The great Mark Hunt started MMA in PRIDE, with a loss. Then he won five in a row, beating Mirko CroCop and Wanderlei Silva, among others. Then he lost five in a row. When the UFC acquired PRIDE, they acquired his contract, and gave him a fight. He lost that too.

The UFC gave him one last fight, and he won that, eventually going 5-1-1. The draw with Antonio ‘Bigfoot’ Silva is likely the best heavyweight fight in UFC history. He lost a title fight with Fabricio Werdum on short notice, and most recently dropped one to Stipe Miocic.

It is on its face a career full of extraordinary challenges. But it is as nothing compared to his childhood. Stephen Lacey has the story for New Zealand’s Stuff.

A new book about Hunt’s life, Born to Fight is a harrowing tale of a young boy who was repeatedly beaten by his sadistic father.

Hunt recalls being hog-tied before being whipped by an apple branch until the skin was ripped from his back. “That meant no school for three weeks, so that was okay,” he laughs. “My old man was ruthless. He terrorised us. He’d start with the mental games before he even found the implements to hit us with. He once tied me up in the garage with my hands above my head and beat me with a frigging broom handle. I got away and my brothers came after me. They said ‘F—ing get back there or we’re all gonna get it.’”

However Hunt had it relatively easy compared to his older sister Victoria. She was raped by her father from the age of six until she turned 18 and finally moved out of the family home. Hunt doesn’t remember much about it, except seeing his father disappear into her room each night, and the strong smell of Dettol that he would use to clean himself up with afterwards. “I still can’t stand the smell of Dettol to this day,” Hunt says.

I spoke to Victoria about the abuse. “It happened nearly every day,” she says. “If I refused to have sex with my father he would take it out on my brothers. I mothered Mark; he was the youngest and I was his protector, there was no one else.”

Victoria says her mother knew what was going on and even encouraged it. “She allowed it to happen; it happened in front of her,” she says. “The Mormon Church that my parents went to also knew but did nothing.”

Finally somebody at Victoria’s school alerted the police. “Mum said I’ll buy you a bike if you drop the charges.” Her father was held in custody and finally allowed out when no evidence emerged. When he was released he continued sexually abusing her. “He said if you open your mouth again I will kill you,” she says.

“I was the one who was surviving for my brothers. Steve was a schizo, John was a hermit who kept to his room for days at a time and Mark was lashing out; he was the bully.”

“Yes I was a bully,” Hunt agrees. “But the scrapping on the streets was my way of dealing with the anger I felt towards my parents. Home was never a safe place for me. I felt safer on the streets.”

“I was a cheap criminal; I did many, many wrongs, I admit that. Of course if I could tell each person I’m sorry, I would.”

“Part of my gift as a fighter is being a human punching bag,” he laughs. “I don’t feel pain like most people.”

“We were all just trying to survive in that s—hole. We were like stray dogs. I say hello now and again, but I never told them I loved them, It’s hard to say things like that in my family. My sister is strong. I feel sorry for her but I’ve never sat down and talked to her about what happened.”

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Hunt’s life turned around when he met Julie Haren, who is now his wife, and mother of his four children. She insisted he get counseling, which changed his life.

Hunt’s brother John committed suicide earlier this year. His other brother Steve has been diagnosed with schizophrenia, and lives with his sister Victoria and her family. His father died of pancreatic cancer in 2005.

Mark Hunt fights Antonio ‘Bigfoot’ Silva, again, at UFC 193 on November 15, 2015 at Etihad Stadium in Melbourne, Australia.

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