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| Tapia says after his farewell tour he wants to concentrate on things like being a good father. |
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Tapia Fighting Addiction, Absence Of Cheers
By Phil Woolever
THE FRINGE: Johnny Tapia steps back between the slamming strands of fate Friday evening, to find a place in the negative space, back somewhere between glory and disaster.
As a main event, it could be more of a vanity affair, but Tapia’s raw emotional history as a star boxer keeps his fan base loyal and wishing him well throughout pugilistic highs and lows or self destructive missteps.
“I know I’ve made too many mistakes,” said a progressively stoic Tapia. “I messed myself up but I didn’t care. The thing I regret the most is hurting people I loved that loved me.”
Tapia will be on recently imposed probation when he steps into the ring at the El Paso County Coliseum, after a coke induced coma and subsequent bust. Tapia keeps the chin up.
“The way I feel now is stronger than I’ve felt I years because I’ve been living right, training right, eating right,” claimed Tapia. “Some people are going to be surprised at how much I’ve got left. Not that I’m proud of what happened, but you’ve got to be pretty strong to be pronounced dead and come back. I’ve done it more than once.”
Tapia’s match is a smaller, southwestern version of Oscar de la Hoya’s feel-good fight outside LA the next evening, hundreds of miles across the great divide. But de la Hoya seems a much more probable victor, although it’s been quite a while since Tapia’s latest listed foe was on the winning side of a scorecard.
If the result provides star-crossed hero Tapia the kind of personal fortitude he’ll need to get through the next stages of no loco vida without tumbling back down into a Sisyphus substance stone, that’s justification enough for another “farewell” fight after February 2007’s long goodbye left Tapia unfulfilled.
But after that it gets scary, if reports are true. For the immediate future, Tapia seems to be proposing both the tragic and the absurd.
Tapia says he’s looking toward another tune up type appearance in Colorado, which seems feasible enough.
After that, Tapia proposes that he’ll be ready for a title fight. A legitimate title fight.
Unfortunately, reality insists otherwise. Even worse, the opponent Tapia reportedly mentioned during New Mexico media gatherings was none other than Isreal Vasquez, coming off the epic trilogy against Rafael Marquez.
Vasquez, separated from Tapia by a couple fistic generations, is this year’s Iron Man model of the action standard. That’s as much as Tapia and Vasquez currently have in common, and it’s nowhere near enough of a reason for them to face off.
It’s seems doubtful there’s a realistic scenario where Vasquez would pounce on such a mismatch. We’d set the odds on such a match ever happening as around 50-1.
Marco Antonio Barrera was merciful as could be, and still made Tapia look ancient. That was a hundred years ago.
Tapia will always be proud, brave and willing enough to give his all from the first to last bell. That’s why his fans love him, but it doesn’t make him a legitimate title contender.
Hopefully Tapia hasn’t missed the point he seems to have lost in the past regarding his series of so-called second chances.
When I spoke to Tapia a couple months back he was accompanied by a gentleman named Art Romero, who seemed like the no BS kind of guy Tapia needs for help correcting previous life or freedom threatening failures.
Logic has to make Tapia a considerable candidate to relapse, especially based on previous form. But it doesn’t have to be that way, and Tapia obviously has mental toughness.
Last time the stakes were life and death. You can’t get any higher than that. If Tapia falls for the bottomless chase of that high again, he might just keep falling for good, until the final splat.
That tragedy wouldn’t be the first in his life, but hopefully he’s seen the last of the desperate, doom dominated days.
He may never be able to return to the white hot days in the Pit at the University of New Mexico or fights like against Albuquerque hometown, then international rival Danny Romero in Las Vegas, but at least Tapia was really at the center of that universe.
Tapia always wears his heart on his boxing robe sleeve.
“I’d be dead if it wasn’t for my wife,” said Tapia. “I owe her everything. My life. Sometimes I couldn’t believe that she put up with me. That’s why I’ll always love her.”
“To all my fans, I just want to say thank you and I’m taking it one day at a time. One day at a time. If I can keep doing that I’ll be ok. I’ve still got a little bit of boxing left in me. I’m just trying to get another chance. Again.”
Let’s hope Tapia’s blessings outnumber his curses.
Tapia’s undeniable guts and glory always seemed to be a beautiful mess in a pick’em spread of “Vida Loco” life.
God bless Johnny Tapia, devils and all.
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Robert Curtis:
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This article seems to be written for folks already schooled on both Tapia's career and his history of substance abuse. I'll do some Web research and fill myself in. A coke induced coma must have a lot of story behind it. The man must have some real dark territory inside him and a heck of troubled past. I hope things work out well for him and I wish him peace and continued blessings.
Thursday May 1, 2008
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Radam G:
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Wow! Tapia has lost his good looks. He face is looking aged. Holla!
Thursday May 1, 2008
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rudy:
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It aint time that hurt his looks Radam, all that yayo the man has consumed. Robert, check out the piece HBO Real Sports did on him -- they had two about Johnny's addiction and his very troubled past. He has some serious demons he's been fighting his whole life...in his prime Tapia was an all action warrior and fan favorite, still remember his signature backflip in the ring after his wins. Definitely God Bless Johnny.
Friday May 2, 2008
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Arturo:
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Damn , sad to see the things Tapia has gone through . We don't get to see too many fighters on cable tv like him in his prime.
Friday May 2, 2008
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mr payback:
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i think tapia is one of the more underrated champions of the last decade, he lost 3 years of his prime to a suspention for coke, and also was robbed of the 122 pound title twice by no less than paulie ayala, in his prime form i would have picked him over the current versions of rafael marquez and israel vasquez. Tapia had hands as fast judah or roy jones but was busier and had the best head movement defense in boxing, the only thing he lacked was one punch power, but he was such a vicious body puncher he could still score body punch knockouts. I hope they air some of his older fights on espn classic, this guy was a real treasure.
Friday May 2, 2008
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Big Tom:
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Hey I'm all behind Johnny Tapia. I always says put yourself in their shoe's. I can't imagine what happened to Johnny at such a young age seeing his parent's getting butchered right before his very own eyes. Just imagine that put yourself in Johnny's shoe's. Eight years old. If Johnny goe's on drugs he's earned the right to be cut some slack. I loved to see Johnny Tapia fight. I'm a fan. Johnny was all warrior.
Friday May 2, 2008
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Steve Chavez:
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We haven't seen the last of Johnny Tapia. This dude has heart. No matter all the demons trying to pull him down, he will stomp on their heads and prevail.
Con Ganas Johnny.
Saturday May 3, 2008
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julia morales:
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keep up the good work
Thursday May 22, 2008
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julia morales:
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keep up the good work
Thursday May 22, 2008
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"I Don't Care Who Wins"
"Margarito has never really fought a big name until now. I've always been a fan of Margarito and I'm predicting a knockout win from Margarito this weekend. I just don't think Cotto is powerful enough to knock Margarito out and he'll have to use his skills, he'll frustrate Margarito but Margarito will get to him in the end. I'm going for 10th round TKO. That's my heart. Now my head is saying, Margarito has never fought anyone on the level of Cotto and it might show. We could see a competitive fight but with Cotto clearly winning the rounds for a decision win. It's a hard fight to call but whatever the result it's gonna be an enjoyable fight. I don't care who wins."
--TSS reader Yuvie flips a coin (photo courtesy Chris Farina/Top Rank)
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