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Chavez Jr. Wears What He Wants, Trains When He Wants
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Has Junior had the very best camp possible ahead of the Martinez fight? Did he give himself the very best chance to win by preparing to the utmost? It didn't sem that way on 24/7; but we shall have to see, this Saturday on PPV, to learn if the pink panties were a good luck charm, or not. (Chris Farina-Top Rank)
“He works when he wants to, that bugs me a little bit, but overall, it's OK. As long as we get the work done.”
Hearing Freddie Roach say those words on the second installment of HBO's Martinez-Chavez Jr 24/7, and then seeing evidence that the son of the legend still has a bit more of the Lord Fauntleroy in him than one would hope or expect at age 26, had me reducing Chavez' chances against Martinez on Saturday night in Las Vegas.
I gave Junior the proverbial punchers chance, and figured that possibly the fact that Martinez didn't dominate Darren Barker and Matthew Macklin at times not because he wasn't mentally primed but because he has slipped, minutely, physically. I thought a sliver of a chance existed for Junior, but because of what I saw on 24/7 I have reduced the sliver to 3/4 of a sliver. I give Junior a 15% shot of beating Sergio Martinez, down from 20%.
In the opening scene, we see Chavez working, which is as it should be for a man taking two steps up in competition from anything he's seen before. From Peter Manfredo to Sergio Martinez is like going from Triple A to the majors…so Junior rooters have to hope that the son of the legend isn't going into the event thinking he will turn on the heater and time the curveballs coming from Martinez as he did Andy Lee.
He's running, late at night, in Vegas, and we hear that Junior likes to keep Michael Jackson hours, sleep all day, and work at night. Junior heads to the Top Rank gym, where Freddie Roach waits. The trainer says Junior's camp at home, in LA, didn't work out so well, because he wasn't working out as often or as hard as he should've been. In Vegas, though Roach tried to light a fire underneath him, Junior didn't tame his tardiness.
We see Junior's mom, Alba Carrasco-Orduno, sort of a fabulous Mexican Peg Bundy looking lady, and she says she's attended just one of his fights. “I don't like it,” she says. “I don't go because it's scary.” Mom, who split with Julio Sr. about 15 years ago, is present at this family reunion, with sons Omar and Cristian, to encourage Junior.
The kid takes a shot at the foe ten years his senior when he says, “You should be fighting my dad. You're too old!” Pop, age 50, breaks into a grin.
Over in Oxnard, CA, Martinez uses a hyperbaric chamber to get pure oxygen into his system. He uses one five days a week, for an hour per session. His cutman, a chiropractor, owns one. The fighter says getting up at four AM, and training hard, is the real secret to his success.
We see Martinez sparring at the gym. Trainer Pablo Sarmiento says Martinez doesn't spar that much, to help keep him fresh. He'll spar just 60 rounds to get ready for Junior. And he hasn't downshifted because of age, he says. He has trained like this, doing lots of footwork drills, for ten years.
Back at the Vegas gym, Freddie Roach waits. Junior is late for a 7 PM mitt workout. After an hour, a Junior lackey calls Freddie, and tells him that the fighter won't be showing up. “WTF,” Roach says. He sighs, and still on the phone, says, “I've never seen nothing like this in my life.” He explains to an associate that Junior woke up, said he'd go to the gym, then after a half hour, decided he wouldn't, that he needed a day off.
Freddie recalls that Junior's rep when they met, back in 2010, was that he was “a little bit lazy.” He says that Junior doesn't refuse any request when he shows up at the gym…but that he doesn't always show up at the gym. The next day, Junior does show up. Freddie tells him to drive Martinez back in a straight line, that the Argentine “can't fight going backwards.” The kid says he worked out 12 days straight, so he decided to have a rest day. The trainer says he warned Junior not to fall back into old habits. “I think we're OK now,” he says. His face doesn't scream certainty. (I guess there is the possibility that we're getting conned, that this is all for show. I strongly doubt that though. One day, when we've been doing this 24/7 docu-mercial deal for a spell, somebody will pull off this sort of con, make watchers believe they have an edge by fabricating an injury in camp, or by pretending to go out at night and blow off training. But not yet, I don't think.)
