then Gervonta fell through. "And then at any given point in time we're negotiating or talking with five to six fighters to see who's down and ready to fight and making a date happen. "And after Canelo and Gervonta, we were talking to multiple people and Chavez was the one to step up, that made sense for me to stay active and get a fight in June. "So really it's just the long line and I just need more time but I'm gonna get to all of these names when the stars aligned." 8 The couple enjoy a long-distance relationship Credit: Instagram / @juttaleerdam 8 Jake holds Logan's baby daughter Esme Credit: INSTAGRAM

Jake Paul admits proposing to Jutta Leerdam was more nerve-wracking than any fight and he needed help of strong whiskey
Jake Paul admits proposing to Jutta Leerdam was more nerve-wracking than any fight and he needed help of strong whiskey

The Irish Sun

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Irish Sun

Jake Paul admits proposing to Jutta Leerdam was more nerve-wracking than any fight and he needed help of strong whiskey

JAKE PAUL revealed proposing to his partner Jutta Leerdam was more nerve-wracking than any fight - and he needed strong whiskey in his corner. The sports power couple went official in April 2024 and have Advertisement 8 Jake Paul says proposing to his partner Jutta Leerdam was more nerve-wracking than any fight Credit: Instagram / @jakepaul 8 He popped the question in St. Lucia Credit: Instagram / @jakepaul 8 The two have been dating since April 2024 Credit: Instagram / @jakepaul 8 He admits no fight was as daunting as popping the question Credit: Esther Lin And the YouTuber-turned-boxer - who has 11 wins in his 12 professional fights - admits no opponent has struck the same fear into him. After requiring some Dutch courage, he said: "By far I was way more nervous to propose than than for any fight. "So yeah, to all the men who are getting ready to propose, some whiskey before it's very helpful." Advertisement READ MORE IN BOXING Cruiserweight Paul began dating champion speedskater Jutta just months after his first and so far only loss - a split-decision defeat to Tommy Fury. And he revealed how the Dutch Winter Olympian The boxer became an uncle in September when brother Logan and Danish supermodel fiancee Nina Agdal Advertisement Most read in Boxing 8 CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS The newly-engaged enjoy a long-distance relationship due to their training schedules - pitting them over 4,000 miles away from each other. Jutta, 26, is coached in her homeland of the Netherlands while Ohio-born Paul, 26, has relocated to Puerto Rico Advertisement Jake Paul leaks 's***-talking' private messages with Anthony Joshua goading him about being KO'd as trash talk ramps up He has his team out with him in the Caribbean island - Paul revealed: "His track workouts are absolutely brutal, long runs, sprinting. Not a lot of breaks. It's hot in Puerto Rico and muggy. "So you really find out who you are, like I said, in those moments and I just have that voice while I'm running that's wanting to quit but you just have to push through that. "And I think that's the art of fighting and in the ring you have those moments where your body is telling you to give up but you just have to push to the next round and keep going." Advertisement Paul returns on June 28 in California against And he will do so back at cruiserweight having gone to heavyweight in November for his controversial clash with Mike Tyson - who made a comeback aged 58. Paul had hoped to capitalise on the 100 MILLION viewers he had tune in on Netflix by holding shocks talks to fight either Canelo Alvarez, 34, or Gervonta Davis, 30. But when both collapsed, he turned to Chavez, the son of Mexican icon Julio Cesar Sr who was also beaten on points by Canelo in 2017. Advertisement Paul said: "I wanted the hardest and the biggest fights, which was first Canelo then Gervonta fell through. "And then at any given point in time we're negotiating or talking with five to six fighters to see who's down and ready to fight and making a date happen. "And after Canelo and Gervonta, we were talking to multiple people and Chavez was the one to step up, that made sense for me to stay active and get a fight in June. "So really it's just the long line and I just need more time but I'm gonna get to all of these names when the stars aligned." Advertisement 8 The couple enjoy a long-distance relationship Credit: Instagram / @juttaleerdam 8 Jake holds Logan's baby daughter Esme Credit: INSTAGRAM 8 Jake Paul returns against Julio Cesar Chavez Jr on June 28 Credit: Reuters

Intrepid Cormac Comerford channeling Shackleton spirit on road towards 2026 Winter Olympics
Intrepid Cormac Comerford channeling Shackleton spirit on road towards 2026 Winter Olympics

RTÉ News​

time08-06-2025

  • Sport
  • RTÉ News​

Intrepid Cormac Comerford channeling Shackleton spirit on road towards 2026 Winter Olympics

