Born to Fight--The True Story of Richy 'Crazy Horse' Horsley (5 page)

BOOK: Born to Fight--The True Story of Richy 'Crazy Horse' Horsley
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Family life changed once again when my mam married a man called Ken. She had been seeing Ken for about a year when he proposed. Mam asked me what I thought about it. Well, I had seen that Ken had put a bit of stability and security back into her life, and as long as she was happy, so was I. I did, however, make it clear to Ken that, even though he would be my mother’s husband, he could never be a father to me. He understood my strong loyalty to my dad, and was happy with that. They married in May 1977, on a lovely day. Plenty of friends and family turned out. Photos are another great record of the past, and in the wedding pictures you can see quite clearly that the 1970s were in full swing. I’ve got shoulder-length hair and am wearing a white ‘Fred Perry’ jumper with a pair of blue bell-bottoms.
My mate Tommy is featured, as is Jill Coser, who I had been going out with for about a year. I don’t really know what happened between us, I suppose we just drifted about, as you do. Things were also changing at the older end of the family. I went to see Granny Horsley after the wedding for what turned out to be the last time. She had gone senile and died a year later.

In many ways I was revisiting the past even back then, as the Teddy Boy movement, which had been a 1950s phenomenon, came back with a vengeance around this time. I got well into the old rock ’n’ roll records, my favourite of which was one by Danny and the Juniors called ‘At The Hop’. I even had a Teddy Boy coat, but I only wore it in the caravan, and ended up giving it to my mate Dean, who was proper over the moon with it. Much of the Teddy Boy revival was down to the American teatime soap
Happy Days
. Everyone wanted to be The Fonz. People were selling their karate gear, relics from the Bruce Lee days, to buy new leather jackets and hair gel. There was a café near the town centre that used to be frequented by all the Teds. They’d play all the old tunes on the Juke box, ‘Shakin’ All Over’, etc. The Teds wanted the owners of the place to change its name to ‘Al’s’, which was the name of the diner in
Happy Days
, but they weren’t successful. I reckon the owners knew it was just another fad that would pass, no different from the Bruce Lee phenomenon a few years before.

Being The Fonz was one thing, but in my heart there was only one King: Elvis Presley. Around this time the news broke that he had died. I was no different from the millions of other fans, and was devastated by his death. I went to my bedroom to mourn and shed a tear for him. It began to seem like all those I held dear were popping their clogs! The media frenzy was relentless: it was all over the newspapers, television and radio. Everyone was talking about it. Then again, some people think he is still with us. I suppose you could say, The King is dead, long live the King!

As everything was changing around me, I started developing new habits too. One day in the caravan, my mother noticed a square box in my pocket, and enquired, ‘Are those cigarettes in your pocket?’ I didn’t answer, but she made me get them out. She grinned and told me to light one up. You probably know what tactic she was employing. But I was a dab hand at smoking. My lungs might as well have been fitted with vacuum pumps … I was that good. As I lit up and puffed away, she immediately realised that I wasn’t a virgin smoker. In fact, I had started smoking about a year earlier. I used to light her nippers up from out of the ashtray; they were the non-tipped ones called Woodbines. I couldn’t have picked a more suitable brand for getting used to tobacco – they were fucking strong, burned the back of your throat like hell and tasted like shit! I think Mam knew she couldn’t stop me from smoking, but at least
she never allowed me to do it in front of her. Thankfully, I gave up the dreaded weed seven years ago and will never smoke again.

While I could kick the smoking habit, no scientist could ever invent a patch strong enough to stop me from my greatest addiction: fighting. It didn’t take long for my family to discover this little habit either. I can still remember the horrified look on one of my aunty’s faces when she happened to walk by one of my early victories. I was knocking the fuck out of a lad called Vic. Her face went whiter with every punch I landed. My hands were covered in blood by the time it was over.

Not long after this, rumours started circulating about a lad at school who reckoned he could do me. Soon enough I spotted him down the Burn Valley – a place quickly becoming my fighting homeland. He was with six of his followers. I walked straight up to him and yelled, ‘I heard you’ve been calling me names and want to fight me.’

I still remember it as clear as if it were yesterday. There was snow lying on the ground. He was wearing what was called a Crombie coat and a pair of Doctor Marten boots. He loved himself. Before he could answer, I put the head straight on him. BANG!!

He was shook up and dazed, and slipped when trying to stand up in the snow. I waited until he steadied himself before unleashing a right hand, putting him flat on his arse, following it up with a smack that almost took his
head off. It was all over in two shakes of a dog’s tail. News of the victory went around the school, focusing on the ease with which I dealt out the beating. Without even seeking it, I was now the ‘hardest in the year’.

