Boxer Richie Hadlow, whose fledgling professional career remains in the balance after a routine pre-fight MRI scan revealed a brain aneurysm, is used to fighting back from adversity.
Eleven years ago, the then 20-year-old broke his neck in a gymnastics competition but refused to let the accident hold him back.
Eager to see how he would fare inside the ropes, Hadlow, who took up boxing only seven years ago, became a national amateur champion in his new sport and represented New Zealand at this year's Gold Coast Commonwealth Games.
He was to make his professional debut on the Joseph Parker v Alexander Flores undercard in Christchurch next Saturday but the MRI scan, newly mandatory for all fighters on Duco Events cards, ended that.
Hadlow, 31, who fights in the lightweight division, is yet to see a specialist and is refusing to call time on boxing just yet. His recovery from the trauma of fracturing two vertebrae in his previous sport suggests he has the spirit to overcome his latest issue.