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Sunday, September 30, 2007

Kelly Pavlik's Rise and Jermain Taylor's Fall

Photo Credit to US Presswire



Boxing is the only sport in the world where there are times you can’t be helped by any amount of wisdom, support, fans, skill, training, experience or trash talk. Even with all those things combined, Jermain Taylor slumped to the floor in the seventh round in a fight that can only be rationalized as the upset of the year.

I won’t join with all of those who will now pretend they were not surprised. Lots of people will now have to paraphrase their predictions of a Taylor rout. I thought Taylor was the stronger fighter and that the body and the conditioning would prevail. I was looking for a “renewed” Taylor, anxious to demonstrate a willingness to mix and overpower.

At first, the fight seemed to follow the expected pattern with Pavlik down in the 2nd round. But I always did believe that Pavlik had heart. It was heart that made him dust off the cobwebs and finish the round, battered but still on his feet. And it was heart that made him come roaring back to rock Taylor with powerful and accurate punches which backed him to the ropes.

There’s never been any doubt about Pavlik’s heart or his killer instinct. With Taylor in the corner, he moved in to deliver the right punches, uppercut, left hook, left anything… At that point, a puff of wind would have blown Taylor down.

So Youngstown Ohio, home of many great fighters, is back on the map again. And so it is with boxing: Kelly Pavlik’s rise led to Jermain Taylor’s fall.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Taylor-Pavlik: A Tough Fight For One Round

Emmanuel Steward, the usually unemotional and restrained trainer for Jermain Taylor, fired a short hook to the ribcage with his remark about his guy’s upcoming fight with Kelly Pavlik:

"It's going to be a tough fight — for about one round," Steward said at the news conference for Saturday's battle in Atlantic City.

It’s too late to comment and too hard to top that quip, so I thought I’d just repeat what I’d learned from listening to boxing fans around the country. Pavlik has lots of supporters who believe in the big bomb theory of boxing, but it is hard to find a single one who will pick Kelly to win big. Pavlik’s supporters are very much inclined to talk up his strong points but, when it comes to conclusions, they are very much hedging their bets.

Truly, I think that Pavlik’s support comes from a tiny GWH contingent and a huge sentiment-for-the-underdog-and-less- ballyhooed fighter. Will Cinderella make it to the ball or be reduced to cleaning the cinders?

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Sam Peter Named New WBC Heavyweight Champion






And the new heavyweight champion is….

Samuel Peter became the World Boxing Council's interim heavyweight champion Monday after Oleg Maskaev dropped out of their Oct. 6 title fight with a back injury. The WBC awarded the title to him. That is only fair for Sam Peter who was anxious to throw down and deserved the shot, but what about me? Don’t I deserve a heavyweight belt? At running my mouth, if nothing else.

Meanwhile, Jermain Taylor hopes to break out of the perception that he’s a dull, uninspiring fighter. That’s not anything I believe, incidentally. Pavlik has lots of fans who like his head-on punching style. That’s not always such a good play against a guy as strong as Taylor is. Pavlik has hopes set high for a major upset due to his devastating KO of Edison Miranda.

It seems to me that Taylor has sometimes been over-anxious, tense, and sometimes defense-minded. Those aren’t capital offenses and part of the reason may be that many of the opponents he’s faced, (B-hop, for instance) were ring technicians. That’s not a sin, either. Ask Floyd Mayweather, Jr. as he waits for Ricky Hatton.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. began his campaign of psychological warfare against Hatton at yesterday’s press conference in New York. An Associated Press story about the press conference quotes Mayweather as saying that Castillo and Kostya Tzu were “over the hill’ when Hatton beat them. Hatton says he’s not intimidated and describes Mayweather’s lack of respect for him and others as a “lack of class.”

Let the games begin!

Monday, September 24, 2007

Wouldn't You Love to Fight the Winner of the Tommie Lee Kid Rock Fight?

24 September 2007 (Sawf News) - Feuding Pamela Anderson exes, Kid Rock and Tommy Lee are now being offered $5 million to duke it out in a winner take all boxing match. So they say. Another article says that Bob Arum has signed on and the purse is now $5 million. Plus Pamela Anderson. I would watch if for free but who needs to see ugly no-talent boxing? Maybe if they gave each other pistols....

