
From as far back as the 18th and 19th Century boxing (fisticuffs/milling) was used to settle disputes between honourable men, it was the number 1 sport in the Western world - including England. It is known as the Noble Art, and regarded as the ‘Sport of Gentleman’.
In Scotland, I first noticed women coming into boxing gyms in the early 80’s; it was difficult to take them seriously back then, but times have changed. Women’s Boxing is now an Olympic Sport, and if anyone watched the boxing at London 2012 you would agree that the standard and quality of boxing displayed by the women was phenomenal, it made me a believer.
Stephanie’s dad was born in Inverness, her mum hailed from Leith in the Capital City of Edinburgh, but the family home derived from Castlemilk in Glasgow, this is where Stephanie grew up. “I used to get bullied at primary school, my big sister Laura would stick up for me. All my report cards would say I was very quiet, a bit of a loner”, Stephanie said. She was brought up in a big close-knit family comprising of 4 big sisters, 2 big brothers, and 2 little brothers. Regarding the situation, she summed it up in one word, “Mental”. The family home moved to another part of Glasgow called Toryglen, where the trend of bullying continued. Stephanie particularly remembers standing up for herself, a girl was kicking her under the desk in the classroom that ended up a fight at the bus stop, “I remember the girl getting on the same bus, I had a burst lip, and I tried not to cry”. Everything dramatically changed when the family moved to Motherwell in North Lanarkshire, “I fitted in nice here, a new start for us, kept my head down and never got bullied”.
Gymnastics, taekwondo, swimming, Stephanie tried a number of sports, “It got to the point I could not afford the uniform”, she went on to say, “I looked up my nearest boxing gym and e-mailed them for details. I received an e-mail back inviting me to go up with an adult”. Boxing lessons were going to cost £1 a night, and she didn’t have to splash out on a fancy uniform. Stephanie’s mum and dad were against her going to boxing, especially her dad. However, Stephanie’s mum let her go to boxing training with her big sister Laura behind her dads back for a few weeks. She started training 2 weeks before her 15th birthday, and her dad began to wonder where she was going every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
Stephanie got her first fight on a Newarthill ABC home show, “Everything was a blur, I was not thinking, it was full steam ahead”, Stephanie wasn’t happy with her performance, she put a lot of thought into whether she was doing the right thing – it’s understandable why she felt that way. She stopped her next opponent in the second round and was invited to a Girls Box Cup in Germany, Newarthill ABC covered the expenses for this trip. After 2 consecutive wins Stephanie returned to Scotland with the Gold Medal. Stephanie racked up another 2 wins before heading to Sweden for another Box Cup where she fought her way to the final, this time returning with a silver medal.
It was the Time Capsule in Coatbridge where Stephanie fought for her first Scottish title, “I had beaten the girl before, it was my first proper title, and I was really scared she would beat me. I had stepped up my training, and the atmosphere was amazing. I got to pick my own music for my introduction into the ring, Kanye West, ‘Stronger’, this got me going. The lyrics were telling me I’m better, faster and stronger”. Stephanie won her first Scottish Title 13-2 on points. A year later Stephanie was making the first defence of her Scottish Title against a girl she knew nothing about, the girl had been hyped up, and the fear factor began to creep in, “I really wanted to keep the title, and the pressure was on, it was a straight final”. Stephanie stuck to boxing, never got involved in a scrap, and won the Scottish Flyweight Title for the second year on the trot by a score of 11-8. In March this year, Stephanie was due to make the 3rd defence of her Scottish Flyweight Title, “I felt like a dead battery, no nerves, and no feelings at all. I had not fought for 9 months since I lost at Haringey, my sister Laura had been with me throughout my whole boxing journey, she was trying her best to motivate me”. Stephanie lost her Scottish Title that day; a boxer at any level thrives on nerves, it keeps them sharp – but Stephanie felt nothing.
