You take a right off Broadway in northeast Minneapolis and bounce down a street that has the same number of square feet of potholes as asphalt. It's an old industrial area and there's a brick office/warehouse building on the left.
A weather-beaten sign — looking as if it could be for a tavern in a Revolutionary War movie — swings above the door for the Uppercut boxing gym. You aren't expecting much, and then you step inside, and it's clean and spacious, equipped to train boxers or to conduct exercise classes.
Jason Hendrickson is a trainer, a coach and helps to manage the Uppercut for owner Lisa Bauch.
"We had a fundraiser for Craig Gromek, a St. Paul police officer with ALS, in March," Hendrickson said. "The matches were between police, firefighters and paramedics, and there had to be 2,000 people in here. It was a tremendous night."
That was many more people than you could expect to find at a boxing card in Minnesota. Most of the boxing promotions are taking place at tribal casinos, where the state's Combat Sports Council has no oversight.
Bobby Brunette, the chairman of the nine-person council, said:
"You see some fighters that probably don't belong on a professional card, but the people from the casinos check with us on many boxers before they use them. The casinos try to put on good cards. It's not easy.
"The purses are much larger for boxing than for mixed martial arts. You can pay for an entire MMA card for what a main-event boxer can cost."