If you like punishment, there's a full story on the right hand side of this page under the Boxing News, Views, and Clues heading.

Roll That Shoulder: Jesse Oltmann

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Maskaev's Nigerian Nightmare: Sam Peter Fight Cancelled




The reason given is a back injury. WBC Heavyweight Champion Oleg Maskaev disappointed Sam Peter by pulling out of the mandatory title defense with the Nigerian power puncher set for October 6. Adding weight to the suspicion that Maskaev is ducking Sam Peter was that Maskaev pushed to fight Vitali Klitscho instead of Sam Peter. The WBC made Maskaev fight Sam Peter instead, since Peter was the real deal and number one challenger.

Interestingly, Sam Peter's only loss was to Wladimir Klitscho, Vitali's successful brother. Maskaev remains an interesting fighter in spite of the five losses on his record. He beat Hasim Rahman in October of 2006 and has a lot of other competent names on his tally. But this doesn't look good for Maskaev and whomever he chooses to fight next, unless it's Sam Peter, will be diminished by the big looming shadow of the Nigerian Nightmare.


Thursday, September 20, 2007

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

School is Out - School is In



Some people easing into the workout at the Jesse Harris Boxing Gym...

Heavyweight Jesse Oltmann



Trainer Sean Diggs working with Jesse Oltmann at Jesse Harris Boxing.

Alex "Ice" Gaca Hits It at Jesse Harris Boxing

Meanwhile....Back at the Gym...

USA Boxing Team: Trouble in Olympic City




The new 2008 U.S. Olympic Team was selected last month in the box-off trials in Houston, TX. I’m disappointed that Olympic representatives didn’t come shopping for fighters to the Jesse Harris Boxing Gym in Stroudsburg, PA. We have a few boxers with exceptional ability and strong work ethics. You know who you are.

Anyway, USA National Director of Boxing Dan Campbell has been under a lot of criticism for setting up a residential program. He’d been having difficulty with boxers who were receiving stipends for training at the Olympic Center in Colorado Springs and then didn’t show up. Campbell believes that a residential program is the answer.

Some of the coaches (who were parents in some cases) didn’t like the idea of turning over coaching control of young boxers they’d been training for a long time. We understand the attachment, but mommies, daddies, and coaches don’t accompany you to basic training, either. If the U.S. is serious about sending well-schooled boxers to the Olympics, then people should understand the need for them to be immersed in an environment where the National Director of Coaching has better focus and control.

I’ve no doubt that future Olympians will be cared for and nurtured at the Olympic Training Center just as they were at home. But being away in a residential program gives the boxers a chance to establish themselves independently and to adjust to unfamiliar circumstances. That is of great importance in a sport where you meet an unknown opponent far away from home and you can’t escape or hide because of the bright lights and the ring ropes.

American boxers have won only three gold medals in the last four Olympics. Maybe that’s a set of circumstances we’ll all have to adjust to by supporting Campbell, the first ever full-time Olympic Director of Coaching. We’re a long way from the 1972 Olympics. Or are we? …

Monday, September 17, 2007

Don King: Saint and Sinner




Okay, I’ve got weird heroes. Don King, for example. I guess one of the reasons why I like Don King is because everyone was always trying to brainwash me so I’d hate the guy. The sportswriters from the most schmuck newspapers in the world (think Pocono Record) would always have an unkind word to say about Don King. The only reason they could cite, as far as I could see, was that their fellow schmuck sportswriters also hated Don King. In calling such people “sportswriters”, I’m taking extreme liberties with the language. In reality, most of the schmucks care nothing about boxing and do not have the intellectual curiosity to learn anything about it. Like cows accustomed to being fed and fattened, they feed on a steady diet of what I call the “Beer Sports” (baseball, football, golf, etc.). The monotony and hum-drum of this rather thin fare is broken up by the occasional photo story about some high school tennis girl or hockey player who can be photographed in knickers.


I’ve noticed that the more insignificant and untalented the sportswriter is, the more he (or she) tended to pile on Don King. Truth to tell, it had just the opposite effect on me.
I figured a guy who had so many insignificant and effete so-called sportswriters as enemies must be doing something right. Everyone forgets now that Muhammad Ali was similarly declared an untouchable in his early days.

