Flow!
In October 2020, Dricus du Plessis celebrated his Ultimate Fighting Championship debut against Markus Peres with a first-round knockout punch in Abu Dhabi. The timing is interesting, given that it was the height of Covid-19 and lockdowns around the world. But I guess a little virus transmitted during a contact sport is the least of your worries when your opponent may kill you at any time with a nicely timed kick to the temple.
It was
around this time that I first started seeing references to DDP on Twitter. But I
didn’t take much notice, as Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) can hardly be described as
“my thing”. I’m a lover, not a fighter; my dad wouldn’t even allow me to play
rugby at school.
Having
said that, for some reason my late father was quite into boxing in the seventies
and early eighties. And of course, I would listen and watch with him, as kids
do.
A fight
between local South African boy Pierre Fourie and light-heavyweight world champion
Victor Galindez stands out in my memory. Fourie was the clear winner… at least in
the eye of the biased Afrikaans radio commentator (was it Gerhard Viviers?). When
the result was announced, Galindez had nicked it. We wuz robbed. Five years
later, both Fourie and Galindez died tragically in motor vehicle accidents, only
4 months apart.
There
was also the quick-hitting boxer from rural KZN with the unforgettable, almost
musical name, Tap Tap Makhatini, famed for taking part in South Africa's first
multiracial boxing tournament (and winning against a Brazilian opponent)
in 1974.
And then
of course, Gerrie “Seer Handjies” Coetzee, AKA the Boksburg Bomber. Everybody on
social media jokes that DDP may be world champion today, but he’s still only
number 8 in Vereeniging (or Roodepoort, or Brakpan). Well, Coetzee became WBA
heavyweight world champion in 1983 when he knocked out Michael Dokes, yet purportedly
he was not even the best fighter in his own family.
There were
other names. Brian Mitchell. Dingaan Thobela. Arnold Taylor. Corrie Sanders. Cassius
Baloyi. Baby Jake Matlala. Charlie Weir with the cute lock of silver hair.
Jimmy Abbott, who later became an institution at Ellis Park.
And of
course, Kallie Knoetze and Mike Schutte, probably better known for jokes in their
collective names than their fighting prowess (although I wouldn’t mess with
either of them). My favourite: the two of them sitting in a bar with
floor-to-ceiling mirrors along the one side. Mike says to Kallie: “Small world,
look over there, Mike Schutte and Kallie Knoetze are also in this bar!” Kallie
suggests that they walk over and buy the two a drink. As they get up and start
walking, he looks in the mirror once more, stops, and tells Mike: “No, I think we
can sit down again, they’re coming across to join us!”
The
legendary Toweel Brothers were world famous in Joh’burg and practically ran
boxing in South Africa in those heady days. Victor was a world champ himself
back in the day; Alan was a top trainer; Maurice was a wheelchair-bound promoter
of major fights.
And
then my interest in boxing waned, sometime in the early to mid-eighties. I cannot
name one fighter worldwide who may have made a name for himself (or herself) in
the last 4 decades or so. Until DDP entered the scene relatively recently, performing
in MMA at the highest level, something much bigger and better than simple
boxing.
When
he uttered the now famous “hulle weet nie wat ons weet nie” (“they don’t know
what we know”) after his previous professional victory last year, it quickly
went viral. What on earth was this guy talking about, people wondered.
I saw
an interview with du Plessis where he was asked about this recently. His
explanation was down-to-earth, old school and fiercely patriotic. It boiled
down to the fact that most people in South Africa don’t have the opportunities or
facilities to compete with the best in the world, but this just makes all of us
more determined and ultimately tougher to beat. It also brings us together… that’s
what we all know, and they don’t know.
Parallels
are drawn with the Springboks in the last two Rugby World Cup (RWC) tournaments.
Not the best team according to most pundits, yet Siya Kolisi and the rest of
the boys found a way to win every time that it mattered most. Typically by just
one point, the same margin as DDP’s victory against Sean Strickland – some irony
in that.
Just
like Kolisi, DDP also seems to have inspired and unified a whole nation. I cannot
get enough of all those scenes of raucous crowds at restaurants and bars around
South Africa, deliriously celebrating the South African fighter’s success at
breakfast time on a Sunday morning. Much like Canal Walk and many other venues
in SA after the RWC final last year.
This is
also why I just had to get up in the middle of the night to watch the fight. Bear
in mind that I’m in London, 2 hours behind South Africa, so it was a 3AM start
in Blighty. I was not much pleased that the organisers and broadcasters
conspired to mislead us… but the three-and-a-half-hour wait was ultimately more
than worthwhile.
Except
for the result itself, my favourite part of the broadcast was listening to DDP’s
trainer and all his “vloei” (“flow”) references. I learnt about this concept a
number of years ago, when a friend shared a book with the same Flow
title with me – describing how not only sports stars, but people in practically
all walks of life perform best when they stop thinking too much and just enjoy
what they’re doing while accessing their creative potential. As someone who
likes to write, I sometimes experience it myself, the words just flowing without
having to plan or think much… the polar opposite of writer’s block.
I’m no
expert in Oriental religion or philosophy, but I would suggest that flow is quite
a Zen concept. Which is also why the “flow” references amused me so much, with
two superhuman beasts pummelling each other to smithereens in front of our
eyes.
“Bliksem
hom!”, the trainer would shout just after each “flow”. Zen, indeed.
You
bliksemed him nicely, Dricus, well done. I think they know now.
You
now only have to beat those other 7 okes in Vereeniging and we can celebrate
you as undisputed champ.
Deon
Gouws
London
21
January 2024