
The funeral of boxing legend Ricky Hatton will take place today, the service celebrating his life will take place at Manchester Cathedral at midday on Friday, October 10. Hatton died aged 46 on September 14 at home.
‘Ricky was a working-class hero’
I’m here to show the respects of the whole of Manchester. Ricky was a true working-class hero. When I was elected mayor, he’d be there in the corner of an event, sometimes a low-key event.He turned up for people, you cannot say that about everyone in life, but Ricky turned up for people. That really matters in life. He’s of this place, he’s of these parts, that is why people love him. He made Manchester proud on the world stage.Service begins
Wayne Rooney and Tommy Fury walk in
Blue Moon engraved on coffin
Bruno: ‘There will never be another Ricky’
Yesterday was a bit of a blur, and now I have got over the initial shock, I am happy to join the many others with my tribute to Ricky. Ricky Hatton, what can I say? He told me he grew up as a fan of mine. I went to a couple of his fights, and we used to bump into each other on the circuit. When he retired and opened a gym in Manchester, I went up to train with him and spar a few times.He got involved with my charity and became an ambassador, and we spoke numerous times about mental health and depression, mainly when we were in dressing rooms waiting to go on stage for shows. I would call that the quality of the one-to-one time we had. The other side of Rick, he made me laugh so many times. There were so many comparisons in our lives separated by 20 years, both business and personal. He did not take himself too seriously.My life was enriched through knowing Ricky, he was great fun to be around. The crowds used to sing ‘There’s only one Ricky Hatton’, never truer words. There will never be another Ricky or anyone like him, and at this time I share the shock and upset of losing what I consider to be a great fighter, a friend, and an amazing human being.Bruno and boxers in attendance
Brass band playing
More celebs arriving
Hatton helped Fury
Tributes from readersGray, UK: The world is a worse place without you Ricky. RIP and thanks for the memories champ.Chris, Manchester: Local hero gone way to early. Rest in peace Rick.Anonymous: RIP Ricky. Followed all your early fights and was there with my brother to watch you defeat the great Kostya Z. One of the best nights of my life. You were inspirational.
Fury arrives in bold suit
‘I took a day of work to pay respect’
Regulars at the Shepherds Call – close to Hatton’s gym – raised their glasses as the cortège drove past. Other mourners – some wearing Man City shirts, flags and waving flags – lined both sides of the street across from énergie fitness – Hatton’s gym. The gym was closed today. Fans clapped and released balloons and set off blue flares.Rita Ellis, 60, said: ‘He was just a decent bloke. There weren’t any airs and graces about him, and had time for everyone. He deserves this turnout today. He was one of us!’Rob Knowles, 27, took a day off work to pay his respects. The internet installer said: ‘I didn’t know him but sometimes people have an impact on your life. I grew up watching his fights and I think it meant more because he lived just down the road and there was always a chance of seeing him in the street. Everyone wanted to be a boxer and be Ricky Hatton. It’s a sad day but a great turn out for a great champion.Lots of love for Hatton
Boxing legends begin to arrive
A City United
Programme for service
New mural for Hatton
Robin Reliant part of the procession
WATCH: Hatton’s funeral begins
‘I walked the route of Ricky Hatton’s funeral procession’
At the heart of the Hattersley Estate on Wednesday afternoon, an artist was creating a mural of Ricky Hatton, screened by two Transit vans as he spray-painted the spiky hair of the boxer who travelled from this place to the top of the world.Hatton would have approved – a wall facing the car park at the Harehill Tavern, a pub without ostentation on an estate he loved, has been selected – though there was little consolation to be found about something beautiful being fashioned from his death. His funeral is on Friday and there is still only bafflement about the loss of an individual who had seemed, for all the world, to be tackling life head on.
Hatton passes through local
‘He was a nice genuine man’
Mourners waved Manchester City flags emblazoned with “there’s only one Ricky Hatton” as his cortege drove by his local pub. Hundreds stood outside the Cheshire Cheese, in Gee, to pay their respects.
They burst into a respectful applause as Hatton’s yellow Robin Reliant stopped outside the pub.Many mourners placed flowers and tributes on the low-loader transporting the vehicle. Mourners then began to singing ‘there’s only one Ricky Hatton!’ Hatton’s body was carried in a blue coffin with “Blue Moon” etched on the side.Super fan James Bowes, 36, first met Ricky in 2002. He said: ‘I went to every fight with him. I even went to Las Vegas. I used to carry his belts out into the ring to Blue Moon.’People used to asked me if the belts were heavy. But they weren’t for me! If it wasn’t for him I would have never got to the fights. Ricky was my best friend. I just wish he was still here to see all this. And what he meant to people.’He will only be my only fighter. Even when there were other celebrities in the room, it was only Ricky.’Fighting back tears, landlord of the Cheshire Cheese Tony Cooper, 57, said: ‘He was a local lad and this was his home from home. He would come in, have a Guinness watch the football and just be himself. ‘He was a nice genuine man. He will be missed.’The night my friend Ricky Hatton confided in me
‘He reached for the stars’
There has always been an innocent and misguided temptation to limit Ricky Hatton’s status to that of the ‘people’s champion’. Such billing was well earned through blood and charm, but as we process the devastating, hollowing end of his life at 46, it is necessary to broaden the parameters of discussion.For in the rawest of sporting contexts, he was also so much more. He was a champion of the world in two weight divisions and, furthermore, responsible for one of the greatest boxing upsets of all, certainly among bouts involving a British fighter. We can talk more about Kostya Tszyu in a moment. Because we must. Because all roads go back to that night in Manchester 20 years ago this summer.But unlike so many fighters, we can also talk about the glory of defeat. About what a loss can say about a man who never settled for being very good when great was on the table. He strived, he chased, he reached for the stars and there was no shame, none at all, in merely achieving the (blue) moon.The legendary career of Ricky ‘The Hitman’ Hatton
Crowd’s beginning to form
Hatton’s memorial route
Tributes at Hatton’s Gym
Manchester’s favourite son laid to rest
Key UpdatesWayne Rooney and Tommy Fury walk in
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Bruno and boxers in attendance
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Fury arrives in bold suit
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Boxing legends begin to arrive
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Hatton’s memorial route
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Manchester’s favourite son laid to rest
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Ricky Hatton funeral latest: Boxing legend’s coffin carried into Manchester Cathedral as Wayne Rooney, Tyson Fury and Freddie Flintoff arrive for service
