{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/4e397f24-c7f2-47d0-85dc-6496e19775b6/69ea224a738b0d0aa5ffee7e?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Dan Donnelly - Dublin Boxing Legend","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/61b9fece1a8cbe11363cf073/1776955548380-92fb2e17-527f-4476-b620-ba47d4a9180b.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>Dublin actor, comedian and former international boxer&nbsp;<strong>Terry O’Neill</strong>&nbsp;joins us to talk about the upcoming show at the National Stadium,&nbsp;<strong>‘In The Ring With Dan Donnelly &amp; Dublin’s Boxing Legends’</strong>, taking place on&nbsp;<strong>May 9</strong>. Terry, who will perform a portion of his hit one-man show&nbsp;<em>Rope-A-Dope</em>&nbsp;on the night, will be joined by heavyweights of Irish culture including&nbsp;<strong>Brian Kerr</strong>,&nbsp;<strong>Damien Dempsey</strong>&nbsp;and Elite champion&nbsp;<strong>Kellie McLoughlin</strong>.</p><p>Though he had just three organized bouts,&nbsp;<strong>Dan Donnelly’s</strong>&nbsp;name remains legendary more than 200 years after his death. Terry explains how Donnelly’s 19th-century clashes with Englishmen Tom Hall and George Cooper on the Curragh were the \"Louis-Schmeling\" of their day - symbols of the oppressed rising against the oppressor. We dive into the life of this hard-drinking man of the people and the macabre saga of his stolen arm, which became a literal ‘Irish Shroud of Turin’.</p><p>We also trace the lineage of Dublin boxing royalty, from&nbsp;<strong>Frankie Kerr</strong>&nbsp;to&nbsp;<strong>Kenneth Egan</strong>, and&nbsp;<strong>Steve Collins</strong>&nbsp;to&nbsp;<strong>Kellie Harrington</strong>. Plus, we run the rule over today’s stars: from&nbsp;<strong>Pierce O’Leary</strong>, fresh off his clinical IBO world title win at the 3Arena, to the resurgent&nbsp;<strong>Jono Carroll</strong>, and the relentless&nbsp;<strong>Paul Ryan and Emmet Brennan</strong>.</p><p>With Donnelly still remembered two centuries on, we ask: which of today’s fighters will be talked about in 2226? If&nbsp;<strong>Katie Taylor</strong>&nbsp;finally gets her Croke Park swansong - a hot topic on today’s pod - she might just be the one</p>","author_name":"News Ireland"}