Wharton Fight Night

Glasgow street tough and New York hedge fund manager mix boxing and business

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In the ring! Wharton Fight night
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In the ring! Wharton Fight night

This year’s Fight Night proved to be a surprising staging post for the business ambitions of two boxing-obsessed Wharton MBA students: Irish fighter Donal McElwee and Connecticut-born organizer Anusha Prasad.

For Prasad, a former Morgan Stanley hedge fund analyst, raising $55,000 for Philadelphia 's Boys and Girls Club made the sell-out event “a memorable evening”. Former lawyer McElwee, an amateur boxer, was “always gonna put [himself] up for it”.

The annual Fight Night, which is held in February, has been running for three years. Initially it was a series of boxing matches between students from Wharton and Penn Law School, though this year other faculties participated. Preparation was serious: twelve student fighters trained every weekend for five months under boxing coach Cliff Johnson, at the local Lef Jab Boxing Club.

Prasad joined Fight Night's seven-member organizing committee last December. She was the only first-year MBA student to do so: “B-school is two year program, so you need to get involved with something,” she says. Her job varied from finding fighters and security guards to booking venues and finding a great DJ.

The 28-year-old says one of her biggest challenges was to match two fighters with the same level of skill and weight: “Finding fighters wasn't easy… Since Penn Law didn't have as many fighters this year we had to look for people from the engineering and education schools to take part.”

But Wharton's rugby captain McElwee, from County Donegal, Ireland, wasn't hard to find. Having lived in a tough neighborhood in Glasgow in his youth, the 28-year-old felt compelled to join the boxing club. In fact McElwee, a Harvard Law graduate, says he had his eyes on the fight before arriving at Wharton: “I knew about it before I applied. As soon as I saw it I was gonna take it up,” he says.

McElwee was Wharton's “No.1 Fighter” on the final fight, up against Nathan Dyer from the Education School. “Nathan is a good fighter,” he says. “He previously attended Notre Dame where he fought eight times. We both knew it was gonna be a good match-up.”

McElwee made a promise to keep the event’s 1,300 spectators entertained. They’d each paid $50 to get into the event at Philadelphia’s Legendary Blue Horizon boxing center.

First off, to emphasize his “proud Irish roots,” he hired midget leprechauns to be part of his entourage when he entered the ring to a backing track of live Irish bag-pipes played by a friend. Then, true to his word, McElwee knocked Dyer down in the second round, and went on to win outright in the third.

McElwee knew Dyer from the first day of the training camp, back in September. “There might be a few black eyes [after the fight], but… I think we're still good friends,” he jokes.

He also says that confidence was the key to winning, something he plans to use in his business career: “You can't have a shadow of a doubt.”

After Wharton, McElwee plans to find a strategy role in either consulting or the sports industry, and is convinced he will benefit from the school's the top sports facilities and in-depth sports business classes. He is also considering fighting for Wharton again next year.

For Prasad, helping to organize Fight Night taught her to get the most out of her resources. “I was handed opportunities to create opportunities,” she says. “It taught me to do things like this on a larger scale. It's been featured heavily on my CV.”

Prasad wants to work in asset management in New York City, where she first took boxing classes, when her adventures at Wharton draw to an end. 

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13 November 2009
 

wow --- there really does need to be a level of fact checking here and not accepting things one is told on face value. after all, this blog does represent b-schools so attention to detail is important. prasad was never a hedge fund manager as stated, nor has she ever managed money. she worked as an "analyst" of hedge fund managers --- meaning asking a myriad of questions of hedge fund managers and writing up reports!


Anonymous

25 August 2009
 

Surely your level of sarcasm needs to be boosted to another level b4 you send CV to anyone. Challenge me if you can find a more cleaver way to repeat that "It's a shame..." thing.


Anonymous

 

Wow i really hope i get to work for you some day!

"It's a shame there were two second year co-chairs of the event and an additional committee of 2nd year organizers that worked to fundraise the $55K and pull off the event well before Anusha was even on campus!"

You're a fantastic team motivator and not anal about sharing credit at all! pls teach meeeeeee michael scott


Anonymous

 

We think the story makes it clear that Prasad helped to organize Fight Night in company with other students, and that the funds raised were a highlight of the event for her, not solely her achievement.


That said we're a tiny team and we'll make mistakes occasionally, so pull us up all you want.


bbadmin

21 August 2009
 

It clearly says that Prasad joined the committee last December...and that there were other members, obviously all who were 2nd years if she was the only 1st year. There were also 11 other fighters... It was a story about Wharton, not about Prasad or McElwee.


Anonymous

 

It's a shame there were two second year co-chairs of the event and an additional committee of 2nd year organizers that worked to fundraise the $55K and pull off the event well before Anusha was even on campus! I know this is a new blog but some amount of fact checking would be good.


Anonymous

19 August 2009
 

To the person who left that last comment, please can you explain exactly what you think is lame? Otherwise we have no reason not to delete it, particularly since you don't have the balls to identify yourself.


bbadmin

18 August 2009
 

Fucking lame


Anonymous

16 August 2009
 

"He is also considering fighting for Wharton again next year"... Bad news, Mr Dyer!


Anonymous

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Sunny Li
By Sunny Li
14/08/2009

Tags:

News & Features
Wharton
Penn Law
Morgan Stanley
Fight Night
Donal McElwee
Boys and Girls Club of Philadelphia
Anusha Prasad

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