Legendary boxing gym goes the distance

NEW YORK, (Reuters Life!) – The folks at Gleason’s  Gym like to say that boxing is the art of not getting hit.

With its down-at-the-heels decor, Gleason’s looks like it’s  taken a punch or two. But focus and fancy footwork have kept  this oldest active boxing gym in the United States firmly in  the ring since 1937.

“I’m a specialist. We’re a boxing gym. That’s what we do,”  said Bruce Silverglade, owner of Gleason’s, located in  Brooklyn, New York. “Woman or businessman we’ll train you in  the sport of boxing, prepare you physically and mentally for a  12-round fight.”

Although the gym has retained its rough and tumble feel one  of the biggest changes in the past few decades has been the  arrival of white collar clientele.

Businessmen discovered Gleason’s in the late 1970s, so in  1988 the gym set up the first white collar boxing match:  between an English professor and a veterinarian.

Women showed up in the 80s and were welcomed. Today 50  percent of Silverglade’s clients are businessmen and women.

“Women train and sweat and get a good workout. If they want  to look good, they go to Chelsea Piers,” he said, referring to  the trendy Manhattan fitness complex.

“If they just want to work out they come here.”

These days the biggest single group at Gleason’s, aside  from fighters, is lawyers and judges.

“It’s one of the last melting pots,” he said. “You don’t  know if the person to your right is a millionaire from Wall  Street or a kid from the projects.”

But no one who trains there should expect to be pampered.

“Walk up our steps and first thing you’ll notice is the  smell,” said Silverglade. “There’s no air conditioning.  That’s  the aroma of working out.”

Muhammad Ali and Twyla Tharp are among the many who have  savored that scent over the years. Middleweight Jake LaMotta is  one of 132 world champions who trained there, as did Robert  DeNiro when he played LaMotta in “Raging Bull.”

Hilary Swank used Gleason’s to shape up for her  Oscar-winning role in “Million-Dollar Baby.”

Gleason’s glories in its appearance of decrepitude.  To  Silverglade, it’s not neglect, it’s ambiance, and a juicy  source of revenue.

“The look of the place is a money maker,” Silverglade  said.

Gleason’s blood-red walls and concrete floors are regularly  rented for fashion shoots and movie locations.

“We keep the paint chipping off the walls because the  fashion people like the contrast of a pretty woman in good  clothing against a boxing gym,” he said.

Even the taped and rusty dumbbells are in demand.

“That rust and tape makes a lot of money for me,” he added.

When the neighborhood went from grungy to gentrified,  Silverglade rolled with the punches. He put on chamber music  concerts and art festivals, alongside the amateur boxing  matches.

“There have been oboes and French horns, that kind of  music. During the neighborhood art festival, artists are  invited to display their work here as long as it has something  to do with boxing.”

Jihad Abdul-Aziz has been a trainer at Gleason’s for three  years. The former Golden Gloves champion explained that while  it takes time to learn the proper punches, how to move around,  jump rope, boxing is one of the most intense workouts there  is.

“You’ll definitely get in shape,” he said. But like most  boxers, he thinks the real payoff is mental.

“Mentally it will improve your life. You’ll want it each  and every day,” he said. “It’s a hunger.”