Students in Focus: Knocking out cancer by fighting for a cure
Stephanie 鈥淭essie鈥 Mernick is willing to take a punch to beat cancer. To do that, the 麻豆免费版下载Boulder graduate student is learning to box to raise money and awareness.
With no boxing experience, Mernick, who is studying environmental policy in the Masters of the Environment Program, has been training with coaches to compete in a charity boxing event scheduled for June 14 in Denver.

I鈥檓 getting up most days at 5 a.m. to go to practice,鈥 Mernick said, 鈥渂ut that鈥檚 nothing compared to the fight that people with cancer go through. It motivates me to take a punch for a good cause.鈥
This fight is personal for Mernick, who has family and friends who have been affected by cancer.
Mernick grew up playing soccer, basketball and softball, but preparing to face an opponent in a boxing ring takes fitness to a new level. To get in fighting shape, she works out at the Corner Boxing Club in Boulder to prepare for the event organized by the nonprofit Haymakers for Hope.
Learning to box as a way to fight for a cause is similar to getting in shape to run a marathon for charity. Participants train as a way to fundraise for cancer research, prevention and treatment. The athletes get to direct the money they raise to the cancer-related cause they want it to go to. Mernick wants her donation to go toward cancer prevention.
鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter which opponent wins in the end,鈥 Mernick said, 鈥渂ecause on June 14, we all will have inched closer to knocking out cancer. The effort you put in is what you鈥檒l get out of it. If you鈥檙e well prepared, that鈥檚 the best you can do.鈥
Mernick finds training for a boxing bout and being in graduate school to be character-building and inspirational. Through boxing, she鈥檚 raising awareness to help beat cancer and encouraging others to do the same. Through her graduate school studies, she鈥檚 learning to help save the planet and motivating people to care about the environment.

When asked if she鈥檚 scared about getting hit, Mernick replied without hesitation, 鈥淵es! I鈥檓 not looking forward to getting hit in the face.
鈥淚 go through waves of different emotions,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hat helps is that we鈥檙e being trained by great coaches who know what we鈥檙e going through. They won鈥檛 let us step into the ring if they don鈥檛 think we鈥檙e prepared. That eases my mind.鈥
Event participants box for three two-minute rounds, which can feel like the longest two minutes ever, said Brian Schroy, regional fight manager for Haymakers.
鈥淓very single person is a first-time boxer,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e giving them their first real amateur boxing bout that鈥檚 a wholly sanctioned event through USA Boxing.鈥

Three years later, Schroy opened an action sports and lifestyle public relations and marketing company, B Dot Media Group, in Boulder. An opportunity to work for Haymakers led him to close his agency to focus full time on the nonprofit.
Schroy and Mernick met when she joined the program. He has been regularly checking on Mernick鈥檚 progress, offering coaching and encouragement from his own boxing experience.
The culmination of Mernick鈥檚 intense training is boxing with an opponent who also is a first-time amateur boxer. Thirty people are training for 15 bouts for the live charity boxing event in Denver.
鈥淲hoever lands the most punches and performs the best on fight night is how they get scored,鈥 Schroy said. 鈥淭he fun thing about boxing is that your friends want to see you win, and your enemies want to see you get punched, but it鈥檚 all for a very good cause.鈥
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