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THE PAYCHECK JESSICA McCaskill received for fighting Katie Taylor in London last December was satisfactory if scarcely life-changing. To be clear, it was sizeable to the point that it would have changed many lives — it just paled in comparison to McCaskill’s annual salary with Chicago-based investment banking company R.J. O’Brien & Associates, and so it didn’t necessarily transfigure hers. It meant a lot, though.
It meant a lot that the Windy City power-puncher was fairly compensated for her efforts – an arduous training camp followed by 10 untamed rounds in which she pushed the world champion close – where in years past women would have been paid pittance for similar. Download qr reader app. It meant a lot that she saw fitting financial reward for her part in the first women’s fight ever to headline on Sky Sports – a seminal show of faith not only in Taylor, but in McCaskill and her ability to captivate an audience, which she did. It meant a lot that she was able to show her peers in female boxing that, slowly but surely, change was coming; that they too might one day be sufficiently recompensed for putting their bodies on the line in the name of sport and entertainment, in pursuit of something glorious. Jessica McCaskill in action against Katie Taylor at York Hall Source: James Crombie/INPHO But for ‘CasKILLA’ herself, not much changed. Sure, there was a moment in the airport in London en route home when, during a customs pre-clearance, one officer muttered to the other, ‘she just fought Katie Taylor’, and McCaskill was waved through immediately. There were plenty of fans gained, too, be they back in Chicago or in Ireland or in London or elsewhere; in that same airport, she found herself shaking hands with strangers even as she was putting back on her shoes on the other side of baggage screening. But the months which followed her career-biggest night in the English capital brought with them a cold dose of reality.
Several follow-up fights fell through: one – in the Bahamas, no less – was lost to a storm; others to opponents’ weight issues and other logistical snags. Offers to face high-calibre opponents such as Barry McGuigan’s Northampton lightweight Chantelle Cameron and Top Rank’s 2016 U.S. Olympian Mikaela Mayer – two propitious talents paving their own paths towards Taylor – were deemed inopportune; neither woman holds a major title and McCaskill’s manager, Rick Ramos, was hellbent against his fighter being used as a shortcut to the top by either heavily-backed ‘upside’ combatant. A concoction of these factors saw McCaskill’s career stall at a juncture in which it seemed bound to take off, and though she’s been constantly training since her fight with Taylor, she hasn’t yet stepped through the ropes since her points defeat at York Hall. Quite recently, she and trainer-manager Rick Ramos found themselves perusing an offer to fight former Taylor opponent Jasmine Clarkson on the burgeoning women’s bareknuckle circuit as a means of dusting off the cobwebs.
They decided to hang tight: Eddie Hearn, Taylor’s promoter with whom they had so effectively brewed an excellent fight promotion last year, had singled out their native Chicago as the launchpad for his billion-dollar U.S. Streaming deal with DAZN. Sure enough, an Instagram message arrived from Hearn which proved their patience vindicated: after 9 months’ of frustration and false starts, McCaskill will return to the ring on Matchroom’s show at the 10,000-capacity Wintrust Arena in her hometown on 6 October.
Jessica McCaskill speaking at Matchroom's press conference in Chicago this week “It’s funny”, says McCaskill, “like, at the press conference the other day, Matchroom shared my quote, my picture, my Twitter, and next thing you know I have a crapload of new followers; I have a lot of messages and people asking for interviews. “When you have a fight coming up, the interest spikes.
My phone has just been going bananas the last couple of days – just Twitter, Facebook, Instagram. “People at work haven’t really caught wind of it; I’ve said to a couple of people – I told the CEO who’s very involved in my career and keeps abreast of what’s going on, making sure I’m okay, which is very much appreciated. And this isn’t disrespect.