While the distance from his Italian training base to the site of next year's Winter Olympics may not be the farthest to traverse, the road towards Milano-Cortina 2026 has been a long and unlikely one for alpine skier Cormac Comerford. If neither Fiji nor Fermanagh are hurling strongholds then it would be fair to say that Glenageary in south Dublin wouldn't be a likely cradle for a Winter Olympian. But when next February rolls around, Comerford will feel that all the sacrifices and hardships have been worth it when he dons the green Team Ireland race suit on the alpine slopes of Bormio. Becoming an Olympian would be the apogee of a dream that was sparked at the age of eight when he followed his parents and family friends to Kilternan for an Oktoberfest open day at Ireland's largest artificial ski slope. "I just got obsessed. I loved any kind of outdoor sport. I was into GAA, I played with Cuala. In the summers we'd go surfing and sailing and then when I found skiing I just fell madly in love," Comerford recalls. "We did a few ski holidays and then it just all snowballed from there. I started racing up at the ski club in Kilternan and eventually went further and further abroad to race internationally." While he was only tackling the baby slopes in that initial introduction, an immediate and ineradicable imprint was left on his psyche. "There's nothing like it. It's probably as close as you can get to flying without actually flying," he says of the sensation of zooming and twisting downhill at speeds of up to 140 kilometres per hour. Helpfully, 2010 Winter Olympian Shane O'Connor was also a source of inspiration, proving to him that an Irish alpine skier could compete at the highest level. "His impact on me was huge. Seeing somebody from the local area, from Dublin, from Ireland, with no snow, no nothing, be able to go from a small 200m plastic slope to competing in the biggest races at World Championships and the Olympics, that really said a lot to me and it inspired me to really push myself and to reach that level and then also exceed that," Comerford tells RTÉ Sport. And push himself he has most certainly had to over the last two decades. In the past, he has been candid about how far he had to penny-pinch finite resources on the road, like sleeping on bus station floors, all in a bid to keep the trajectory of becoming an Olympian on the right track. Many would have long given up by now. But not Comerford whose spirit was never dampened, citing Kildare-born Antarctic explorer Ernest Shackleton. "I've always had this sense of adventure and desire to go somewhere that hasn't been before," he reasons. "I love the story of Shackleton going down to Antarctica, going into the complete unknown and looking back on it now, they were clueless really and their preparations were terrible but he had this crazy goal to do something that was never done before and those are the stories that kind of inspired me when I was younger and the idea of an Olympics." The burden has been lifted somewhat ahead of the Olympics, where Ireland will have a male and a female quota place each in alpine skiing. An Olympic Federation of Ireland scholarship grant has been "a huge help, especially for the preparations for the Olympics", according to Comerford. "That Olympic scholarship really helps boost opportunities like pre-Olympics. And that's a big thing I'll be pushing now this summer, is trying to garner more support to have a really full programme leading up to Games." The other help has been through his day job as a mechanical engineer. "With the support of Sport Ireland, we reached out to their network and when I graduated, I got in touch with some companies and I've been lucky enough to land a job with Atlantic Projects Company," he says. "They're a mechanical engineering company based in Limerick. They've been really supportive. I've been able to progress in my mechanical engineering career while I have time away from snow." Comerford is qualified for four disciplines at the Games: slalom, giant slalom, super-G and downhill. By his own admission, slalom would be his forte, main focus and the one he has an ambitious target for. "That's what I've naturally kind of excelled at and that's the one where I'm ranked in the top, I think it's 5-6% in the world at the moment," he says. "My big goal for the Olympics is I'd love to make a top 30. I'm preparing for a full Olympics and ideally a top 30, that would be a great achievement for me." Helpfully, Comerford is based in Italy for portions of the year which means the trials and tribulations that the Olympic venue in Bormio will provide is not alien to him. "I've been based in the winters in Italy for about seven, eight years but I usually base myself in the Dolomites area which is really great for me," he says. "I've skied on all the slopes where the Olympics will be so that's an added advantage. I kind of know the area, I know the country, I know the culture so that'll be a big advantage going into these Games. "Bormio, where men's alpine is going to be based, that's a serious downhill and super-G slope. It's probably considered the most dangerous downhill slope on the World Cup circuit. I think last year there were some serious injuries. So it will be demanding. "I've raced there when I was younger in some international races on the lower section for slalom and giant slalom. So I have a bit of experience on the slope. But as far as the super-G and downhill, I haven't raced there. But we'll have some training just coming up to the races and that will be the true test."

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