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“The Domino Diaries” Proves Great Boxing Writing Isn’t a Thing of the Past

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People lament that this is no Golden Age of boxing writing. Hogwash, I say.

Ok, maybe not Gold, but Silver perhaps. Some of the stuff on the Net doesn’t get love because we are a more fringe sport than back in the day. But the cerebral treatments of the sweet science from mere “bloggers” is a head above most of the uninspired stuff you used to see in big city dailies. And you also see some rock-solid journalism and wordsmithery out there, if you know where to look. I recommend writer Brin-Jonathan Butler; principled, intelligent, and can collect big picture thoughts and philosophy and render it accessible. He has a new book out, “The Domino Diaries,” which I asked him about.

What brought you to cover boxing so much? Why boxing?

When I was 11 ran into an incident with bullying that turned into a swarming that drastically impacted my life. I was afraid to leave my front door for the next three years. By accident I caught an interview with Mike Tyson talking about his history with bullying and how it traumatized and tormented him and humiliation defined much of his childhood. Boxing was his way out. At that point I knew nothing about boxing but Mike Tyson was obviously one of the most nightmarishly intimidating figures in the world. It turned out he’d created that image as a construct on the basis of what a world class victim he’d been as a kid. After watching that interview, the next day I went to two places I’d never been before on my own: a boxing gym and a library. Both of these places inexorably changed and saved my life. The courage and generosity of boxers as a group is something that marked me for life. That initial admiration I felt for them only increased as I got more and more access to understanding them both as an amateur boxer and later on interviewing so many luminaries in the sport: Mike Tyson, George Foreman, Teofilo Stevenson, Felix Savon, and Guillermo Rigondeaux and many others. Incredible people doing things I never cease to marvel at.

Why Cuba…what about it lured you?

Cuba had many of the best boxers in the world turning down millions to leave and it had Ernest Hemingway for the last 20 years of his life along with the highest literacy rate in the world to appreciate my other passion besides boxing: literature. It was an all-you-can-eat buffet what I’m most gluttonous for. Also, I think a lot of writers feel like advocates for the underdog in a fight. Cuba picked a fight with the most powerful nation on earth and, somehow, managed to keep going for well over 50 years. My own lens into that struggle was meeting many of their finest fighters from the 1970s all the way to young kids who were already national champions tempted by vast fortunes to come to the states. Conflict was all over the place with nearly every life you encounter lived at the extremes. Also, nobody enjoys a party more than Cubans. It’s a place and a people who only get richer the more you try to bring something of value to the equation with understanding and keeping your ears and heart open to really listen. Cuba doesn’t get much of that in our society and I think it’s a shame.

And Cuba now being opened up…will it improve things for them, or screw em up, make em more like us, in a bad way? Will it be no longer true that “every Cuban is a good mechanic?”

Where the Bay of Pigs failed to topple the government, tourism may prove to be the fatal invasion at least in terms of toppling how the society functioned. All Cubans want change, but tourism is always a mixed blessing. Where does the money go? It helps many and divides a great deal for everyone else. I think on the whole, given what my friends back on the island are telling me, the divide is growing between have and have nots and it’s made the island for many Cubans a less hospitable place to remain. Then again, I’m confident Havana couldn’t become anything else even if it wanted to. From 1492 until Fidel took power, there wasn’t a single Cuban steering the ship. They’ve struggled through some inhumanly tough times since then but I’ve never met a more courageous, proud, decent people than them. So I’m very hopeful they can find their own way with the changes that are so desperately yearned for. But will it be easy? Not a chance.

Rigo…has America corrupted him…too many whisperers in ears of promises of more and better?

Rigondeaux was the saddest face I ever encountered in Cuba and it looked even worse when I met up with him in the United States. He’d been disowned by his father and his mother had died back home. He was forbidden to return for her funeral. He’d also left behind a wife and two children. I wondered how much money would it take to offset the searing agony of what was required of him to just step foot on American soil after what he described as the most traumatic experience of his life traveling in a smuggler’s boat at gun point. Cubans are the most expensive human cargo on earth. One of the reasons I sought to tell his story was the fact that slaves were first brought to Cuba in 1520 and, even today, human beings are bought and sold on the marketplace for top dollar when they flee to the United States. Guillermo Rigondeaux, along with tens of thousands of other men, women, and children each year, had to endure grotesque torment no people should ever have to endure. The decision these Cubans make is the real villain and I place the blame on policies on both sides of the 90 miles separating Cuba and the US.Rigo gets a fair bit of criticism in the media for a being a safety-first fighter in the ring… this man risked his life and left behind everything he ever cared about just to have a chance to step inside a ring. And there’s nothing unique about his dynamic compared to all the other Cubans who left the island to gain opportunity in the US.

