That mundane, accidental quality is what makes the film so devastating. One wrong push, one pulled trigger, and a family is destroyed. Southpaw is ultimately not a film about a boxer who loses his title; it’s about a man who loses his soulmate and must crawl through hell to find himself again. Maureen’s death is the wound that the rest of the film desperately tries to heal.
It seems you're asking about the character Maureen Hope (played by Rachel McAdams) in the movie Southpaw , and there might be a typo with "southpaw better" — I think you mean Southpaw the film.
Watch how the loss of his wife sends Billy Hope into a visceral emotional breakdown as he loses his career and family:
Maureen was considered the "brains and heart" of Billy's operation, and without her guidance, his life collapses rapidly.
Narratively, Maureen’s fate serves the classic “women in refrigerators” trope—where a female character is harmed or killed to provide a male protagonist with motivation. However, Southpaw elevates this device by making her absence the central obstacle. Billy’s journey is not about avenging her, but about learning to live without her. He must internalize her lessons of patience, discipline, and love—qualities he had previously taken for granted. Under the gruff tutelage of Tick Wills (Forest Whitaker), Billy transforms his rage into focus, not to win back a title, but to win back his daughter. The final fight is not for glory but for redemption, a desperate attempt to prove he can be the man Maureen believed he could be.
Emma Jennings' character serves as a symbol of hope, love, and stability in Billy's life. Her sudden disappearance represents the fragility of life and the devastating consequences of unexpected tragedy. Through Emma's character, the film highlights the importance of human connections and the impact of loss on those left behind.
Due to his self-destructive behavior and drug abuse, Social Services takes custody of his daughter, Leila .