Not that it was all plain sailing. I still had to learn to control my aggression – if you can’t do that as a fighter, you’re nothing. One incident that I am particularly ashamed of involved a family of sisters from Norway who were staying on our caravan site. I did have some good laughs with them, but one day one of them pushed me too far. I hit her. As soon as I lashed out I regretted it. It’s a lesson well learned. Even though the girl recognised it was her fault, I should never have hit her. She laughed about it years later when I bumped into her in a nightclub, and pointed out the crooked teeth from where I had hit her. Still, I don’t see it as a laughing matter, but it happened, and you can only put it down to experience.

The same thing happened with a mate of mine called Jimmy, who also lived on the caravan site. He was a few months older than me. Jimmy and I had some good times together. His mother had a broad Scottish accent that was hard to understand. I can remember the time he chinned a lass as if it were yesterday. She was a tall bird, about 6ft 2in, with long ginger hair. They were having an argument and then smack! Jimmy clanged her right on the button. She went down like a baby giraffe trying to find its legs. We kept in touch after we
had moved from the site down to the town. A few years later, he was riding a motorbike and hit a patch of oil on the road. He skidded and went straight into a lamp post. He died a couple of days later in hospital. I was gutted. I went to his funeral but it took ages for it to sink in. Despite the incident with the Welsh girl, I have some very fond memories of Jimmy. Rest in peace, my friend.

Gradually I was realising that there was a world of fighting outside of the Burn Valley when I started getting into boxing after watching a fighter called Dave ‘Boy’ Green on TV’s
Sports Night
. I think it was 1976. He hailed from the Fens, and was a true warrior. I loved Dave’s all-action, non-stop style. Every fight he had was exciting to watch. He was a real crowd pleaser and he made a big impression on me. I used to listen to all his fights on the radio and then watch the recording on the television, as back then you didn’t have ‘Pay to View’ TV. He was my first real boxing idol. A couple of years later, I plucked up the courage to write to him and received a reply, along with a signed photo. I was over the moon – I still have the picture in a frame.

Unfortunately I lived miles away from any of the local amateur boxing gyms, so couldn’t go as regularly as I would have liked. This wasn’t a major problem, as there were plenty of sparring partners to be had, such as Tank’s cousin, Buller. We had a little trouble over something and he threw a boot at me, hitting me in the head. That meant game on. As we squared up, I threw
an accurately painful left hook straight into his gut, taking the wind out of his sails. I hammered a right on to his chin, and it was game over – the flowers were in the post!

Other people’s fights offered another opportunity to learn my trade. A friend of mine called Corbo was once having a scrap with a lad who, I thought, had a bit too much for him. A fair-sized crowd had gathered. Corbo was doing OK and was giving as good as he got, until the lad started scraping his face off the wall. The crowd cringed – Corbo’s face was getting really messed up. Now that wasn’t right, so I lashed out at him with a pair of Dublin boots. I almost took his fucking head off. Needless to say the fight was over, but Corbo’s face was a disaster. He looked like an advert for acid peeler. I’m sure it would have been a different story if the other lad hadn’t cheated.

Looking back on all these incidents, I guess you can only say that boys will be boys. I suppose the art to success is knowing what you can and can’t get away with. I was certainly pushing my luck at school. One incident in particular sticks out. It was during a science lesson, when a few of us were larking around with the Bunsen burners. We had found that you could use then as water guns if you put the tube over the tap. Well, for some trivial reason the science teacher had come down the room to tick one of us off. As he started walking back up the classroom, one of the lads put the tube over
the tap and another turned it on full. Water started squirting out and, at the exact same time, I picked up the Bunsen burner and directed it towards the science teacher, splashing the water all over his bald head. I tried unsuccessfully to hide the makeshift water gun before he turned around, but the sight of him with rivulets of water cascading down his face had us all in hysterics – it was just too funny.

He stormed down the classroom, looking straight at me. Gulp! He grabbed a hold of me, and started shouting and wagging his finger in my face. I managed to extract myself from his iron grip by pushing him away. But he went to grab me a second time. This time I pushed him away harder and told him loud and clear to ‘FUCK OFF!’

When I swore at him all the class went
‘EEEEEEEEEEE’
in unison. I barged out of the classroom with the teacher in hot pursuit, and started wrestling with him as he tried to drag me to the headmaster’s office. As we got to the stairs I made a break for it, pushing him down them before sprinting off. I ran out of the school and into the Burn Valley. I staged it so I didn’t get home too early, but with each step to the front door my butterflies got stronger. I was certain I was going to get busted.

