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Barnsley boxer aims to raise £15,000 for hometown foodbank
Barnsley boxer aims to raise £15,000 for hometown foodbank

BBC News

time06-05-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Barnsley boxer aims to raise £15,000 for hometown foodbank

Boxer aims to raise £15,000 for hometown foodbank 9 minutes ago Share Save Chloe Aslett BBC News, Yorkshire Share Save Boxxer Callum Simpson says he is getting involved "as much as possible" as the foodbank's latest ambassador Boxer Callum Simpson is hoping to help raise £15,000 in three months to support a foodbank. The British and Commonwealth super-middleweight champion launched the "Fight Against Hunger" campaign during a visit to Barnsley Foodbank He said he wanted to get involved "as much as possible" in order to understand issues of food poverty in his hometown. "Barnsley has backed me since day one," he said. "I am in the position I am because of my town, my community, so it's only right I give something back." The foodbank, which is part of The Trussell Trust network, supplied food to about 6,800 people in the year to August 2024, more than a third of whom were children. Simpson added: "If you were to ask me a few months ago who uses a food bank I would've said people on lowest income, maybe single parent with kids, but it's not [just] them. "It's families with two parents, working good jobs, some with kids some without [because] the cost of everything has gone up. "People need a little help, people are going through a hard time." Boxxer Simpson holds the British and Commonwealth super-middleweight titles Next month Simpson will fight Ivan Zucco for the European super-middleweight title at Barnsley FC's Oakwell Stadium and the foodbank said his support was already providing a boost. "We have had a real upswing in monetary donations because of his profile on this already," said Andy Gaskell, fundraising officer at the foodbank "Because he is a professional athlete he was really interested in the nutritional value of the parcels, and he said he could see they were healthy. "That was affirming for us - to have an athlete say, 'I can see the thinking here'." He said the hub spent about £5,000 on food per month, so, if successful, the campaign would fund three months worth of meals for service users. Mr Simpson said he was also looking for "long term" ways to support the cause. "It would be great if I could finish my career and there be no one in Barnsley going hungry," he said. Listen to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North

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