Money not a good enough reason to box

Davit Chaloyan ducks under a punch from Delicious OrieImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Orie bowed out of the Paris Olympics in the round of 16 against Armenia’s Davit Chaloyan

Orie forged on with plans for a professional career. Having dreamed of being a millionaire as a 19-year-old kid, turning pro changed his life financially.

“I thought money [would] make me happy. I genuinely thought money is the answer to my emptiness,” he says.

“I worked eight years to get that money and I got that money. I got a lot of it and I was predicted to earn a lot more of it in the future, only to realise that I felt emptier.”

Orie was at a crossroads. His pro debut win over Milos Veletic was designed to be an easy opening night for him. Instead, he laboured through it and failed to get the knockout most expected.

He would spar, get hit and wonder why he was doing this.

“I had to make a choice. I either stepped away when it was more or less too late – when in my third or fourth year I get knocked out by some up-and-coming guy who purely just wants it more than me,” he says.

“Or I have the power in my hands to step away and walk away from the things that I could have got.”

As well as the safety aspect of continuing without his full focus, Orie feared how his own mental health would decline.

“You start to find other things that could be destructive instead of constructive. I’ve seen it countless times in boxing, the likes of Tyson Fury and the rest,” he says.

“I’ll be honest, I genuinely feel like that was the road I was going down.

“So I had to make a decision. I feel like I would have been really stupid to know that and still keep going for the money.”

Delicious Orie bites into his Commonwealth gold medalImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Orie wants to be a role model to young men who are considering what to do with their lives

Orie is now a financial advisor. He has spoken openly about his decision to walk away from boxing in a bid to help other young people, particularly men, pursue fulfilment as opposed to money.

He says he came to the decision to retire from boxing without consulting those close to him.

They were as shocked as the wider world and Orie now thinks that was a mistake and he should have been more open with how he was feeling.

“Being strong mentally doesn’t necessarily mean completely cutting off your emotions,” he says.

“The negative side of mental health comes when it’s been ignored and just put to the side. Then before you know it, it’s too late. I feel like education is key.”

For Orie, it came down to fulfilment. He wants to be a role model, as Anthony Joshua at the London 2012 Olympics once was to him.

“Pushing on any more would just be me seeking validation from others externally and it wouldn’t give me the fulfilment that my soul yearned and needed,” he adds.

“I’m not special, I’m just the person who likes a target and a goal and wants to achieve that and gets a real sense of fulfilment.

“It took me to step away from millions of pounds to realise that that’s it. The whole point of life is to chase.”

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