and Jane Couch boxing, 2003 The
British Boxing Board of Control initially refused to grant Couch a professional licence on the sole ground that she was a woman, and argued that
PMS made women too unstable to box. Claiming
sexual discrimination and supported by the
Equal Opportunities Commission, Couch managed to have this decision overturned by a
tribunal in March 1998. However, some criticism followed as the
British Medical Association called this result "a demented extension of equal opportunities". Couch would later seek the right to fight a male opponent, but was unsuccessful. Of this, she said Couch's first major success occurred in only her fifth pro fight in 1996 when she won the
WIBF light welterweight title by outpointing France's Sandra Geiger over ten rounds in Copenhagen, Denmark. Of this fight, Couch observed in 2004 that "I have never been hit so hard in all my life", and called Geiger "the toughest opponent (she) fought". The first sanctioned professional boxing match between women in the U.K. was in November 1998 at
Streatham in London, between Couch and Simona Lukic. Couch won. Couch announced her retirement on 1 December 2008 and said she intended to continue as a boxing promoter. At the time, she said ==Other achievements==