RWANDA-bound racehorse trainer Gabrielle Englebrecht and jockey Kathy O'Hara will emerge from the same corner at Canterbury tonight. From bashing each other in the boxing ring, the pair will be out to win for each other under the Canterbury lights, reports Craig Young in the Sydney Morning Herald.His report adds: ''Kathy nearly broke my nose,'' Englebrecht said yesterday in the midst of talking about a filly named Farixton, which runs in the third race.Englebrecht, who is about to enter the amat

RWANDA-bound racehorse trainer Gabrielle Englebrecht and jockey Kathy O'Hara will emerge from the same corner at Canterbury tonight. From bashing each other in the boxing ring, the pair will be out to win for each other under the Canterbury lights, reports Craig Young in the Sydney Morning Herald.

His report adds: ''Kathy nearly broke my nose,'' Englebrecht said yesterday in the midst of talking about a filly named Farixton, which runs in the third race.

Englebrecht, who is about to enter the amateur boxing ranks, has a fierce determination to succeed in all facets of life. Next June the 23-year-old, along with friend Elizabeth Street, is bound for Rwanda and a children's orphanage.

''I did volunteer work in a northern province of South Africa when I left school at 17,'' Englebrecht said. ''I loved it and always wanted to do it again. I haven't had a chance to have a holiday since I started training two years ago.''

So a deal was struck with the father, Warwick Farm horseman Steve Englebrecht.

''Dad is going look after my small team of horses while I'm away for a month,'' Englebrecht said. ''The way I see it is, I'm a pretty young, fit, healthy woman, and if I'm going to take time off I want to do something where I can be of use to someone - where I can help out rather than just sit on my backside for a month doing nothing.''

Englebrecht is also determined on the boxing front, with an amateur career set to take off early next year.

''I've always been sporty so I've tried to do something new,'' she said.

Amateur boxing ''is a lot less rougher than professional boxing'', with Englebrecht adding, ''I'm a featherweight, 57 kilograms and under. I'm probably only about 60 to 70 per cent fit at the moment.''