In CA, we see Sarmiento, a fellow Argentine, and Sergio interact. They mesh quite well, both say. After dinner, they watch tape of Junior. Sergio says he likes to study foes, more for how they think than how they fight. He does note that Junior uses the left hand almost purely to hook with, not jab, so you might want to see how Martinez exploits that on fight night. “I don't see how really he's going to give Sergio any trouble,” Sarmiento says of a fighter he allows is “strong and aggressive.”
“It's a farce that Junior is a world champion,” Martinez says as he watches Chavez celebrate a win on tape. “It's embarrassing.”
Chavez Sr. then watches tape of Martinez versus Matthew Macklin, while Junior sleeps. When Junior is up, dad excitedly shares wisdom on how to better Martinez. Junior listens, and then pads about the house in much-mocked pink briefs, before heading to the pool for a dip. Dad comes poolside, boxing a shadow, telling Junior that his hook will mess up Martinez. At 10 PM, Junior is ready to train…but his session takes place in his kitchen, without Roach. Alex Ariza, his strength coach, is present. We can mock this setup, and people surely will, if he loses. If he wins, then we will embrace the relaxed attitude. But you don't have to be an old school fart to think that he'd be better served in the gym, with his trainer, rather than “working” in his kitchen. “I'm ready for this fight,” Junior insists.
Next, we see a fashion designer come to the house to show Sergio some outfits for fight week. He says that he's in the public eye, so he needs to look sharp, and speak well.
Contrasting to Junior's carefree attitude, Martinez arises before dawn to get in road work. Whereas Junior chews cereal in his undies, Martinez is contemplative and philosophical, saying that he won't forget where he came from, because if he does, he is destined to fall back to that place.
My takeaways: As for the pink panties, god bless 'im. You have to respect that element of Junior's personality, that he doesn't care if the world sees him in pink panties.
Also, boxing ain't rock 'n roll. A singer can burn the candle at both ends, sleep all day, get down to business at night, when he is young. But performing on that stage isn't like this stage. A singer can be aided by a TelePrompTer, or a pill or powder or backing musicians, to carry him to the encore. Chavez will be alone in the ring come Saturday, and if he has been slacking in training, he will get rocked.
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Gene Hackman’s Involvement in Boxing Went Deeper than that of a Casual Fan
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Gene Hackman’s Involvement in Boxing Went Deeper than that of a Casual Fan
“Of all the celebrities I’ve met, he’s probably my favorite. He’s just an average guy.” So said Michael Nunn during his heyday as a world middleweight champion. It was an observation echoed by Nunn’s trainer Joe Goossen. “He’s not really what you would expect a superstar actor to be,” said Goossen. “He doesn’t think he’s a star. He thinks he’s just an actor.”
They were talking about Academy Award winning actor Gene Hackman who was found dead in his sprawling Santa Fe, New Mexico, home yesterday (Feb. 26) along with his wife of 34 years, the classical pianist Betsy Arakawa, and one of their two German shepherds. Hackman was 95 years old. No foul play is suspected.
People forget how good Michael Nunn was in his prime. During his 27-month reign as the IBF world middleweight champion, which began in July of 1988 with a seventh-round stoppage of former Olympic gold medalist Frank Tate, Nunn defeated Juan Domingo Roldan, Sumbu Kalambay, Iran Barkley, Marlon Starling, and Donald Curry. His 88-second blast-out of Kalambay was named The Ring magazine’s Knockout of the Year and he was at or near the top of everyone’s Pound-for-Pound list.
Michael Nunn was the jewel of the Ten Goose stable until he pulled up stakes and left one day, returning to Davenport, Iowa, the blue-collar Mississippi River town where he was raised by a single mother in the city’s poorest neighborhood. The name Ten Goose referred to the siblings, the 10 children – eight boys and two girls — of Al and Anna May Goossen. A former Los Angeles police detective who found time to helm the Sherman Oaks (CA) Little League program, Al encouraged his sons to get involved in sports. They all excelled on local sandlots, and three found their way into boxing; Dan as a promoter, Joe as a trainer and a TV boxing pundit, and Patrick as a fighter – he lost to Hector Camacho and Roberto Duran when both were well past their primes and left the sport with a 19-3 record.
