Sydney Sweeney and boxing legend Christy Martin have graced the cover of Sports Illustrated together.
The image at New York‘s Trinity Boxing Club shows Sweeney seated on a red stool inside the ring, wearing a cropped white tank, American-flag shorts, red gloves, and a sweatdrenched stare that suggests she’s just emerged from battle.
Behind her stands Martin, arms crossed, exuding the calm authority of the fighter’s corner.
The cover photo captures the raw emotion, athletic vulnerability portrayed in the movie.
As the digital cover drops, the message is loud and clear: this isn’t just a publicity stunt. It’s a reintroduction, a redefinition, a tribute.
Sweeney‘s transformation: from Hollywood glamour to fighter’s grit
Sweeney‘s dramatic shift didn’t come overnight. To inhabit Martin‘s world, she intentionally stepped away from red carpets and stylists.
She spent months away from the spotlight, training intensely with boxing workouts, weight training, and disciplined nutrition.
The result: more than 30 pounds of muscle, broader shoulders, and a look far removed from her previous image.
In one interview, she described her routine plainly: “I weighttrained in the morning for an hour, kickboxed midday for about two hours, then weighttrained again at night for an hour.”
She added that her body “was completely different,” and that she didn’t fit into any of her regular clothes anymore.
But the physical work was only part of it. Sweeney has stressed repeatedly that the fight scenes were real, punches thrown, bruises earned, and even a concussion during filming.
According to her, there were “concussions, there were bloody noses … I loved it!” That brutal honesty underscores the authenticity she brought to the role.
That level of commitment isn’t just about aesthetics. It reflects a deeper respect for Martin‘s journey, the rise, the pain, the survival.
Capturing Martin’s grit
The pairing of Sweeney and Martin for the Sports Illustrated cover carries weight beyond visual shock value.
Martin, a trailblazer in women’s boxing, first signed by legendary promoter Don King, and the first female boxer to grace the SI cover back in 1996, broke barriers in a sport dominated by men.
Bringing her back into the spotlight under such raw, unfiltered circumstances is more than a marketing move. It’s a reclamation.
For fans who know Martin‘s past, her championship fights, her victories, her 32win record, including many by knockout, this cover feels like paying homage.
For newcomers, it offers a visceral first impression of what that era and that struggle looked like.
Sweeney‘s transformation adds another layer: the idea that a contemporary actor, accustomed to calls for beauty and glamour, is willing to embrace vulnerability and strength in equal measure.
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