Okay, I get it that Don King is a player and that he woos fighters with an eye to making money. But how is it that different from the owner of a baseball team or team of NASCAR drivers? Don’t they all court the type of players or drivers who will make them rich? Or am we supposed to believe that there is philanthropy in the selection of football draft picks and ignominy when Don King goes after a fighter he thinks will make it big?

Anyway, I always had a soft spot for the rebel. Don King’s a rebel. He’s a guy who came up from nowhere, and he’s taken his own path to success and redemption. It’s true that boxing made Don King rich but don’t forget that Don King also made boxing rich. Don King and others like him pulled together multi-million dollar purses by seeing the opportunities presented in developing media like PPV and the cable companies. That type of effort benefited a large number of people in addition to boxers and their families. The broadcast media companies (HBO, ShowTime, etc) profited and so do the casinos, the newspapers, hotel chains, and just about everyone else who ever made money from sport.

It may be anti-climatic now to say that I’m adding a link to Don King’s website but that’s what started me on this rant. It’s worth checking out. With so much money and power at his disposal, King has been doing things like pledging to raise $150 million for a veteran’s memorial in KY. He’s recently visited the Nazi death camps at Auschwitz and commented on the Warsaw uprising.

And of course, there’s the boxing. Lots of boxing.

Friday, September 14, 2007

Acosta at King's Gym in Reading


Will the Real Acosta Please Stand Up?

A Little Boxing History



Light Heavyweight Champion Eddie Mustafa Muhammad at Ali's Deer Lake Training Camp


Drew Bundini Brown at Ali's Deer Lake Training Camp


I was looking through an old photo album the other day and I came upon a picture of Bundini Brown, for many years a permanent fixture in Muhammad Ali’s entourage. Bundini was “spitting it” when most of us were in diapers; he’s credited with many of Ali’s best rhymes including the well-known “float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.”

If ever a guy had an interesting life followed by an ignominious death, it was Bundini Brown who died in Los Angeles in September of 1987 from what some said was a drug overdose. The 2001 Michael Mann film “Ali” had Michael J. Foxx playing a dissolute Bundini Brown excoriated by Ali for selling one of Ali’s championship belts to score heroin. The reason I bring this up right now is not because I enjoy a quick trip down through memory lane but because boxing has a history and history is important to what we do today.

Bundini Brown was one of those guys who, like a historical thread, runs through many different eras of boxing. Bundini served in the U.S. Navy at age 13, traveled the world for about twelve years before joining the entourage of the great Sugar Ray Robinson. Brown joined Ali (then known as Cassius Clay) in 1963 and stayed with him until he retired. When you’ve been to the top with people like Ali and Ray Robinson, I guess the regular daylight doesn’t shine so much as it does for the rest of us. If it’s true that Brown was a heroin addict, then it must have been because nothing could fill the void inside himself when life moved on without him.

From the same time comes Angelo Dundee, who spent a lot of time on the mountain with great boxers like Sugar Ray Leonard, Carmen Basilio, and, of course, Ali. Dundee, whose real name is Angelo Mirena, has been able to remake himself even in his 80s. Dundee keeps busy at whatever suits him; he was hired to train actor Russell Crowe for his movie appearance in “Cinderella Man,” for example.

Boxing history should never be viewed through the rose-colored lenses of nostalgic yearnings for the good ole days. In some ways, boxing has developed into a sport of greater integrity and compassion for the fighter. People like Eddie Mustafa Muhammad, the former light-heavyweight champion, have helped in the effort to secure better representation for boxers, an initiative strongly supported by Senator John McCain of Arizona.

On the dark side of boxing are people like Panama Lewis who, in a different way, are also part of legend and myth. Lewis did time in jail and is banned for life from American boxing for his part in the 1983 Luis Resto- Billy Collins fight. Lewis was convicted of having removed the padding from Resto’s gloves, an act which had the effect of reducing Collins to a bloody pulp plagued with blurry vision and depression. At the age of 22, Collins drove his car off a cliff in Tennessee.

The whole matter of the Collins-Resto-Lewis fiasco is reexamined in a documentary soon to be released (Sept 16 in Manhattan) called "They Came to Fight."