Stephanie is 21 years old and has been boxing for 6 years; she started working at the Premier inn when she was 16, doing the nightshift on the reception desk. She started her shift at 10.30pm, returning home at 8.30am in the morning, after a wee bite to eat before going to sleep she would wake up and go to the boxing gym, then the cycle would begin again. Stephanie has only boxed 6 times in Scotland so the extra cash would help pay for expenses to go to tournaments out-with her native Scotland.
In the early days at Newarthill, Stephanie was the only female boxer. The boxing club was old school, and they tried putting her off using rigorous training sessions, but it only made Stephanie more determined to succeed. Stephanie was just not going to go away, the club decided she was serious and started training her properly, “After 3 years they built me a shower, toilet and changing room, there’s more girls at the club now since the Olympics”.
It was my dad who had the honour of opening Newarthill ABC back in 1980; the club has produced a wealth of boxers since, and is regarded as one of the best boxing clubs in Scotland.


Jenna Reilly looked an imposing figure standing next to Stephanie, she overshadowed her in height and build.
Jenna Reilly, England V Stephanie Kernachan, Scotland
As the bell sounded for round 1 Kernachen looked eager, but it was Reilly who was putting the punches together, a solid overhand right from Kernachan rocked back the head of Reilly, the last right hand of a four punch combination clipped Reilly again. Reilly seemed to effortlessly throw a mass of punches throughout the round that were not all necessarily hitting the target, Kernachen was picking her shots. An exchange of punches heralded the start of the round 2, Kernachen was beginning to get in the driving seat landing the cleaner punches, pushing Reilly back, stalking her opponent, bang on the money with a good right and a cracking left hook. Kernachen had Reilly against the ropes bringing in uppercuts and hooks, Kernachen finished the round using a straight left-right with pinpoint accuracy, there was little response from Reilly. Kernachan stepped up another gear in the 3rd; a straight right jerked Reilly’s head back. Kernachen was now dominating the fight, letting her punches flow like a river, notably landing a hard left hook. Reilly tried to fight back but looked jaded, and yearning for the bell. Kernachan finished the round strongly with a stiff jab, working to the head and body followed by a combination of straight punches.
There was 5 ringside judges, 4 of them awarded the contest to Stephanie Kernachan who won by a majority of 4-1.
This was a big step in the right direction for Stephanie; I asked her thoughts, “I knew I had won, you just know, I was really hungry to win, and I treated it like my last chance”. Stephanie was also thankful to former Great Britain Team representative Nina Smith for taking her to one side and giving her pointers throughout.
Stephanie mostly spars with boys at Newarthill that include professionals like Gerry Brady, Danny Brady and Scottish Middleweight Champion Garry McCallum - she laughed while saying she takes it easy on Gary. I tried in vain to get her to pick a favourite Rocky movie, “Don’t really know, I like them all”. She did express her love for the boxing film Cinderella Man, it’s about a seemingly washed up journeyman James Braddock who gets a shot at the World Title against a brutal punching Max Baer (Who killed 2 men in the ring) Braddock defeats the virtually unbeatable Baer and becomes the Heavyweight Champion of the World. Stephanie’s biggest inspiration in life is her big sister Laura, “She has been there for me every step of the way”. Her all-time favourite boxer is Scottish Amateur Champion Charlie Flynn, “I wanted to box like him, he’s a smart boxer, and he used to fight for Newarthill”.
Stevie Newns informed me that Glasgow Company Morton’s Rolls have been back down to the club with more funding for Stephanie. She is currently over in Ireland for a month because there are more female boxers to spar with; this is all part of her preparation for selection to compete at Glasgow 2014. Stephanie’s emphatic win at Haringey doesn’t score any points with Boxing Scotland, but winning 2 of the last three Scottish Titles at Flyweight must go a long way to help her plight in securing a place in the team.
Regarding the Commonwealth games in Glasgow 2014, Stephanie told me, “It would be a dream come true”, but that dream come true is also her Burning Ambition.
By Raymond Fraser Buchanan