Gene Hackman, a regular at the monthly Ten Goose cards at the Reseda Country Club when he wasn’t off somewhere on a movie shoot, became something of a surrogate brother to the Goossen clan. When a Ten Goose fighter such as Michael Nunn or one of the Ruelas brothers was fighting out of town, Hackman would be there if he could fit it into his schedule.
Before making his mark on the big screen, Hackman, a former U.S. Marine, appeared in numerous TV series and on Broadway. Nominated for five Academy Awards, he won Best Actor as “Popeye” Doyle in the “French Connection” (1971) and Best Supporting Actor for his role as the evil Sheriff in the Clint Eastwood Western “Unforgiven.”
“The French Connection,” which also won Best Picture, has the most spectacular chase scene in any movie, a chase between a car, commandeered by “Popeye,” and an elevated subway train in Brooklyn. Hackman’s other credits are too numerous to list, but a personal favorite is “Scarecrow” (1972) where Hackman plays a vagabond recently released from prison, opposite Al Pacino.
Both the late Dan Goossen and Joe Goossen served as technical consultants for several of Gene Hackman’s movies, notably “Split Decisions” (1988). One of Hackman’s lesser films, “Split Decisions,” co-starring Jennifer Beals, is part sports film and part crime drama. Hackman plays a boxing trainer named Danny McGuin.
Another Goossen brother, the late Greg Goossen, served as a stunt double on several of Hackman’s movies and had small speaking roles in 15 Hackman movies. Greg made it to the Major Leagues as a catcher, appearing in 193 games across parts of six seasons, mostly as a back-up with the sorry New York Mets.
Postscript:
Michael Nunn’s title reign ended with a thud on May 10, 1991, when he was stopped in the 11th-round by James Toney. Nunn’s corner, which included Angelo Dundee, threw in the towel after Nunn pulled himself upright on shaky legs after being decked with a thunderous left hook. Nunn, 36-0 heading in, was ahead on the scorecards by margins of 8, 6, and 4 points before the roof fell in on him. Although the 22-year-old Toney also came in undefeated and would go on to carve out a Hall of Fame career, this was a huge upset.
Nunn went on to capture the lineal super middleweight title before leaving the sport with a record of 58-4 (33 KOs). In his final stab at a world title, he lost a split decision to Graciano Rocchigiani in Berlin in a bout for the vacant WBA light heavyweight title, a fight that would be shrouded in controversy, not because it was a terrible decision but because Rocchigiani’s corner was allegedly informed of the score after each round. By then, Michael and Joe Goossen were back together.
The streets from which Michael Nunn escaped eventually reeled him back in. On August 6, 2002, eight months after his final fight, Nunn was arrested by an undercover FBI agent at a Davenport motel. Charged with purchasing cocaine with intent to distribute, he was sentenced to 24 ½ years. The sentence was longer than what prosecutors had recommended. Witnesses testified that Nunn was involved in the drug trade as far back as 1993 and it mattered that Nunn had previous arrests in Davenport for battery on police officers.
Nunn was released in 2019.
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Greg Haugen (1960-2025) was Tougher than the Toughest Tijuana Taxi Driver
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Many years ago, this reporter overhead ring announcer Chuck Hull gushing over a young boxer who was fairly new to the professional game. “This kid,” he said, referencing Greg Haugen, “is another Gene Fullmer.”
Hull, who would be inducted posthumously into the International Boxing Hall of Fame, was very familiar with Fullmer, a boxer he greatly admired. The ring announcer had worked two of Fullmer’s title fights, Gene’s 15-round decision over Sugar Ray Robinson in March of 1961 and his 10th-round stoppage of Benny “Kid” Paret later that year.
There was a stylistic similarity between Haugen and Fullmer, but the comparison went beyond that. When the cognoscenti in New York got their first look at Gene Fullmer, they dismissed him as just another good club fighter. It was preposterous to think that one day he would defeat the great Sugar Ray Robinson, and never mind that Sugar Ray’s best days were behind him. (Fullmer and Robinson fought three times. The middle fight was a 15-round draw. Robinson won the first encounter with a vicious one-punch knockout.)
Likewise, even after recording three consecutive upsets in 10-rounders at the Showboat in Las Vegas, Greg Haugen was considered nothing more than a good club fighter. He had a wealth of grit, one could see, but in the eyes of the so-called experts, he was too one-dimensional. It was far-fetched to think that one day he would defeat an opponent as slick as Hector Camacho, but we are getting ahead of ourselves.
