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Boxer Lance Ferguson-Prayogg dies after 'white collar' bout Boxer Lance Ferguson-Prayogg dies after 'white collar' bout
(35 minutes later)
A man has died following a "white collar" boxing match at a nightclub in Nottingham. Tributes have been paid to a man who died following a "white collar" boxing match at a nightclub in Nottingham.
Lance Ferguson-Prayogg, from Liverpool, died in hospital after paramedics were called to the Forum club on Saturday afternoon.Lance Ferguson-Prayogg, from Liverpool, died in hospital after paramedics were called to the Forum club on Saturday afternoon.
The gym, in Wallasey, Wirral, in which Mr Ferguson-Prayogg trained, tweeted: "R.I.P. to one of our finest boxers... we are all totally devastated."The gym, in Wallasey, Wirral, in which Mr Ferguson-Prayogg trained, tweeted: "R.I.P. to one of our finest boxers... we are all totally devastated."
Staff at the Forum said they were saddened by the news.Staff at the Forum said they were saddened by the news.
Kirsty Radcliffe, a photographer who had met Mr Ferguson-Prayogg during events, said: "He was a very well liked man, a very talented boxer, a gent."
'More safety''More safety'
Lance Ferguson-Prayogg trained at 12 Quays Gym in Wallasey and the event was organised by a company called Dukeries Fight Card Promoter.Lance Ferguson-Prayogg trained at 12 Quays Gym in Wallasey and the event was organised by a company called Dukeries Fight Card Promoter.
Marcellus Baz, from the Nottingham School of Boxing, described the bout the man took part in as "white collar boxing".Marcellus Baz, from the Nottingham School of Boxing, described the bout the man took part in as "white collar boxing".
He said: "It's not a governed sport... it's got to be governed, it's got to have more safety.He said: "It's not a governed sport... it's got to be governed, it's got to have more safety.
"England boxing is governed, it's monitored, the safety is right up there where young people are checked before [and after] they go into the ring.""England boxing is governed, it's monitored, the safety is right up there where young people are checked before [and after] they go into the ring."
A statement issued on behalf of staff at the Forum said they were saddened by the news and their condolences are with Mr Ferguson-Prayogg's family. Matt Slater, from BBC Sport Online, said white collar boxing covered a broad spectrum of unlicensed, but legal, boxing.
He said: "[White collar boxing] used to be quite a specific thing, but it has become a very generic catch-all phrase for something much larger.
"It's become everything between professional boxing at the very top and amateur boxing at the bottom, there's a huge space in the middle that's been around for ever and ever."
A statement issued on behalf of staff at the Forum said they were saddened by the news and their condolences were with Mr Ferguson-Prayogg's family.