Have any of your takeaways of your time there changed since you finished the book? What do you want, ideally, for the reader to take from your fine book?

My biggest takeaway from arriving in Cuba was how nothing I’d read prepared me for the reality of what I encountered. That made me question a lot about where I come from and our values feeling threatened by Cuban society. If money isn’t the bottomline to fulfillment and happiness and success human beings have to calibrate those things in other ways that I believe are vital and we could learn something from. Family, community, compassion, decency where things I found in incredible abundance in Cuba despite enormous hardships. Women felt safe and valued without advertising struggling to make them feel awful and inadequate without consuming some product. I was told to prepare for the poverty of Cuba before I first visited. On a materialist level, that’s absolutely true. If you look in a lot of other ways though, what you discover the poverty we have back home in terms of so many things we’ve lost that don’t make good headlines because they essentially are fine print unless you’re living them. You simply can’t look at the struggle of Cuban boxers without looking at the dignity and courage of all Cubans struggling and it’s one of the most astonishing things I’ve been privileged to witness and share with this book the best I could.”

Here is ordering info on the book:

http://www.amazon.com/The-Domino-Diaries-Champions-Hemingways/dp/1250043700

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The Challenge of Playing Muhammad Ali

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There have been countless dramatizations of Muhammad Ali’s life and more will follow in the years ahead. The most heavily marketed of these so far have been the 1977 movie titled The Greatest starring Ali himself and the 2001 biopic Ali starring Will Smith.

 The Greatest was fictionalized. Its saving grace apart from Ali’s presence on screen was the song “The Greatest Love of All” which was written for the film and later popularized by Whitney Houston. Beyond that, the movie was mediocre. “Of all our sports heroes,” Frank Deford wrote, “Ali needs least to be sanitized. But The Greatest is just a big vapid valentine. It took a dive.”

The 2001 film was equally bland but without the saving grace of Ali on camera. “I hated that film,” Spike Lee said. “It wasn’t Ali.” Jerry Izenberg was in accord, complaining, “Will Smith playing Ali was an impersonation, not a performance.”

The latest entry in the Ali registry is a play running this week off-Broadway at the AMT Theater (354 West 45th Street) in Manhattan.

The One: The Life of Muhammad Ali was written by David Serero, who has produced and directed the show in addition to playing the role of Angelo Dundee in the three-man drama. Serero, age 43, was born in Paris, is of Moroccan-French-Jewish heritage, and has excelled professionally as an opera singer (baritone) and actor (stage and screen).

Let’s get the negatives out of the way first. The play is flawed. There are glaring factual inaccuracies in the script that add nothing to the dramatic arc and detract from its credibility.

On the plus side; Zack Bazile (pictured) is exceptionally good as Ali. And Serero (wearing his director’s hat) brings the most out of him.

Growing up, Bazile (now 28) excelled in multiple sports. In 2018, while attending Ohio State, he won the NCAA Long Jump Championship and was named Big Ten Field Athlete of the Year. He also dabbled in boxing, competed in two amateur fights in 2022, and won both by knockout. He began acting three years ago.

Serero received roughly one thousand resumes when he published notices for a casting call in search of an actor to play Ali. One-hundred-twenty respondents were invited to audition.

“I had people who looked like Ali and were accomplished actors,” Serero recalls. “But when they were in the room, I didn’t feel Ali in front of me. You have to remember; we’re dealing with someone who really existed and there’s video of him, so it’s not like asking someone to play George Washington.”

And Ali was Ali. That’s a hard act to follow.

Bazile is a near-perfect fit. At 6-feet-2-inches tall, 195 pounds, he conveys Ali’s physicality. His body is sculpted in the manner of the young Ali. He moves like an athlete because he is an athlete. His face resembles Ali’s and his expressions are very much on the mark in the way he transmits emotion to the audience. He uses his voice the way Ali did. He moves his eyes the way Ali did. He has THE LOOK.

Zack was born the year that Ali lit the Olympic flame in Atlanta, so he has no first-hand memory of the young Ali who set the world ablaze. “But as an actor,” he says, “I’m representing Ali. That’s a responsibility I take very seriously. Everyone has an essence about them. I had to find the right balance – not too over the top – and capture that.”

Sitting in the audience watching Bazile, I felt at times as though it was Ali onstage in front of me. Zack has the pre-exile Ali down perfectly. The magic dissipates a bit as the stage Ali grows older. Bazile still has to add the weight of aging to his craft. But I couldn’t help but think, “Muhammad would have loved watching Zack play him.”

