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| Taylor looking right at the camera lense. Borges wishes he'd look in the mirror, and get it through his skull that all fighters get tired, some just have the will to shrug off severe fatigue. |
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BORGES: I'm Tired Of Taylor's Constant Excuses
By Ron Borges
No one really believes in Jermain Taylor any more. Why would you?
SHOWTIME’S Super Six tournament, designed to crown one super middleweight champion and create a boxing star in the process, has five of the best fighters in the 168 pound division involved. Then there’s Taylor. How’d he get in there ahead of undefeated IBF champion Lucian Bute (24-0)?
The combined record of the six of them – Taylor, WBC champion Carl Froch, WBA title holder Mikkel Kessler, former Olympic medalists Andre Dirrell and Andre Ward and ex-middleweight champion Arthur Abraham, who dumped the meaningless 160-pound title he held for this opportunity - is 161-4-1. Take out Taylor, which most people believe Abraham is about to do Saturday night in Berlin, and it’s 133-1.
Only a few years ago Taylor was the talk of boxing, a raw talent from Arkansas with an athlete’s agility and a pleasant way about him. Unfortunately, he turned out to be more athlete than fighter and less pleasant than we thought once he began to believe he was a star.
That star went into nova almost the moment it began to twinkle, mostly because of his own arrogance and refusal to put in the time it takes to master as difficult a trade as boxing. In what seems like a century ago but was really only four years, Taylor beat back Bernard Hopkins twice, although many folks would have argued then and certainly now that he was handed those decisions because the sport wanted a new face and he was briefly the Chosen One.
Yet even at his coronation in that first victory over Hopkins, Taylor revealed a fatal flaw for a fighter. He tended to fade like old newspapers. He faded in fights and, soon enough, he faded in his profession.
Taylor has now lost three of his last four fights, is 3-3-1 since beating Hopkins and has been knocked out twice, first by middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik and most recently by Froch. The latter stopped him with 14 seconds left in a fight Taylor had at one point been winning easily.
His conclusion was he didn’t lose, he got tired, which is why he will very likely lose again to Abraham, who is smaller and less athletic but hard in places where Taylor is soft.
“The best fighter lost because he didn’t train right,’’ Taylor (28-3-1) said in the build up to what will be a SHOWTIME doubleheader with Abraham fighting Taylor at the O2 World Arena in Berlin while Froch (25-0, 20 KO) takes on Dirrell (18-0, 13 KO) in Nottingham, England, not far from his roots.
That was the kind of comment that leads you to have no faith in Taylor. Some guys learn from their mistakes. Others repeat them. Taylor has been singing this song since he first faded badly against a guy old enough to be his fistic grandfather, Hopkins, in their first meeting.
This did not change except in his first fight with Pavlik. He didn’t wait until the end to tire that night, being knocked cold in his corner in the seventh round after seemingly having Pavlik beaten in the fight's opening minutes.
That night he said he got tired because he’d expended too much energy trying to knock Pavlik out when he had him hurt. This all leads you to conclude he gets tired early and he gets tired late. Either way, he doesn’t seem to get tired of losing.
Jermain Taylor loses these kinds of fights because he respects neither his opponent’s skills or his own. At the age of 30, a professional for eight years, he claimed to have not trained properly for Froch. After they woke him up, Taylor said exhaustion and Big Macs got him not the undefeated WBC champion. Sadly, six months later he’s still saying the same thing.
“The only reason I lost to Carl Froch was because I got tired,’’ he said this week.
No, the only reason you lost to Carl Froch was because he’s a professional and you’re not. He comes to the arena physically prepared, mentally prepared and emotionally prepared. Although he is far less gifted an athlete then Taylor (or even than young Dirrell who is so blessed with speed and movement) but he defeated him because he is a master craftsman who shows up to work every day with his tools sharpened, a proper lunch in his pail and a desire to leave the job at the end of the day having given full measure to the people who pay him.
In this case, that is the fans of boxing, people Taylor has short- changed for some time now. The sadder fact is he’s short-changed himself. Perhaps he can turn that around this time. Perhaps he finally understands at 31 that he is at the end of the line if things don’t work out for him in this double elimination tournament.
Maybe, most of all, he finally understands very few people believe he can fight anymore, an opinion borne out by his lackluster win over a totally shot Jeff Lacy. But boxing is a forgiving place if you have been given a reputation by powerful entities like HBO, which Taylor has. It gives those few fighters many opportunities to let their supporters down.
So Taylor gets another chance at a second chance Saturday night but Abraham (30-0, 24 KO) hardly sees it that way. He sees it as the beginning of a coronation for him, the start of what is a long, 18-month road which when it has been traveled will crown the survivor a star.
