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ward


Friday Dec 14, 2007

Ward's rise, fall, and re-emergence are presented.

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The Hard Life and Times of Micky Ward

By Robert Mladinich

It has been rumored that a theatrical movie called “The Fighter” will soon go into pre-production for release in the summer of 2009. 

It will be directed by the brilliant Darren Aronofsky, who also directed the lauded 2000 film “Requiem for a Dream,” and will star Mark Wahlberg as junior welterweight Micky Ward and Brad Pitt as Dickie Eklund, Ward’s troubled half-brother.

It does not appear that the film will be based on the terrific book called “Irish Thunder: The Hard Life & Times of Micky Ward,” which was written by former ESPN anchor Bob Halloran and recently released by The Lyons Press.

It is hard to imagine that the screenwriters could depict Ward’s topsy-turvy life and career any better than Halloran did. 

Growing up in Lowell, Massachusetts, a once lively and robust town that had fallen on extremely hard times by the 1970s, Ward saw many of his friends and family fall prey to the lurid temptations of the streets. 

One of the town’s most prominent victims of the drug scourge was Eklund, a sensational amateur boxer who, in 1978, took a legend-in-the-making named Sugar Ray Leonard the 10 round distance in a pro bout in nearby Boston. 

Ward, who was 12 at the time, worshipped his brother and would eventually be trained by him when he turned professional in 1985. 

Unfortunately, Eklund’s immense natural talent was wasted when he became addicted to crack. Not only was he in and out of trouble with the law, he was one of the “stars” of a 1995 HBO documentary called “High on Crack Street.” 

The hard-hitting but extremely sordid film chronicled the daily lives of several Lowell crack addicts. Eklund immodestly lit up a crack pipe on camera, with the smoke swirling around his head like an ominous halo. 

He smirked at the camera and twitched his eyebrow purposefully, as if gloating about his “good fortune.” 

Although Eklund always had his kid brother’s interest at heart, and was a damn good trainer when he showed up at the gym, he would prove to be a very distractive influence in Ward’s life. 

One night Ward was arrested for interfering with the arrest of Eklund for a relatively minor offense. During the fracas, a policeman cracked Ward on the hand with a nightstick. That injury incurred by Ward would plague him throughout his career.

In the summer of 1996 I met with Ward on the day before he fought a rematch with Louis Veader of Providence at the Foxwoods Resort in Connecticut. The interview had been set up in advance, and Ward was aware that on the same weekend I would also be visiting Eklund at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Plymouth, where he was serving at least eight years for robbery. 

I had a good relationship with Joe Lake, an advisor to Ward, as well as with Ward himself. For some inexplicable reason, however, the gruff and crass Al Valenti, who was Ward’s promoter at the time, didn’t want me speaking to the fighter. He wouldn’t tell me why and responded to all of my inquiries by muttering obscenities.  

The Internet was not yet in existence and the Ward/Eklund article was for “The RING” magazine, which was the most widely read boxing publication around. With Ward on yet another comeback trail, Valenti’s downright nastiness and uncooperativeness was hard to fathom. 

When Ward failed to make weight on his first try, I followed him into the steam room where he obligingly gave me a good interview. 

Over the years Ward had a lot of people around him who seemed to hinder his career more than they helped him. Besides Lake, another stable influence was Mickey O’Keefe, who was then a Lowell police sergeant and the owner of the Lowell Boxing Club. 

He and Ward seemed to be joined at the hip, but their relationship hit rocky waters years later when Sal LoNano took over as Ward’s manager of record. 

Ward finally managed to attain a measure of ring immortality on the basis of his three-fight series against Arturo Gatti. He finally retired in 2003 with a record of 38-13 (27 KOS). 

He is the type of fighter whose legend will only grow larger as more time goes by. He was always a stand-up guy, whether it was in the ring as a boxer, in the streets where, if provoked, he could be a tremendous street fighter, or when dealing with his very large and dysfunctional family. 

During his nearly two-decade boxing career, Ward was betrayed by many people and Halloran’s book is quick to name names and back up those assertions with cold, hard facts.

In a sport that is virtually devoid of happy endings, Ward has somehow managed to come out on top. Despite his breathless battles against Gatti, he seems to have his faculties intact. He bought a house on the good side of town and is living a simple but seemingly happy life. 

Although the social dynamics in Lowell have changed somewhat, he is a local icon for all of the right reasons. He has always been, and continues to be, a guy that you want to root for. 

Not only was he a gladiator in the ring, his loyalty to others, especially Eklund and many people who did not deserve such devotion, is well known in boxing circles. 

If Ward’s story was nothing more than a boxing saga, this book wouldn’t have been written and a movie wouldn’t be in the works. 

But “Irish Thunder” is as much about boxing as it is about family, loyalty, devotion and betrayal set against a backdrop of the world’s two dirtiest businesses: boxing and drugs.