The Resto-Collins fight wasn’t the only time Lewis was implicated in questionable boxing tactics. He was trainer and corner-man for Aaron Pryor who managed a decisive and suddenly energetic attack in the 14th ground of his 1982 fight with Alexis Arguello after drinking from a mysterious “little black bottle” which Panama Lewis always maintained was a concoction of Schnapps and honey.

Panama Lewis is not allowed to enter the ring or work as a corner-man in the U.S. but he has managed a return to boxing in other parts of the world. He currently manages the Ibragimov brothers, Timur and Sultan. Sultan Ibragimov’s next fight is with Evander Holyfield on October 13th at the Khodynka Ice Palace, Moscow.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

"Never Again": Jaidon Codrington at ESPN Contender Series



Al "Sweetness" Green's already mythical KO of rising star Jaidon Codrington in November 2005. This was Codrington's first and only loss.


ESPN made the right decision to host the third Contender series this year as the first real boxing episode jumped off. I have to admit that, though I tuned in lots of times to Series One and Two, I was always a little turned off by the fact that the actual boxing was severely edited to appeal to the type of fight fan more accustomed to watching “Rocky” movies or “Million Dollar Baby” or about “Cinderella Man” James Braddock. That was a feeling shared, I think, with some of the boxers at the Jesse Harris Boxing Gym in Stroudsburg, Pa. The Contender was a good idea, but there was a lot of what they’d call “fake-$ssed” drama and slowed down shots ala Hollywood. Real fighters like to see things speeded up, not slowed down.

Let’s see… how do you spell Jaidon Codrington? We have a local connection to “The Don” mostly through one of our fighters, R.J Sockwell, who sometimes visits the gyms in New York for sparring. Sockwell originated from Queens, as does Codrington, and it was only natural we’d follow the events of Broadway Boxing where Codrington and fellow “chin checker” Curtis STEVENS often competed and had large New York followings. It’s a neighborhood thing. It was through Sockwell that I met Zab Judah and Monte Barrett at an event where Sockwell was competing (a big W) in the Red Hook section of Brooklyn, NY.

I got post-middle-age-drift there. We were talking about Codrington and the Contender III series which jumped off with its first fighter between Jaidon “The Don” Codrington (16-1-0) and Brian Vera (14-1-0) from Houston Texas. The two had fought in the amateurs and Vera was out to avenge his loss.

My Sicilian ancestors have a saying: “Revenge is a dish best served cold.” Stay cold. Don’t let your feelings get in the way of your objectives, in other words. Where Vera was concerned, it was a big mistake to let his emotions get the best of him. He should have left it to someone else to knock off Codrington, if that can happen. As things were, Vera was drawn into a trash-talk war with Jaidon and that’s something you can’t win with boys from the streets of New York. I’m not saying it’s not just as nasty or tough in the back neighborhoods of Houston, but it’s just not so much the perfected style as it is, say, in Starett City, Bushwick, Brownsville, or Bed-Sty-Do-Or-Die.

Short story. Brian Vera went down hard for the second time in Round Two and the referee did the “right thing.” Vera was game, though, and he pressed the case in close, hoping to connect with the big shot. I was glad for Codrington. The “1” on his 14-1 record was one of the most devastating knockouts in boxing history. Knockouts occur every day in boxing, but not like the one Codrington sustained against Al Green. It was a good sign that Codrington mentioned the KO in the pre-fight coverage. He knew that people were looking for that post-KO mental weakness which afflicts some fighters who get knocked out. The only way to deal with demons like that is to face them and fight them off. Easier said than done, but there was a steely ring of truth in his voice when Codrington said: “That ain’t going to happen again for anybody.”

It sure didn’t happen for Brian Vera. Codrington flashed power and leverage. He showed some nice moves, finishing combinations and stepping off to his right to continue the attack without being effectively countered. Vera had trouble finding him.

Check out the ESPN Contender website. I’ve posted a link at the upper right hand corner of this page under File Cabinet : Boxing Sites. Click on the one that says “The Contender Series ESPN Website. There you will be able to read short biographies of the boxers and learn their boxing history. You can see some metrics like “arm crank” and “light board” and other stuff I didn’t know you could measure.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Vitali Klitschko Vs. Hasim Rahman?