Greg Haugen, who passed away last Saturday (Feb. 22) at age 64 in a Seattle-area hospice after a three-year battle with renal cancer, entered the pro ranks after winning Tough Man competitions in Alaska. A native of Auburn, Washington, his first documented fight was in Anchorage. Each of his first five fights was slated for 10 rounds.
Those three upsets were forged against Freddie Roach, Chris Calvin, and Charlie “White Lightning” Brown. Two more fights at the Showboat would follow preceding a date with IBF 135-pound champion Jimmy Paul at the Caesars Palace Sports Pavilion. A protégé of Emanuel Steward, Paul was a product of Detroit’s fabled Kronk Gym.
Haugen was one of the first boxers to cultivate a cult following on ESPN. This owed partly to his attractive young wife and their two daughters, adorable little girls, who appeared on camera a lot as they cheered him on from their ringside seats. That marriage was crumbling when Haugen caught up with Jimmy Paul, but Greg overcame the distraction and captured the title with a hard-earned, 15-round majority decision. According to an Associated Press report, Haugen supplemented his $50,000 purse by getting a $2,000 advance and betting on himself at 4/1 odds.
Haugen lost the title and suffered his first defeat in his first title defense, a 15-rounder with Vinny Pazienza before a rabid pro-Pazienza crowd in Providence, Rhode Island. The “Pazmanian Devil” won five of the last six rounds on all three scorecards to win a unanimous decision, but ended the battle with his face all marked-up. “Many ringside observers, including the majority of out-of-town press, had Haugen the winner,” wrote Boston Globe boxing columnist Ron Borges.
They fought twice more. Haugen recaptured the belt with a wide 15-round decision in the rematch in Atlantic City and Pazienza emerged victorious in the rubber match, winning a 10-round decision. It was a great rivalry. Aggregating the scorecards after 40 bruising rounds, Haugen nipped it 1141-1136.
Between his second and third meetings with Pazienza, Haugen was outclassed by defensive wizard Pernell Whitaker on Whitaker’s turf in Virginia, but Greg’s days as a world title-holder were not over yet.
On Feb. 23, 1991, fighting at 140 pounds, his more natural weight, Haugen became the first man to defeat Hector Camacho, scoring a split decision over the 38-0 Bronx Puerto Rican who was defending his WBO belt. The match at Caesars Palace would have ended in a draw if not for the fact that referee Carlos Padilla docked Camacho a point for refusing to touch gloves at the start of the final round.
For Haugen, a noted spoiler, it was the biggest upset of his career. In the sports books around town, Camacho was as high as a 10-1 favorite.
The rematch in Reno followed a similar tack; it was a very close fight, but Camacho won a split decision and Haugen’s third world title reign, like his first, ended in his first defense.
Haugen returned to Reno the next year where he ended the career of Ray “Boom Boom” Mancini, stopping the former lightweight title-holder and future Hall of Famer in the seventh frame. And then, after defeating two fourth-rate opponents, he was thrust into the fight for which he is best remembered.
Greg Haugen vs. Julio Cesar Chavez at Mexico City’s Azteca Stadium wasn’t a great fight, but it was a great spectacle. The announced attendance, 132,247, broke the record set in 1926 when 120,557 jammed Philadelphia’s Sesquicentennial Stadium for the first meeting between Jack Dempsey and Gene Tunney.
Those that were there will never forget it. Ring announcer Jimmy Lennon Jr recalled that there were little fires up in the far reaches of the mammoth stadium where people were cooking the food they had brought. “I remember thinking that this was more of a mass celebration than just a sporting event,” reminisced Lennon Jr who compared the event to Woodstock in a conversation with Bernard Fernandez for a story that ran on these pages.
Haugen goosed the gate by saying that Chavez had built his record, reportedly 84-0, on the backs of “Tijuana taxi drivers that my mom could whip.” Chavez took it personally and, to the great jubilation of the great multitude, he punished the American before taking him out in the fifth round.
Other boxers since then, lacking Haugen’s originality, have also demeaned their opponent’s conglomeration of former opponents as a bunch of Tijuana taxi drivers. The term seems to have supplanted “tomato cans” as a term of derision. So, Greg Haugen’s legacy extends beyond what he accomplished in the ring. He left an acorn in the storehouse of American slang.
