The Sweet Science
HOME ABOUT CONTACT
EnglishRussianChineseItalianDeutchFrenchSpanishPortugueseJapaneseKorean
The Sweet Science Boxing
Boxing Podcast Boxing RSS 
duddy


Thursday Oct 1, 2009

Keitt was hurled overboard for a "name" trainer, but the switch didn't go swimmingly. Duddy hopes he can regain some of the magic he and Keitt manufactured.

      Print this article     Email this article

Duddy Benefitting From Return To Mr. Keitt

By George Kimball

So after all that it's back to the old sledgehammer and tires. 

 

At one point in his career the WaMu Theatre might as well have been John Duddy's  house, but since the Irish middleweight last headlined there he has engaged in eight fights for four different promoters,  and changed trainers three times. Thursday, nine days ahead of his return to the scene of his glory days, Duddy presided over a luncheon at a midtown steak house, to which he was accompanied by the trainer who will be in his corner when Duddy faces Jorge (Michi) Munoz on October 10th. 

 

Welcome back, Harry Keitt. 

 

Keitt, who broke Duddy into the pro game six years ago, was unceremoniously tossed overboard after guiding his prize pupil to a 20-0 record.  His replacements (Don Turner for four fights, Patrick Burns for three) did not, as promised, exactly vault the Irishman to a new level. Turner followed Keitt out the gate after Duddy barely survived a majority decision win over Walid Smichet on the Wladimir Klitschko-Sultan Ibragimov undercard early last year, and Burns' exit was prompted by Duddy's first loss, to an Ohio journeyman described by his own trainer as a "B fighter," on a Main Events card in Newark this April.

 

More ominously, no doubt, from the standpoint of Duddy's advisor Craig Hamilton, was that fact that a boxer who had knocked out 16 of the 20 opponents he fought under Keitt had been extended the 10-round distance five times in a row. 

 

So when Duddy, who was married in his native Derry this past summer, returned to the U.S. three weeks ago, pretty much his first stop was a fence-mending session with Keitt.  Since then it's been more or less back to the future time:

 

Here's the sledgehammer, John. You remember where that tire is, don't you? 

 

To bring this thing full circle, Duddy's post-prandial activity yesterday consisted of a sparring session at Gleason's with James Moore, his countryman and onetime Irish Ropes stablemate with whom he used to work pretty much every day.

   

Moore, of course, had cut his ties with Keitt even before Duddy did. In fact, when he faced off with Yuri Foreman in Atlantic City last year, Moore must have been somewhat taken aback when he looked across the ring and saw Keitt in the opposite corner.  

 

A man not given to Schadenfreude, Keitt said yesterday "I know some of the John's old crowd were sitting around hoping he would lose, but I never felt that way. I only wished him the best." 

 

The move back to Keitt was smooth enough on a personal level, but it hasn't exactly been a seamless transition in the gym. When he commenced his work with Duddy in 2003 he was dealing with an amateur straight off the plane. This time around, while Duddy must deal with whatever psychic scars linger from the Billy Lyell fight, while Keitt finds himself trying to polish Duddy back into a semblance of his earlier self. Kite likens it to "restructuring" an old building. 

"He looked like a guy trying to fight with a strait-jacket on. It was like he was all bound up," said Keitt of Duddy's initial sparring sessions.  "He wasn't snapping his punches the way he did before he left, but we've been making him work and you can see improvement every time he spars. He looks more and more like the old John Duddy every day. “

 

Keitt, who had monitored the progress of his onetime star pupil from afar, allowed "it couldn't have been that bad, because he kept winning -- and when he beat Howard Eastman, he beat a pretty good boxer."  

 

Munoz, the opponent on the Juan Manuel Lopez-headlined "Island Warriors" card, is 21-3 but in many ways a prototypical Duddy opponent. Which is to say he's 21-0 in Kansas and Missouri and 0-3 elsewhere. Duddy describes him as "a tough Mexican with a good right hand and a decent left hook who comes right at you" -- in other words, the sort of fighter John Duddy used to lick his chops over. 
 