I've got this image that won't ever leave my brain. I respect Vitali Klitscho and can see that he's gained in handspeed, balance, boxing skill, etc. but can't rid myself of the idea that he goes shopping for fights the way other people go shopping for tomatoes or cantaloupe. You pick the one that's ripe and ready to fall from the vine. Thinking like that made my eye catch on somebody's tech-savvy internet posting. Here's the quote verbatim:
You notice how when the Rock comes back with a big KO win Vitali suddenly gets a sudden injury/operation again?He's ducking a top level contender like the Rock and it gets more obvious all the time. The Rock would pwn him, LMAO.
It's fortunate that I recently had a course in geek-speak. The word "pwn" is geek-speak for "own." The acronym LMAO is a group of letters meaning "laughing my ass off." Remember, language is power. So is Hasim Rahman's overhand right which toppled Lennox Lewis to the canvas.
I so much like the idea of a Klitchko-Rahman fight that I'm learning Russian in the hope of being able to communicate it to Klitchko's managers.

Zab Super Judah: Back in Force



The only good thing that ever came of Zab Judah’s fall from boxing grace was that we got to watch him on ESPN2 for free. Zab’s appearance last Friday night was his third vindication since losing to Carlos Baldomir in January of 2006 and Floyd Mayweather (12 round decision) in April of 2006. His 12 round unanimous decision over Edwin Vazquez, in combination with his 11th round loss to Miguel Cotto, should put to rest all those critics who have said that Zab was six-round fighter. Though Judah went down in the 11th round, the Cotto fight was a lesson in boxing ferocity.

When you consider that the Mayweather fight was just four months after Baldomir, and that the Mayweather fight was followed by an arrangement to fight Miguel Cotto, even the dull-witted can figure out that former undisputed champion Zab Judah has ducked no one.

The names on his list of 35 professional fights read like a who’s who in boxing history. Don’t forget the win over then reigning champion Cory Spinks in 2005. DeMarcus Corley wasn’t exactly a cakewalk in 2003. Junior Witter isn’t exactly a household word in the U.S. but here’s a clue: Englishman Witter just knocked out Vivian Harris in 7 rounds last week, September 7 in Doncaster. On Zab’s record are bouts with Kostya Tzu (loss) and IrishMickey Ward (win).

Edwin Vazquez was no shrinking violet—he’s a fighter of great determination and technical skill. It would be kind of stupid for me to say that I’m glad Zab’s back. The truth is, he’s never left.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Al Wilkerson

 

Former Professional Boxer Al Wilkerson coaches young fighters at the Jesse Harris Boxing Gym.
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Marquez - Juarez Fight Cancelled

Juan Marquez suffered a cut and infection on his hand and the entire card is cancelled? I was looking forward to his bout with Rocky Juarez at Super Featherweight. Here's the announcement:

Junior lightweight champion Juan Manuel Marquez, suffering from an infection in a cut on a knuckle on his right hand, withdrew from a scheduled Sept. 15 defense against Rocky Juarez, and the entire "Fireworks" card was canceled Friday night.


I wonder what's behind that? I guess you can take it at face value. Oh well, there's Taylor-Pavlik coming up September 29. As usual, Kelly Pavlik will be ready to rumble but the smart money thinks that Taylor will be too strong for him.

Anyone have opinions to offer on this one?

Saturday, September 8, 2007

Hasim "The Rock" Rahman Takes Care of Business

Why am I writing about Hasim Raham? I guess I'm motivated by the idiot sports writer who called the former heavyweight champ (KO'd Lennox Lewis) a "one-punch wonder." Yeah, right. The only "wonder" I have about that writer is if he ever climbed the steps into a boxing ring.

Anyway, Rahman took care of business last night at the Soaring Eagle in Michigan with a 2nd round KO of Dickie Ryan. So I guess that makes him a 2-punch wonder? In fact, Raham's knocked out 34 of his 43 opponents. The sportswriter who called him a "one-punch wonder" would probably get dropped from the air from one of Rahman's punches if he sat in the sixth row.