As it happens, though, nothing was said. Luckily we didn’t have a telephone, and the school never sent a letter. I stayed away from school for about six weeks because I thought that I would have been expelled
anyway. When I went back my form tutor informed me that the headmaster wanted to see me in his office. He asked me for my version of the Bunsen-burner fiasco, but as I started telling him he began interrupting me, giving the version that he had been told by the teacher. He fumed, ‘So then you told Mr so and so (I’ll keep his name anonymous) to “fuck off”.’ As soon as he said
fuck off,
I started laughing, as it sounded so funny coming from him. This was not a good idea as he went ape shit. Fortunately though he resisted suspending or expelling me, and offered me another chance. I can only think that the teacher had kept his mouth shut about being pushed down the stairs as then the Head would have had no option but to kick me out. I guess the old baldy was too embarrassed to talk about it! After all, it didn’t take much to get a suspension. For instance, Corbo was suspended just for shouting at a teacher during a cricket match. It was Teachers v Prefects. A teacher called Nutall went into bat, and Corbo belted out, ‘Nutall, go and fuck off and play with your nuts.’ Pretty fucking hilarious. If you have ever read the 1970s
Skinhead
series of books, well … Corbo was the absolute double of the lad on the front cover of
Skinhead Escapes
.

Even though I avoided suspension, I still got six of the best with the cane from the headmaster. I got three on each hand. But you couldn’t let out any emotion, no matter how much it hurt; you just had to be brave and
keep it all inside. This was repeated when I went back for my first science lesson, to make an example to the other kids. I became a bit of a celebrity, so to speak. Even so, given the choice between the cane and suspension, I would have taken the suspension any day. I had the misfortune of being caned in every year in senior school: first, second, third, fourth and fifth. No wonder I got to prefer giving beatings to receiving them.

I first appeared in court at the age of 13. Also featured in the dock were four of my mates: Gam, Corbo, Coto and Vaughnie. It had all started from the best intentions, as we had initially decided to earn some extra money by going potato picking. We walked a good few miles to get to the farmer’s field, but couldn’t find any ‘tatty’ pickers. The place was deserted, except for a great big haystack, which in our adolescent imaginations began to resemble a bouncy castle. We jumped on top, bouncing around for about an hour, leaving the stack a wreck. One of the lads then set the haystack on fire and all the smoke from it alerted the farmer and god knows who else and all of a sudden, both he and his farm hands turned up from nowhere. We made a run for it but got caught. Well, we got taken to the local police station
and were subjected to a round of interviews. We got bailed – no pun intended – and had to go back the following week to see if we were going to be charged. As it turned out, the farmer was a local magistrate and wouldn’t settle out of court. Just our fucking luck! We were charged with criminal damage. We started laughing like madmen when they called out our middle names in court, provoking the judge to give us a proper roasting – verbal, that is, not the sort of roasting that footballers give to their groupies! We had to pay damages of £6 each and were given a conditional discharge for a year.

Some people say the best place for little scallywags is the boxing gym. Well, there were no gyms near us, but we improvised and started our own in an old school building. The rat-a-tat of bags, skipping ropes spinning around at blinding speeds, the smell of blood, sweat and liniment oil … I don’t know how the others used to feel, but I just loved it. We all used to get stuck in. The lads had a different impression of me after we’d traded punches because there was always blood spilt – there are no hiding places in the ring, after all. And we were intently trying to knock each other out! We were never taught how to do this and do that, we just used to fight and pick things up naturally. I had instinctive ability, and think I would have gone a long way in the legitimate boxing game if someone had grabbed me then and taught me some ring craft. You certainly couldn’t
fault our dedication, as we were there three nights a week for about six months.

I was a glutton for punishment, and started going to a proper boxing gym. I ended up going alone as none of the other lads were up for it. There were some good boxers there who I used to spar with. Admittedly I took some pastings, but it’s all part of the learning process – as they say, no pain, no gain. I tried to learn a lot from guys like the Foreman twins, who were both southpaws and smooth operators. Ken had the best jab I’ve ever seen – he could snap it into your face quicker than an elastic band. It banged off my nose quite a few times. Other fighters relied more on power, like Big Ronnie, who was as tough as they come. Every time I got out of the ring after a session with him, I’d be banged up with a busted nose or a black eye, but I loved it. He was a good middleweight, and ended up fighting the likes of Herol ‘Bomber’ Graham in the amateur game. The main thing I learned was how to soak up the punches. An excellent junior there called Mickey M once caught me with a peach of a left hook, right on the bell at the end of the first. Everything drained out of my legs. I had to go another couple of rounds, but I got to the end. Some so-called tough guys think they can just turn up and start pasting all the boxers, but as soon as they get a beating in the ring, they change their minds. You don’t see them turn up again.

The bottom line is that boxing is a skilful sport,
fought by tough people. When lads used to be bust up, the main trainer, Duncan, used to repeat his favourite saying with a smirk on his face: ‘That’s what it’s all about.’ He would even turn a blind eye to the odd bit of cheating, so long as it reflected a desire to win. There was one big guy there who used to try to bully you in the ring, using his southpaw stance to the optimum advantage. The first time we sparred I couldn’t land anything on him. I thought, Fuck this, and waited for him to come in close before releasing a cracking right hand into his balls. That sapped the energy right out of him. In the end, I could take anything he threw at me, replying to each shot with interest.