Jermain Taylor has long thought himself a star but he wasn’t willing to work hard enough to prove it. Arthur Abraham thinks he’s a star too but he has always understood there is a responsibility that comes with that, a responsibility that, if left unfulfilled, will come back to tap you on the shoulder when you’re inside a boxing ring. Worse, it may tap you on the chin.
“There is nothing special about him,’’ Taylor insisted this week, as if giving Abraham his due was somehow radioactive. Well, he may not be special but he’s 30-0. He may not be special but he not only won a world championship he successfully defended it 10 times. He may not be special but he didn’t have to move up to 168 pounds because he got too lazy to stay at 160. He moved up for an opportunity. My bet is Taylor came here for a payday, which is not the same thing by a long shot.
“I am sure he will have a different opinion of me once I’ve caught him for the first time,’’ a surly Abraham said this week. “We’ll find out Saturday night what shape Taylor will be like.’’
While Abraham talks with respectful menace in his voice, Taylor kept insisting, “I beat myself in every fight I lost.’’
No, actually you didn’t. Pavlik beat you into unconsciousness. So did Froch, leaving you on the floor like a half empty sack of potatoes. Winky Wright beat you but was given only a draw. And if Cory Spinks wasn’t half your size, he would have beaten you too because he, too, is a professional.
For a guy who beats himself, Jermain Taylor has had a lot of help. Yet both he and his enabler, trainer Ozell Nelson, keep singing the same old song, refusing to learn from their mistakes and hence doomed to repeat them.
“I feel like I’m the bigger fighter,’’ Taylor said. “I’m a lot stronger. As long as I don’t get tired I’m going to win the fight.’’
Well, in the long history of boxing there have been few fighters who didn’t get tired. It comes with the savage nature of the sport. It comes with facing a man who keeps applying hard pressure on you, as Abraham tends to do.
Exhaustion, or at least near exhaustion, is inevitable for even the most highly trained boxer when he is facing an opponent of equal or superior skills. So if Jermain Taylor feels he can’t win if he gets tired, he’s already half beaten because Abraham will wear him down. He will wear him out. He will make sure he gets tired. Then what?
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rudy:
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This piece will turn into a POS after Saturday night!!!!!
Friday Oct 16, 2009 04:29:18 PM
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Revis:
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This is legitimate critisism for Taylor's constant excuses for losing fights and lack of discipline, work ethic to prepare for fights but look at his fights, even the ones he got ko'd they were close fights or ones he was winning. He wasn't disrespecting Abraham he was stating the truth. He's just a normal fighter which I agree. Good defense,clever w/h power. He's not this dynamic juggernaut boxing writers are making him out to be. He's good not great and he's not invinsible. I like JT in this fight to shut critics like you up who don't have guts to step in the ring wrong!!! If he uses his reach and size advantage, box on the outside and be mentally ready to go 12 rnds it should be his night.
Friday Oct 16, 2009 04:46:29 PM
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Frank Z:
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my coach (amateur boxing) always told us that you need to learn how to fight tired, he had us spar when we were tired, saying that that is the time when we really get better and when we really learned to fight, so yes, this is no excuse, especially for a guy who had a huge amateur career and won an olympic bronze medal, and has fought many of the top middleweights and junior middleweights. He seemed the most focused this time he has been in a while, but his fatigue is mental as well as physical cause it's a pattern now. i also wonder if his stance tires him out too. he leans forward and dangles his elbows out, instead of keeping them in and by his ribs, and he also squares his upper body and keeps his shoulers in an awkward position, just all this little stuff that can eat away your energy through 36 minutes.
Friday Oct 16, 2009 05:16:33 PM
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RG - palaging tama:
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Wow! I'm glad that Superfightwriter Ron B's copy about Jemaine Taylor has finally come my way of seeing him. For those years that Hopkins, Wright and Spinks cleaned JT's clock, KP KTFO of him and Froch did the same, I got nothing but insults for saying that JT was a hyped-_____. I will not be surprised to see JT repeat the same performance, and to see the same performance with the "constant excuses." Once again, I'm reminded of a song by the late, great Ray Charles about sending somebody back to Arkansas. Holla!
Friday Oct 16, 2009 05:27:14 PM
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ohnoes:
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Wow... one of the worst articles I have ever read. Not only do you write like a sixth grader, you also repeat the same points over and over (we get it, you don't like Jermain) and misspelled Bute's name (who isn't participating because of his prior commitment not because the promoters chose Taylor instead).