 

   
 

 

add to Facebook add to Myspace add to Digg add to Mixx add to Linkedin add to Yahoo Buzz


brownsugar:  a very somber tale about another fighter nearing the end of the road,.. good luck to ya Duddy....
Friday Oct 2, 2009 03:32:55 PM
deepwater:  stop drinking and getting sh7tfaced in queens duddy. keep fighting c level fighters and you can sell out the garden a few times before you hang em up. dont fight any champs becouse you will get hurt
Friday Oct 2, 2009 03:34:36 PM
Isaiah:  Duddy better thank everything he can that his fight with Kelly Pavlik didn't ever happen. It would have ended poor John's career. I agree with deepwater and strongly suggest Mr. Duddy just hang around the Madison Square Garden to try and squeeze out a few more paydays. John just doesn't have what it takes to beat someone on Pavlik's caliber
Friday Oct 2, 2009 10:35:17 PM
JohnnyBadAss:  I traveled down to Brooklyn years ago one Thanksgiving weekend and showed Mr. Keitt a punching combination that could bring the title to our lad....I also gave him a copy of my book , "Johnny Bad Ass" by The Big Lefthook that clearly describes the move. He needs to learn to pivot COUNTER clockwise and throw his money puncn, the BIG LEFTHOOK.... If anyone knows John ask him to e-mail me and I'll be once again glad to travel to Gleason's to help....WHY?...The Irish always stick together.
Sunday Oct 4, 2009 08:46:18 PM
mc:  why wont this guy fight ANDY LEE?
Monday Oct 5, 2009 08:26:13 PM
Cool Hand Luke:  John Duddy, a super classy kid. Wish him the best. He works real hard but no trainer in the world is going to help him overcome his mediocre talent. Whatever success he had was due to his Irish skin in an town with a lot of Irish people and very very good and easy matchmaking. The trainers had nothing to do with anything he accomplished.
Tuesday Oct 6, 2009 09:42:14 AM
Johnny Bad Ass:  Fights are won in the corner. A good trainer is worht his weight in gold As for Mr. Keitt, he's a "Stand-up" guy. Just look at how he welcomed John back after such betrayal
Tuesday Oct 6, 2009 05:12:13 PM
Cool Hand Luke:  John Duddy is a great kid but his back is up against the wall and Harry Keit is broke like the rest of the trainers at Gleasons so they are made for each other.
Wednesday Oct 7, 2009 09:48:43 AM
Johnny Bad Ass:  You seem to be a NYC guy....do you know MIke Reila? If so, he should know that counter clockwise move
Wednesday Oct 7, 2009 12:50:05 PM
Boxed-in:  I'd like to see Duddy fight Andy Lee..why isn't it happening?
Tuesday Oct 13, 2009 01:12:17 PM

Name: Email:  (will not be displayed, TSS Privacy, your email is required to autoapprove your comment)

Please be respectful, and do not use foul language in your comment

Discuss this article in the forum

  THESWEETSCIENCE.COM   More from the Top Team of Writers in the Fight Game ...
 
More from this Writer
Columns by George Kimball
 
Recent boxing Columns and News
•  Boxing World Is Disrespecting Mosley by David A. Avila
•  There’s Nothing Magical About Manny Pacquiao’s Improvement: Part 1 by Frank Lotierzo
•  Erik Morales Wants Another Crack At Pacquiao
•  K2 Dynasty: And Now, For the Next Stadium "Superfight" by Phil Woolever
•  Cunningham-Godfrey Fight Postponed by Michael Woods
 
 


TSS Video
Roger and Floyd Mayweather in LA talking about Mosley fight
  
Roy Jones and Bernard Hopkins smack talking in L.A.
  
Oscar De La Hoya on Mosley-Mayweather fight and Manny Pacquiao
  
More Video
TSS Photo Archive

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.

Round by Round Coverage
Manny Pacquiao v. Miguel Cotto
Fight aficionados, tune in for live, round by round coverage of the Manny Pacquiao v. Miguel Cotto welterweight championship on Saturday, November 14th beginning at 9 pm ET / 6 pm PT.

The Sweet Science Writers
The Sweet Science
Legal  | Privacy  |  Sitemap  |  Disclaimer  |  The Savage Science © 2004-2007 The Sweet Science Boxing.  All rights reserved. .