While the book reads like fiction, it is all true. It is hard not to like Ward, but the book will only make you like him more. The book is as compellingly powerful as one of Ward’s vaunted left hooks to the liver. 

Ward was a fighter who was hard to keep down. “Irish Thunder” is a book that is hard to put down. 

It is available at all bookstores and on Amazon.com and BarnesandNoble.com.


Contact Robert Mladinich @ TheSweetScience.com


Paul Taylor:  This is a must read. Micky Ward was one of the great, great action fighters of the 90's, and a partner in history with another immortal, Arturo 'Thunder' Gatti. I know I'll be celebrating when the two of them head to Canastota for enshrinement. These guys are the anti-Floyd, men that gave it their all to please the fans.
Saturday Dec 15, 2007
pete:  Another excellent Mladinich article. Keep them coming. However, watching Mark Wahlberg be Micky Ward will be rough.
Saturday Dec 15, 2007
William Major:  mick is a great guy. it all about loyalty with him. very simple guy who would give you the shirt off his back . im so very happy for him now. he had alot of users around before and has managed to whittle them away .May GOD BLESS him and his brother. and pete,i think walberg would be a good "mick"
Saturday Dec 15, 2007
Anonymous user:  I was never much of a Wahlberg fan earlier on, particularly during the early-mid 1990's. But, I think he's since matured and improved significantly and also think he'll be a good "mick".
Sunday Dec 16, 2007
Dino da Vinci:  I may have a New England bias, but put me down for Wahlberg doing a great job with this part.
Sunday Dec 16, 2007
David Payne:  The film will miss Matt Damon as Eklund. He was pencilled in for the project but has withdrawn hence Pitt's involvement. Presently.
Monday Dec 17, 2007
Rich O'Halloran:  The author of this article might wonder how the screenwriters could do a better job than the author of the book he reviews. Here's how - the screenwriters have the benefit of all of the material collected by Keith Dorrington. Keith saw this story many years ago and was the first person to work with Micky and Dick. Keith's work was the foundation for the movie, and the footage and other material he shot and compiled has been invaluable to the screenwriters.
Monday Dec 17, 2007
Mike McNamara:  Probably the best "character" book on boxing I have ever read. The author did not gloss over negative relationships in Ward's life, nor did he rationalize Ward's losses to unfair decisions. He told it like it was, which makes you appreciate Ward all the more.
Friday Dec 21, 2007
Andy Kokolis:  This move is going to be awesome. It is about time. New England is the boxing capital of the best fighters in noth america.
Tuesday Jan 1, 2007
Andy Kokolis:  I love you USA boxing thank you for making my dreams come true. When everybody was out getting drunk and doing drugs I was in the Somerville Boxing Gym learning and training very hard six days a week in becoming a fighter. Good luck to the USA Boxing Olympic Team Luis Yanez Rau'shee Warren Gary Russell jr Raynell Williams Sadam Ali Javier Molina Demetrius Andrade Shawn Estrada Christopher Downs Deontay Wilder and Michael Hunter. Bring home the GOLD!!
Friday Jan 18, 2008
Kelly Koble:  If anyone knows how to contact Micky Ward, Please let me know. We fought on the Sugar Ray / Haggler ticket. I would like to contact him! Thanks
Tuesday Jul 22, 2008
Anonymous user:  yo kelly try goids gym chelmsford mass
Monday Apr 27, 2009
Name :  While I can appreciate Ward as the boxer of his day, the way that the media, and people who have never met him potray him belies who he really is. I have commented on the youtube comments, as I'm about to do here: Mickey Ward is a brute. I grew up in Lowell, and had my tough times on the streets too. I know what it's all about. One night, Mickey and his band of thugs crashed a private party, chasing everyone out- As we left, never once talking or even knowing Mickey, he and his band grabbed me and threw me backwards over a kitchen table pummeling me. As I stumbled outside, they confronted me, spoiling for a fight. None of us had provoked this, or had talked with them! Mickey sucker-punched me - and as I stood wavering, with them laughing and encouraging him for more, another hapless victim had pulled in to the party and was getting out of his car. They diverted their attention to this poor bastard, and Mickey left me to punch out this other guy who had done nothing wrong....This is the Mickey Ward I know....Where do you think he got "all that mean-street training?!" By picking fights and then duking it out....Nice guy? No. not at all.
Friday May 1, 2009
Rick Fox:  I knew Micky from bar-hopping around Lowell and Dracut over the years, he would show up now and then. He could never remember my real name, but always called me "Mel", because my uncle Mel is a well known boxing trainer in the Merrimack Valley. Mickey was always a gentleman, very soft spoken. Once over a vodka and cranberry he showed me the screws holding his hand together after the "incident". He was confident, and was looking forward to fighting again. I hope the film comes to fruition. Good Luck, Mick! - Rick
Wednesday Jun 24, 2009

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