****

Twenty-four hours after the premiere of The One, David Serero left the stage for a night to shine brightly in a real boxing ring., The occasion was the tenth fight card that Larry Goldberg has promoted at Sony Hall in New York, a run that began with Goldberg’s first pro show ever on October 13, 2022.

Most of the fights on the six-bout card played out as expected. But two were tougher for the favorites than anticipated. Jacob Riley Solis was held to a draw by Daniel Jefferson. And Andy Dominguez was knocked down hard by Angel Meza in round three before rallying to claim a one-point split-decision triumph.

Serero sang the national anthem between the second and third fights and stilled the crowd with a virtuoso performance. Fans at sports events are usually restless during the singing of the anthem. This time, the crowd was captivated. Serero turned a flat ritual into an inspirational moment. People were turning to each other and saying “Wow!”

****

The unexpected happened in Tijuana last Saturday night when 25-to-1 underdog Bruno Surace climbed off the canvas after a second-round knockdown to score a shocking, one-punch, sixth-round stoppage of Jaime Munguia. There has been a lot of commentary since then about what happened that night. The best explanation I’ve heard came from a fan named John who wrote, “The fight was not over in the second round although Munguia thought it was because, if he caught him once, he would naturally catch him again. Plus he looked at this little four KO guy [Surace had scored 4 knockouts in 27 fights] the way all the fans did, like he had no punch. That is what a fan can afford to do. But a fighter should know better. The ref reminds you, ‘Protect yourself at all times.’ Somebody forgot that.”

photo (c) David Serero

Thomas Hauser’s email address is thomashauserwriter@gmail.com. His most recent book – MY MOTHER and me – is a personal memoir available at Amazon.com. https://www.amazon.com/My-Mother-Me-Thomas-Hauser/dp/1955836191/ref=sr_1_1?crid=5C0TEN4M9ZAH&keywords=thomas+hauser&qid=1707662513&sprefix=thomas+hauser%2Caps%2C80&sr=8-1

            In 2004, the Boxing Writers Association of America honored Hauser with the Nat Fleischer Award for career excellence in boxing journalism. In 2019, Hauser was selected for boxing’s highest honor – induction into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

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L.A.’s Rudy Hernandez is the 2024 TSS Trainer of the Year

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L.A.’s Rudy Hernandez is the 2024 TSS Trainer of the Year

If asked to name a prominent boxing trainer who operates out of a gym in Los Angeles, the name Freddie Roach would jump immediately to mind. Best known for his work with Manny Pacquaio, Roach has been named the Trainer of the Year by the Boxing Writers Association of America a record seven times.

A mere seven miles from Roach’s iconic Wild Card Gym is the gym that Rudy Hernandez now calls home. Situated in the Little Tokyo neighborhood in downtown Los Angeles, the L.A. Boxing Gym – a relatively new addition to the SoCal boxing landscape — is as nondescript as its name. From the outside, one would not guess that two reigning world champions, Junto Nakatani and Anthony Olascuaga, were forged there.

As Freddie Roach will be forever linked with Manny Pacquiao, so will Rudy Hernandez be linked with Nakatani. The Japanese boxer was only 15 years old when his parents packed him off to the United States to be tutored by Hernandez. With Hernandez in his corner, the lanky southpaw won titles at 112 and 115 and currently holds the WBO bantamweight (118) belt. In his last start, he knocked out his Thai opponent, a 77-fight veteran who had never been stopped, advancing his record to 29-0 (22 KOs).

Nakatani’s name now appears on several pound-for-pound lists. A match with Japanese superstar Naoya Inoue is brewing. When that match comes to fruition, it will be the grandest domestic showdown in Japanese boxing history.

“Junto Nakatani is the greatest fighter I’ve ever trained. It’s easy to work with him because even when he came to me at age 15, his focus was only on boxing. It was to be a champion one day and nothing interfered with that dream,” Hernandez told sports journalist Manouk Akopyan writing for Boxing Scene.

Akin to Nakatani, Rudy Hernandez built Anthony Olascuaga from scratch. The LA native was rucked out of obscurity in April of 2023 when Jonathan Gonzalez contracted pneumonia and was forced to withdraw from his date in Tokyo with lineal light flyweight champion Kenshiro Teraji. Olascuaga, with only five pro fights under his belt, filled the breach on 10 days’ notice and although he lost (TKO by 9), he earned kudos for his gritty performance against the man recognized as the best fighter in his weight class.

