Drew Jackson (left) is known as Tiny around the family pub in Nanango, but when he steps into the boxing ring as a Brophy boxer he’s Tiny Tim. A big, affable bloke, Tiny hits with the power of a bulldozer.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
Ring the bell, bang the drum…let them know Fred Brophy’s in town. At 58, Fred is far from a spent force, even if the tent boxing circuit has now contracted to a few Queensland towns. Fred began boxing for money at five and his name is synonymous with sideshow boxing.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
The Brophy troupe can tour almost anywhere (except NSW) without breaching health and safety requirements, but Fred chooses not to, believing that Queensland is the natural fit for the boxing tent.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
The Serjeant Major (Ian Haycock) of Fred Brophy’s boxing tent in Nanango, Queensland.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
Many of the kids who turn up to fight are street toughs trying to break out of a rut. Boxer Jock Mathews, 15, from Maryborough, is the opposite. Polite and well spoken, he spars with his trainer dad until his name is called.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
The tent set-up of Fred Brophy’s boxing match in Nanango, Queensland.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
Jimmy Shannon, aka Kid Valentine, gets some advice in the boxing tent in Queensland.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
Show day in Nanango dawns full of hope. The annoying showers of previous days seem to have retreated to another valley and by midday, still more than six hours before the first show, the beers are flowing behind the tarps.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
Drew Jackson’s father cheeers on during the boxing match in Fred Brophy’s tent.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
A close-up of the action in Fred Brophy’s famous outback boxing show.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
Workers shift hay bales to prepare for a Fred Brophy’s boxing match in Nanango, Queensland.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
Fred, 58, who bills himself as a fourth-generation showman, is quite secretive about parts of his early life, but this much we do know: he was born in 1952 in Perth, but spent his entire childhood on the road, touring the backblocks of Australia either with his parents’ sideshow act or with his uncle Selby Moore’s highly regarded tent boxing troupe. He was boxing for money at age five.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
The Smiling Assassin (aka Mehul Narsey) is hurt during a boxing match
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
ROund 3 of the the Smiling Assassin (aka Mehul Narsey) bout.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
Rebecca Burgess and Drew Jackson (aka Tiny Tim the boxer) have a quiet moment out of the boxing ring.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
The ‘Smiling Assassin’ (Mehul Narsey) and Jock Matthews show that out of the boxing ring, they can be good mates.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
The fight of The Smiling Assassin (Mehul Narsey).
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
The Sarg preparing for the boxing match.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
The Smiling Assassin warms up before the big fight.
Photo Credit: Dean Saffron/Australian Geographic
David Bainbridge shows off his tough tattoo at the Fred Brophy boxing tent.