I hope they're not paying you for this : \
Friday Oct 16, 2009 05:28:07 PM
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mortcola:
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Well, Rudy, I've gotten tired of Borges' exaggeration too. But the problem is, he's right this time. Taylor has proven himself - to fall apart under pressure and fatigue. I think he's gutsy. But that's not the same as the courage that every fighter who fights down the stretch experiences. Taylor is a nice guy and a good athlete. But he's never handled adversity well, and Abraham is a very, very tough and resourceful guy who knocks people out and has never folded, even when his jaw was crushed early in a fight he really won (Miranda). I don't think Taylor will handle him any better than the last few ordeals he failed to handle. The best predictor of the future is the past.
Friday Oct 16, 2009 05:34:01 PM
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brownsugar:
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Amen BROTHER!!,... that nothing special comment didn't sit well with me either coming from Taylor,.. I would have thought him to be a bit more humble and respectful,... but I still can dream can't I??? ,... Taylor by majority decision...
Friday Oct 16, 2009 05:54:47 PM
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koutnedout:
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a abraham is real tough. i agree taylor might fold like he did in the pavlik and froch fights. taylor was all hype. i thought spinks beat him as well. if he loses lets see what excuses he will come wit then
Friday Oct 16, 2009 07:06:40 PM
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the Roast:
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@mortcola, well said. You nailed it. Down goes Taylor.
Friday Oct 16, 2009 07:49:31 PM
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Fe'Roz :
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We know about Taylor.... and his prospects seem grim. So for those who have lost hope, I'll see you and raise you. We all have. JT has made himself hard to support.... and even harder to watch. Unless of course you enjoy train wrecks. The question for me is....how good is Abraham? He defended his crown 10 times against who exactly? Once, heroically against Miranda in a questionable hometown decision. And once definitively. With a KO. But who was Miranda? Another TV fighter. the man witha great story and a glass chin. A wishful....or should I say wistful... thought. The hopes of cable execs....and for the briefest moment....some of us. But he faded faster than Mayorga, his Central American doppelganger. Down Goes Miranda !!! Again and again. I grant that JT is one fight away from a big name on a prospect's resume. But who is the 166lb 'Super' Middleweight Arthur Abraham. We shall see soon enough.
Friday Oct 16, 2009 08:20:02 PM
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SJ:
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I still have my money on Taylor. I don't think Abraham will present problems for him as Froch and Pavlik did.
Friday Oct 16, 2009 09:13:17 PM
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Isaiah:
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Prediction guys. This will look an awful lot like Taylor/Froch. Taylor will outbox Abraham through a lot of the fight, get tired in the second half, get beatdown bad for a few rounds and get stopped in the 11th round. Abraham's got him right where he wants him, but he will take some punishment to make it happen though. It won't matter. Abraham by 11th round KO. Besides, Taylor really lost the first fight against Hopkins when Taylor was running scared in the 12th. It could be argued Taylor also lost to Winky Wright and Cory Spinks, not to mention Taylor's "OFFICIAL" losses... Abraham hasn't faced this level of opposition, but he's won all but the 'broken jaw fight" convingly and there's nothing showing that Abraham can't win this one too.
Friday Oct 16, 2009 09:43:05 PM
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rob:
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Some fair points here... and some selective quoting. In a recent teleconference, Taylor said of the Abraham fight, "no excuses." He spoke of having been irresponsible with his weight, said that's been in order this go-round, it's time to put up or shut up. We shall see.
Friday Oct 16, 2009 10:36:51 PM
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MisterLee:
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Wow! Finally some one else who believes that Winky mugged Taylor and left nothing but a business card in his pocket! Winky whooped him, and taylor could only hit forearms and gloves all night EXCEPT for round 12. Oh no! Losing one round means you don't get to to "WIN" the title. ACTUALLY, thinking back, i'd have given winky round 12, winky effective "outboxed" taylor, he hit without getting hit and used lateral movement and his jab to keep from getting hit... the fact that Taylor was moving forward and hitting air did not mean he was "pressing the fight." The whores at HBO did not want to give Wright a belt and future fights. If winky had rightfully won, he would have been able to get the big fights and would probably be sharper now. Looks like winky is gonna be out for a whole year now (mr. i'm not going to retire). I can only relish in his previous achievements, as much as pple fault Paulie's "lack of punch KO power", the guy jumps back into the ring immediately after every loss... and that's what Taylor needs, emotional toughness, GET A SPORTS PSYCHOLOGIST and quit blaming your losses on your conditioning. you're a professional athlete, oscar de la hoya went thru hell with mosley 1, after recording a hit album. When the body fails, the heart prevails. Holler!
Friday Oct 16, 2009 11:48:20 PM
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Isaiah@MisterLee:
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Just speaking the truth buddy. Keep the crow coming for the non-believers. I'm a man that'll admit if I'm wrong though, so in case I am, save some for me. Taylor's going down!
