Scott Harrison is a small man with big plans. He plans to rule the talent rich
featherweight division before too many more suns set on his hometown of Cambuslang,
Scotland.
Cambuslang is on the outskirts of Glasgow, a city with a reputation through
the years of producing small men with muscular aggression disproportionate to
their physical purchase. Like Scotland's first world champion -- the great Benny
Lynch -- Scott Harrison is steeped in this tradition.
But with Marco Antonio Barrera, Erik Morales and Juan Manuel Marquez all hovering
around the featherweight limit, Harrison has a big mountain to climb. Don't,
though, tell this to Harrison.
He routinely endures a punishing pre-fight training camp in the searing heat
of Spain, including regular training runs up the side of a mountain. In Harrison’s'
mind, despite their undoubted quality, the Mexican trio are merely another obstacle
which will melt away under the relentless heat of his attack when the time is
right.
This weekend Harrison meets Manuel Medina in Scotland on a card which, unfortunately,
will not be shown on US TV. Showtime declined to pick it up. Harrison has vowed
to make Showtime regret that decision, and he does not appear a man to be taken
lightly.
Adding even more intrigue to the featherweight picture, this week also saw
the announcement that Juan Manuel Marquez will meet Derrick Gainer on August
16 on an HBO After Dark Card. At present, Gainer rounds out the top four in
the featherweight division, along with the three Mexicans. If Harrison is able
to take out Medina, exactly which road leads to the top may become clearer for
the Scotsman after August 16. First, however, Scott Harrison must concern himself
with Manuel Medina.
Medina is a volume puncher with an elusive and often awkward style. Just ask
Johnny Tapia. Though Tapia was awarded a decision over Medina, it was fight
many thought Medina won. Medina stayed away from Tapia while relentlessly peppering
him with shot after shot. Though Medina was throwing mostly arm punches, there
can be little doubt his style caused the savvy Tapia fits.
Saturday night Medina has promised to shatter Harrison like a taco shell. More
recently, however, it was Medina himself who was broken down and floored by
countryman Juan Manuel Marquez. Marquez impressively stopped Medina in the seventh
round, Marquez underlining his own status as one of boxing’s rising talents.
Come Saturday night Harrison will no doubt be trying to better Marquez in hopes
of making a statement to the boxing public. Big fights lie just over the horizon
for Harrison, with Golden Boy promotions currently considering Harrison as an
opponent in the near future for featherweight king, Marco Antonio Barrera.
If his last fight is anything to go by, Harrison will look to break Medina
down with a style built on white hot aggression. Though not known as a single
punch knockout artist, Harrison is exceptionally strong for a featherweight
and is bent on ceaselessly punishing opponents a round at a time until they
submit to his will.
In his last outing Harrison gave Wayne McCullough a remorseless beating over
12 rounds which left many asking serious questions about McCullough’s
corner, such was the violence of Harrison’s performance.
The Irishman, who has never been stopped, later admitted that fighting Harrison
was like fighting a true welterweight. McCullough was simply overwhelmed by
Harrison’s bludgeoning strength. This is the same McCullough who in defeat
still put up good showings against both Eric Morales and Naseem Hamed. McCullough,
however, simply had no answers to the questions being asked of him by the Scotsman’s
furious attack.
It is the same approach that Harrison will bring into the ring with him on
Saturday night. According to Harrison, there will be no surprises in this regard.
He will not deviate from what has made him successful.
For Medina’s part, he has suggested that his experience and ring generalship
will nullify the straight ahead approach of the predictable Harrison. Harrison
himself has stated that it is one thing to know what is coming, but quite another
to nullify it. He may have a point.
Harrison may just be the type of single minded fighter who can impose his will
onto superior technicians. And Harrison, who appears to be improving with every
performance, still sees himself as a work in progress. His desire to keep learning
and to improve technically will no doubt be integral if and when he takes the
step up into rarified competition against the likes of Marco Antonio Barrera.
Harrison dreams of one day facing Barrera in front of 50,000 compatriots at
Scotland’s national stadium, Hampden Park. He dreams of resuscitating
the old ‘Hampden Roar’, the crowd roar which once upon a time provided
Scotland’s now fledgling national soccer team with the proverbial extra
man.
For now, though, Harrison must content himself with focusing on Medina. The
immensely experienced Mexican, who turned pro at 15, will provide an interesting
test for Harrison. Despite the Mexican’s bravado this past week, Medina’s
career is surely now on the downward arc.
A motivated Harrison should be able take care of the Medina comfortably. If
Harrison does not stop Medina outright, he should at least have the Mexican
reconsidering the appropriateness of his taco shell remark before the night
is out.
In Harrison’s mind, Medina is only one more stop along the way on the
road to the top. After Medina is dispatched, Harrison will go home and plot
the next step of the journey.
In Harrison’s new house in Cambuslang -- only yards away from the housing
scheme he grew up in -- a massive painting of Benny Lynch, as big as the man
himself, hangs. It is somehow appropriate that the fighter from Cambuslang will
continue his journey to become one of Scotland’s greatest boxers under
the steely gaze of the little man from Glasgow.
Perhaps one day the names Scott Harrison and Benny Lynch will stand side by
side in boxing lore. For now, it is merely a dream inside the head of the man
from Cambuslang. Of course, it never hurts to plan ahead.