My love affair with watching the professional game continued. In 1978, I started collecting all the weekly boxing supplements run in one of the newspapers. I especially loved Rocky Marciano and the Brown Bomber, Joe Louis, who is thought by many in the know to be the best heavyweight of all time. For Christmas I got the
Encyclopaedia of Boxing
, which had all the world champs in at every weight, with great in-depth action and brilliant photos. I was also given an 8mm film projector and screen, with which I could watch some of the classic fights on film. They were silent and in black and white, but when the lights went out and the film was rolling, it was magical: Marciano v Walcott, Marciano v Louis, Ali v Frazier and plenty more. Unbeatable. All the lads from school
would come round to watch them too. I still have them to this day.

I passed my medical to box and was lined up to fight in the December of 1978. But some things just aren’t meant to be, and the fight had to be pulled when I started to suffer with pains in my legs and heels. I was diagnosed as having ‘Osgood-Schlatters’ disease, which basically meant that I was growing too quickly, causing inflammation of the bone where the thigh muscles attach to the lower leg. I was not allowed to do any physical exercise for a good while. I had to wear bandages around my knees for six months, as well as having my boot heel built up by a quarter of an inch. As soon as there was a bit of wear on them, I had to get them redone. It was a good job flared trousers were in at the time, as otherwise my bandages would have shown through. If drainpipes were in, I’d have been well fucked!

The 1970s were still in full swing, and I loved all the partying. In the summer of 1978, Mam, Ken, Corbo and I went on holiday to Butlins for a week. Corbo and I were at the disco every day. There was a punk rocker there with a Mohican hairstyle. One night, after the disco, he got on the diving board in the outdoor swimming pool and dived in with all his clothes on. Everyone used to think he was mad. Happy days. I can still recall all the lasses crying at the last disco of our stay, as they were saying their goodbyes to their brief
holiday loves. We would laugh at them and say, ‘Look at them, daft bastards.’ We certainly weren’t a sentimental bunch.

I continued my partying back home at the disco night, which was held every Thursday at the local youth club. You’d see lads on the dance floor showing off or trying to act dead cool, all in order to pull the birds. At the beginning The Fonz was still all the rage, and people would turn up dressed up like him, or with T-shirts with ‘The Fonz’ written on them. Then disco started taking over, with the release of the films
Saturday Night Fever
and
Grease
. I have to admit that I went to see
Grease
at the local ABC Cinema with a few of my mates – you’d be surprised at how many so-called ‘hard’ lads were in the queue. There were two brothers called the Barnstable twins who used to go to dancing classes, and would have the dance floor cleared for them just so they could strut their stuff with two girls to the song ‘Greased Lightning’. The twins were done up like John Travolta’s character and the two bewers – that is, women – were dolled up like Olivia Newton John. They used to think they were film stars, but I just thought they were a pair of fucking prats.

And how could I afford all this partying? Well, I had started going to football practice with a lad from my class, who lived above a pub. On the days that we weren’t at practice, he would take shots at me. With his fists. I used to let him sock me in the jaw for 10p a
punch. He used to absolutely love it, he really did. I used to get £1 a day from him and he thought it was worth every penny. After all, in 1978, £1 a day was good money.

Violence didn’t scare me half as much as ghosts. Sometime during the summer, I started camping out in our Roy’s front garden, or slept on the couch in the living room. Roy was my mam’s brother and was married to Jean. They had two kids together plus they also looked after Roy’s five kids from his first marriage. Quite a brood! One night I was sleeping downstairs, when I suddenly woke up with a start. I could feel something behind me, but was frozen with fear and couldn’t turn around. I tried to ignore it, but just couldn’t. It was like a vibrating current of electricity. The hair on my body was stood on end. There was something in the room.

I plucked up the courage to turn around and have a look. Nothing could prepare me for what I saw. Sat down in the chair opposite was an old woman. She raised her head to look at me. I shouted with fear and leaped of the couch like a scolded cat.

I ran through the kitchen, into the passage, up the stairs, and started banging doors. I barged into Roy and Jean’s bedroom, white as a fucking sheet. Roy and Jean woke up and wondered what was going on. I told them I had just seen a ghost in the front room and that there was no way I was going back down there. The look on my face should have said it all. Roy went down to check
and found nothing. He said it was my imagination. But I know what I saw and, believe me, it was a ghost. A real spirit! I never slept down there ever again.

BOOK: Born to Fight--The True Story of Richy 'Crazy Horse' Horsley
2.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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