I met Rahman a couple of weeks ago when I accompanied trainer-coach-impresario Jesse Harris and fighter RJ Sockwell to King's Gym in Reading PA for some sparring sessions. I arrived too late to interview Rahman but I did get to shake his hand. I noticed two things:

  • Rahman's hand is huge, about the size of the two plastic casts of the fist they have up in the Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, NY. One of those belongs to Sonny Liston; the other to an old-school fighter of yore named Primo Carnera.

  • The other thing I like about Rahman was his plain, no-fooling clothing style. No bling. I do like bling, but there is a reason that Mike Tyson first showed up in the ring without fancy robes and boxing shoes. He was there to do the people's business.

Alright, that's my rap for the day. Comments anyone? The winner of the comments section gets to spar with the person I choose from the Jesse Harris Boxing Gym on Route 209, South of Stroudsburg. Peace out...

Thursday, September 6, 2007

How We Do

Footwork is ever so important and too little used. In boxing, there are times when you've got to move, and other times when you have set down and punch.

Guess Who's Back....

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Focus Group

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Speed Kills: Jesse Oltmann

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Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Mack Truck

 
Who in the hell let Mack Truck in here?...
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Jesse Harris preparing his fighter, RJ Sockwell, for a sparring session at King's Gym in Reading PA.
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Monday, September 3, 2007

Heavyweight Dayton Wheeler

 


Veteran of twenty-one professional fights, Heavyweight Dayton Wheeler is set for his upcoming battle with Kerry Biles on September 14 at the Riveredge in Reading, PA.
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Marshall Kauffman with Bobby Heath

 

Bobby Heath has a big following in the Reading area. He's trained by Marshall Kauffman at King's Gym, the home base of Kermit "Killer" Cintron.
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Sunday, September 2, 2007

The Big Dogs: Heavyweights Dayton Wheeler (left) and Maurice Harris

 


Dayton Wheeler rests up after a sparring session with former World Heavyweight Champion Hasim Rahman. Rahman's getting ready for his September 7 tuneup match with Dickie Ryan. Dayton heads up a fight card at the Riveredge Hotel in Reading, PA on September 14. Maurice Harris is a hard-punching six foot four fighter well remembered for his sensational knockout of Russian Sergei Lyakhovich.
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Heavyweight Maurice Harris poses with former boxer and current impresario Jesse Harris and Welterweight RJ Sockwell at King's Gym in Reading, PA. Left to right: Jesse Harris, Maurice Harris, RJ Sockwell.
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Round Two King's Gym Reading: Bobby Heath and RJ Sockwell

The second round of sparring between Jesse Harris' boxer RJ Sockwell and Bobby Heath who trains at King's Gym in Reading, Pennsylvania...

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Rockin' in Reading at King's Gym

A lot of exciting stuff has been happening lately at Jesse Harris’ JBA Boxing Gym where life, like boxing, is ever unpredictable. I have to take responsibility for some of that unpredictability—it was me who got us lost on the way to King’s Gym in Reading.

We were supposed to bring heavyweight professional boxer Jamil McKay down there with us to spar with former world heavyweight champ Hasim Rahman who’s on a march back to another title shot. Some misunderstood communications resulted in just the three of us: Jesse Harris, RJ Sockwell, and me.

With Jesse Harris weaving in and out of traffic fielding dozens of telephone calls, one eye on a road and the other on a movie we were watching, I realized that Jesse must have been the original progenitor of Attention Deficit Disorder.

After touring the Reading suburbs for about two hours and about 500 miles of Rte 222, and watching a movie called “Black Snake Moan” we arrived just in time to shake hands with Hasim Rahman who was leaving. Rahman was huge and reminded me of the Rock of Gibralter. His two professional boxers and sparring partners were names I’d heard: Dayton Wheeler and Maurice Harris. If Rahman was the Rock, these other guys were at least Battleships in the Surrounding Waters. I was so pissed we’d arrived too late to see this Battle of the Titans but I worried for RJ. His work was ahead of him. Without sleep, without food or water, and with a great deal of freeway miles laid unnecessarily on his head, he had to spar with the young pros stalking the gym.

Wheeler and Harris were kind enough to let me photograph them. They were real gentlemen and recognized me straight off as the village idiot. We'll have more about them when I get enough time to put up their pictures and bios. It’s been a hard day’s night. Check out Round One and RJ Sockwell rockin’ with Bobby Heath of King’s Gym in Reading.