After being manhandled by Julio Cesar Chavez, Haugen sheepishly said, “They must have been very tough taxi drivers.” He would have 15 more fights before leaving the sport in 1999 with a record of 39-10-2 with 19 KOs. In retirement, he trained a few boxers but couldn’t keep at it after suffering nerve damage in his left arm working the pads with a heavyweight.
There were undoubtedly some very tough guys in the ranks of Tijuana taxi drivers, but in a conventional boxing match, Greg Haugen would have likely whipped them all. He was nowhere as great as the stupefyingly sappy post-mortem tribute that ran in a small Washington paper, but he was tough as nails.
Greg Haugen is survived by four children – two daughters and two sons — and five grandchildren. Speaking to Kevin Iole, his daughter Cassandra Haugen said, “He was a good man with a huge heart. He came from nowhere and made himself into a champion, but he was always a kind-hearted man and just the best Dad.”
We here at TSS send our condolences to his loved ones. May he rest in peace.
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Nakatani, Japan’s Other Superstar, Blows Away Cuellar in the Third Frame
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WBO world bantamweight champion Junto Nakatani continued his steady advance toward a mega-fight with countryman Naoya Inoue at Ariake Arena in Tokyo tonight with a third-round stoppage of David Cuellar.
After two nondescript rounds, the 27-year-old, five-foot-eight southpaw stepped on the gas and scored two knockdowns before Canadian referee Michael Griffin waived it off. The first knockdown was the result of combination of body punches. As soon as Cuellar got to his feet, Nakatani was all over him. Another combination, this time upstairs, knocked Cuellar on his rump. Looking very discouraged, he made a half-hearted attempt to beat the count and almost made it, not that it would have mattered as he was a cooked goose. The official time was 3:04 of round three.
Nakatani (30-0, 23 KOs) was making his third title defense. He trains in LA with TSS 2024 Trainer of the Year Rudy Hernandez. It was the first pro loss for Cuellar (28-1) who hails from the Mexican city of Queretaro and was making his first start outside his native country.
Nakatani has indicated an interest in unifying the belt which potentially portends three more domestic fights as all four pieces of the 118-pound title are currently in the hands of Japanese boxers. “Bam” Rodriguez and former pound-for-pound star “Chocolatito” Gonzalez sit a division below him and may also be in his future, but the big money is in a showdown with Inoue, the undisputed 122-pound champion. That match-up, when it transpires, will be the first all-Japanese fight to arouse the interest of casual boxing fans around the world.
Other Bouts of Note
Super bantamweight Tenshin Nasukawa took a massive step up in class and was successful, scoring a unanimous 10-round decision over Jason Moloney. The scores were 98-92 and 97-93 twice.
The 26-year-old southpaw has made great gains since his embarrassing loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr on New Year’s Eve of 2018. In that match, the baby-faced Nasukawa failed to survive the opening round and left the ring crying. Heading in to that match, framed as a 3-round exhibition, Tenshin was reportedly 46-0 as a kickboxer and rated in some quarters as the best kickboxer of all time.
After only five pro fights compressed into 30 rounds, the WBA saw fit to rank Nasukawa at #2. He could have embarrassed the organization (check that; the WBA has no shame) by getting his butt kicked by Moloney, a former world title-holder, but Nasakawa (6-0, 2 KOs) rose to the occasion and scored his best win to date. A 34-year-old Aussie, Moloney declined to 27-4.
The 12-round contest between bantamweights Seiya Tsutsumi and Daigo Higa was a spirited contest that ended in a draw. The scores were 114-114 across the board.
The 29-year-old Tsutsumi (12-0-3) was making the first defense of the WBA title he won with a 12-round decision over Takuma Inoue (Naoya’s brother). Higa, also 29 and now 21-3-2, was a former WBC flyweight titlist.
Tsutsumi had an uphill battle after suffering a bad gash on his forehead from an accidental clash of heads in the fourth round. The hill got steeper after Higa put him on the canvas with a left hook in round nine. But Tsutsumi responded with a knockdown of his own in that same round and finished strong, seemingly doing enough to retain his title.
This was their second meeting. Their first encounter in October of 2020, a 10-rounder on a club show at historic Korakuen Hall, also ended in a draw.
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