Two fights later, back in Tokyo, Olascuaga copped the WBO world flyweight title with a third-round stoppage of Riku Kano. His first defense came in October, again in Japan, and Olascuaga retained his belt with a first-round stoppage of the aforementioned Gonzalez. (This bout was originally ruled a no-contest as it ended after Gonzalez suffered a cut from an accidental clash of heads. But the referee ruled that Gonzalez was fit to continue before the Puerto Rican said “no mas,” alleging his vision was impaired, and the WBO upheld a protest from the Olascuaga camp and changed the result to a TKO. Regardless, Rudy Hernandez’s fighter would have kept his title.)

Hernandez, 62, is the brother of the late Genaro “Chicanito” Hernandez. A two-time world title-holder at 130 pounds who fought the likes of Azumah Nelson, Oscar De La Hoya and Floyd Mayweather Jr., Chicanito passed away in 2011, a cancer victim at age 45.

Genaro “Chicanito” Hernandez was one of the most popular fighters in the Hispanic communities of Southern California. Rudy Hernandez, a late bloomer of sorts – at least in terms of public recognition — has kept his brother’s flame alive with own achievements. He is a worthy honoree for the 2024 Trainer of the Year.

Note: This is the first in our series of annual awards. The others will arrive sporadically over the next two weeks.

Photo credit: Steve Kim

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A Shocker in Tijuana: Bruno Surace KOs Jaime Munguia !!

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It was a chilly night in Tijuana when Jaime Munguia entered the ring for his homecoming fight with Bruno Surace. The main event of a Zanfer/Top Rank co-promotion, Munguia vs. Surace was staged in the city’s 30,000-seat soccer stadium a stone’s throw from the U.S. border in the San Diego metroplex.

Surace, a Frenchman, brought a 25-0-2 record and a 22-fight winning streak, but a quick glance at his record showed that he had scant chance of holding his own with the house fighter. Only four of Surace’s 25 wins had come by stoppage and only eight of his wins had come against opponents with winning records. Munguia was making the first start in the city of his birth since February 2022. Surace had never fought outside Europe.

But hold the phone!

After losing every round heading into the sixth, Surace scored the Upset of the Year, ending the contest with a one-punch knockout.

It looked like a short and easy night for Munguia when he knocked Surace down with a left hook in the second stanza. From that point on, the Frenchman fought off his back foot, often with back to the ropes, throwing punches only in spurts. Munguia worked the body well and was seemingly on the way to wearing him down when he was struck by lightning in the form of an overhand right.

Down went Munguia, landing on his back. He struggled to get to his feet, but the referee waived it off a nano-second before reaching “10.” The official time was 2:36 of round six.

Munguia, who was 44-1 heading in with 35 KOs, was as high as a 35/1 favorite. In his only defeat, he had gone the distance with Canelo Alvarez. This was the biggest upset by a French fighter since Rene Jacquot outpointed Donald Curry in 1989 and Jacquot had the advantage of fighting in his homeland.

Co-Main

Mexico City’s Alan Picasso, ranked #1 by the WBC at 122 pounds, scored a third-round stoppage of last-minute sub Yehison Cuello in a scheduled 10-rounder contested at featherweight. Picaso (31-0-1, 17 KOs) is a solid technician. He ended the bout with a left to the rib cage, a punch that weaved around Cuello’s elbow and didn’t appear to be especially hard. The referee stopped his count at “nine” and waived the fight off.

A 29-year-old Colombian who reportedly had been training in Tijuana, the overmatched Cuello slumped to 13-3-1.

Other Bouts of Note

In a ho-hum affair, junior middleweight Jorge Garcia advanced to 32-4 (26) with a 10-round unanimous decision over Uzbekistan’s Kudratillo Abudukakhorov (20-4). The judges had it 97-92 and 99-90 twice. There were no knockdowns, but Garcia had a point deducted in round eight for low blows.

Garcia displayed none of the power that he showed in his most recent fight three months ago in Arizona and when he knocked out his German opponent in 46 seconds. Abudukakhorov, who has competed mostly as a welterweight, came in at 158 1/4 pounds and didn’t look in the best of shape. The Uzbek was purportedly 170-10 as an amateur (4-5 per boxrec).

Super bantamweight Sebastian Hernandez improved to 18-0 (17 KOs) with a seventh-round stoppage of Argentine import Sergio Martin (14-5). The end came at the 2:39 mark of round seven when Martin’s corner threw in the towel. Earlier in the round, Martin lost his mouthpiece and had a point deducted for holding.

Hernandez wasn’t all that impressive considering the high expectations born of his high knockout ratio, but appeared to have injured his right hand during the sixth round.

Photo credit: Mikey Williams / Top Rank

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