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Parting Ways
By Steve Kim
What had been a hushed whisper, was made loud and
clear today. Jack Mosley, would no longer be training
his son, Shane. Ending a highly successful run that
spanned over two decades, that includes a decorated
amateur ledger and a professional career that is still
in progress that has seen 'Sugar' Shane win
championships in three weight classes.
By any standard, it was a highly successful team. Both
father and son should one day look back on this union
with good feelings. But as the father/trainer stumbled
in the corner during his son's decisive 12-round loss
to Winky Wright last weekend, it was clear, they had
gone a long way together, but it's as far as they
could go.
The names I'm hearing that are being considered to
take over the training duties are Joe Goossen, Freddie
Roach and John David Jackson. The first two, are
highly respected veterans of the trade, Jackson, is a
rising up-and-comer, who's work with Mosley in 2000,
was instrumental in his first( and much more
definitive) win over Oscar De La Hoya at the Staples
Center in Los Angeles.
All three would be good choices, the question would be
though, is it too late? Mosley is already 42 fights
into his professional career and is 32 years old.
Maybe, he is, what he's destined to be. On top of that
were the hundreds of amateur fights that have added
mileage to his odometer and the thousands of rounds of
sparring that he has engaged in over the years.
Physically, he looks fine- with or without the help of
BALCO- but maybe he's like that car who's paint job
still looks new but the engine still has over 500,000
miles on it.
But regardless, the time is right for a change. The
reality is, Jack, like most fathers who train their
sons, are limited, for several reasons.
One of them in my opinion is that most fathers,
outside of training their own sons, really don't have
that much experience training fighters as a whole.
Think about it, of all the fathers that have trained
their sons, how many of them outside of Tony Ayala Sr.
and Felix Trinidad Sr. have really had any success
outside their own gene pool?
Mosley, in the past had the opportunity to work with
other fighters, most notably, heavyweight Clifford
Etienne, with very limited success. Fathers, it seems,
are only as good as their sons. If their sons are
blue-chippers, they'll look very good for a period of
time.
But here's the flipside, if their sons are premium
fighters, the fathers are unaccustomed to dealing with
adversity like other trainers who have fighters that
don't always win or have it their way all the time.
This was shown during Mosley's first loss to Vernon
Forrest in January of 2002, when the elder Mosley
seemed to freeze at the sight of his son really being
in trouble for the first time in his career. Other
trainers, have been there and done that.
When the tide turned quickly for Wright, the scene was
repeated again. Mosley, didn't seem to offer much in
terms of constructive instructions and even worse,
seemed to have a poor grasp of even the most
elementary of tasks like knowing what round it was.
Hey, anyone can look like Angelo Dundee if they have
Muhammad Ali or Sugar Ray Leonard in the corner. Give
me the experienced, steady hand that knows how to
right the ship in rough waters. And speaking of the
great Dundee, remember his words to Leonard in the
late rounds against Hearns in 1981?
" You're blowing it kid, you're blowing it," he would
tell a struggling Leonard in the late rounds."
Now, was that the only reason why Leonard was able to
turn the tide against 'the Hit Man' on that warm
September night? Of course not, Leonard was special,
he did those types of things often. But it was
Dundee's ability to see things the way they were and
have the fortitude to tell his fighter something he
may not have wanted to hear, that was invaluable.
Leonard was a Secretariat, but even a great
thoroughbred needs an able jockey.
But perhaps Mosley, like most fathers that work their
sons corner, didn't have the ability to tell his son
the truth or perhaps even worse, have such a warped
and prejudiced view to even know that they were in
peril. The same love that drives them, is the same
emotion that can keep someone from seeing things the
way they really are.
Now, Mosley comes into the twilight of his career
with another set of eyes overseeing things. For his
sake, you hope that this change didn't come too late.
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Angie And Goody...23 Years Later
Twenty three years later after they seconded Marvin Hagler and Ray Leonard in Las Vegas, Goody Petronelli and Angelo Dundee crossed paths again. This time, it was at Foxwoods. Photo/friend of TSS "The Iceman" John Scully reports there were only pleasantries exchanged. Goody didn't debate the split decision victory enjoyed by Leonard, which to this day Hagler disputes.
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