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 02:46:34 AM
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Matthew:
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I've said it before; I don't see any way that Taylor can win this fight. He's a good athlete who never really learned how to fight. That fact is simply inexcusable for a fighter with his amateur background. Once he became a top contender, he never fought often enough to improve. He's regressed since he beat Hopkins. Although his fight with Winky could have gone either way, I will say that Wright got hit more cleanly in that fight than he had in his whole career to that point. Winky didn't fight at all in the 12th round, and it cost him the fight. Fighters rarely change their stripes at age 31. I see Abraham stopping Taylor late.
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 07:20:04 AM
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RedStripe:
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While reading the article I first felt that Mr. Borges was being too hard on Taylor, but then I got to thinking: What the hell is a professional athlete (especially a boxer) doing eating at McDonald's on a regular basis? Even my second graders know that fast food is bad for you, so Taylor really ought to know better.
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 08:45:44 AM
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jt:
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I thought we were supposed to be excited about the Super Six? Going by Borges' two articles today both fights have already been decided.
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 09:15:44 AM
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jt:
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Way to suck the excitement out of the event.
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 09:16:31 AM
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Steadadelica:
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Abraham won't win the torny but will make it difficult for evey one he fights. Taylor is a footnote, included by the sponsoring US network to keep the dollar interested and introduce possibly the least well known of the fighters to the home Market. Abraham by knockout in the 8th
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 09:49:40 AM
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ali @ Frank Z:
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Damn good writing I didn't know that your stance can get you tire but it makes sense when you think about it. Also I heard that you need to learn how to rest during a fight I wonder has he been taught those things. Another thing I was looking at was how much taller Talor is I hope he uses that great jab all night cause if he does and don't get tired im postive he's going to when this fight.
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 12:54:23 PM
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Frank Z @ Ali:
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yeah my coach called it taking time off in the ring. instead of attacking the entire time or tensing up for an attack, if you get tired circle him lightly on your feet and pop your jab. this way it'll get the oxygen flowing again and help you get your groove back. take time off and take a look at what the other guy is doing, let him come to you some and then you can respond and counter him. it's gonna be something taylor has to use, i think he's too tense in the ring a lot, that plus if he really doesn't train that hard is a double whammy on his stamina. and you're right he's much much taller than abraham. he's listed as just an inch taller but it looked like at least a 4 inch difference. if he can pop his jab from a higher vantage point he can defnitely outpoint abraham. taylor throws good shots, he just gets wild sometimes and doesn't aim before he throws a lot of the time. one guy who's good at staying relaxed is james toney. i woul dnever advocate not training hard but his style of fighting lets him geta away to an extent with not going hard in the gym.
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 01:39:33 PM
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ali @ Frank Z:
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Hell Yeah James Toney is the most relax fighter ever. Do you think has done some thing that would help him not get so tire in this training camp.
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 02:23:33 PM
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Brownsugar:
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the results of the JT vs AA bout are already all over the web for anybody who wants to know....
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 04:47:57 PM
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JaketheSnale:
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I agree with James Toney. I thin its a combination of his defense and his personality. His shell defense, like Mayweather's requires quick, relaxed eyes. Because both hands are not up all the time, and the elbows are tucked in, you don't expend too much energy. Just raise the left shoulder and lean back . Applying it in an actual fight however, is another thing. I can use it sparring with my kids but I would get clocked if I use it in the gym! Ha a!
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 04:54:16 PM
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Frank Z @ brownsugar:
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yeah..... i guess we shouldn't give it away here until more people see it.
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 05:22:57 PM
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Steve:
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Well, all you can say is, how true the Borg prophecy has become. Borgsy could be the new "Borge Identity" in a Mat Damon movie. Seriously tho.... these kind of stamina issues shouldnt be as problematic for JT as they have been, particularly with an opponent that was throwing as many punches as others for the 1st half of the fight
Saturday Oct 17, 2009 08:36:46 PM
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Suits, Stop Squabbling, And Posturing, AND MAKE FIGHTS!
"Floyd may very well be the most talented boxer but that he does not understand that what the fans, who ultimately pay the bills, watch fights for is entertainment. At the moment, he not only ignores that reality but frankly doesn't seem to care. Neither about our wishes and/or our passion for to see great fights. Thus, there is little Go ... and even less Show. I am vaguely interested in the Business of Boxing. Frankly, it is a mess on a good day and worse on it's worst. I prefer reading the Business pages where brilliant men and women develop skills and strategies to create incredible value and wealth (for themselves and others) in ways far more effectively and meaningfully than those who Rule ...some might say Ruin...this beautiful Sport." --FE'ROZ, speaking for a majority of fight fans
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