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| You could look at it like Pinklon Thomas squandered his talent because he messed around with drugs. Or you could see that it's a miracle he's alive and clean and helping out others today. |
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PINKLON THOMAS: "I Was Praying To God To Let Me Die"
By Rick Folstad
On Nov. 15 at the Performing Arts Center in Tampa, Fla., former WBC heavyweight champ Pinklon Thomas, after some nervous fidgeting and maybe a quiet prayer or two, will stand up at the podium in front of a large crowd and give an acceptance speech as one of the inaugural inductees into the Florida Boxing Hall of Fame.
It won’t be a long speech. Thomas would rather go ten hard rounds than speak in public. But a speech is needed and Thomas will give one.
He could talk about the drug habit he had as a fighter, about that Saturday night more than 20 years ago when he was driving down Interstate-95 outside Miami and saw a semi coming the other way, how he prayed to God to let him swerve into the path of the truck and take his life.
“I was praying to God to let me die,“ he said. “Then suddenly, I realized God wasn’t going to take my life. I was praying for him to do something bad to me, but he wasn’t going to do that. If I wanted to kill myself, I couldn’t ask God to do it.“
Thomas could also talk about a life filled with unbelievable highs and all-time lows, how he finally picked himself up off the floor and brushed himself off with the help of his trainer, Angelo Dundee, who will also be inducted into the FLABHOF on that Sunday.
He might tell the crowd about that bleary-eyed night in February 1989 - just a few weeks after he lost to Evander Holyfield - when he suddenly found himself sitting on a bar stool in Miami at 1 o’clock in the morning after smoking cocaine and weed and drinking booze for five days and five nights. He could tell you how he’d lost 13 pounds, grown a beard and was still wearing the same clothes he put on almost a week earlier.
“I was as red as a beet and my heart was thumping like it was about to bust," he said. “You know that thing where they talk about hitting rock bottom? I hit it.”
He went looking for help and ended up on the doorstep of Dundee, who had taken Thomas to the heavyweight championship four years earlier when he beat Tim Witherspoon for the title.
But Dundee wasn’t having any of it. He told Thomas to get out of his office, that he wanted nothing more to do with him.
It was Dundee’s way of trying to save Thomas from himself, a slap to the face hoping it will bring a good man back to his senses.
“The way he looked, he scared the hell out of me,” Dundee said, remembering just how far Thomas had fallen. “There is nothing worse than a guy with that much talent wasting it on drugs. He could box and he could punch. He was really a great heavyweight. But you can’t beat drugs, and he was the best example of that.”
It was a turning point for Thomas. He knew he had to put his life back together before it was too late. Dundee had reached him.
“Oh, I shook him up," Dundee said. “I made him feel so bad it straightened him out. Look at him today. He's a great guy.”
Hit by some of the best heavyweights of his time, Thomas said Mike Tyson and Mike Weaver hit him harder than anybody.
“But it’s a drag to get hit by something you can’t even see,” he said.
He finished his boxing career with a record of 43-7-1 with 34 KOs, but says the toughest thing he ever faced was his addiction.
“If I hadn’t done drugs, I’d still be champ right now.”
Thomas told me all this 15 years ago when we sat in an almost empty dining hall at the Araba Shrine Temple in Fort Myers, Florida, where he was making an appearance on behalf of the Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Southwest Florida.
He was 36 and six years clean at the time, working hard to make sure he made it to seven years.
Now he’s been clean for more than 20 years.
Today, Thomas, 51, is still in Orlando, still drug free, and still trying to pitch in and help where ever he can, though it would have been easy at any time for him to slip back into that dark hole that swallowed him up and held onto him for so many years.
When he stands up at the podium in front of that crowd on Nov. 15, he could talk about today instead of yesterday.
He could talk about how he just launched his newest idea, a project called PINK, or Pride In Neighborhood Kids, how children from deprived areas “need to believe in themselves,” and how he wants to help them be “physically and mentally prepared.“
He might talk about his work counseling kids. That’s what Thomas does now. He counsels, he makes appearances, he talks to young people. And he’ll hit the heavy bag if he sees one hanging around and someone tosses him a pair of bag gloves.
The guy who doesn’t like to talk in public has a lot he could say. But he saves most of his talking for the kids he tries to help. Those are the ones he’s trying to reach.
So if he stands up at the induction ceremony and just says he’s honored, don’t hold it against him.
Just shake his hand and say, “So are we, Pink. So are we.”
The FBHOF induction in Tampa is scheduled for Nov. 13-15. For tickets or more information call Butch Flansburg at (813) 810-5896.
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Pegleyjr:
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Oh boy, sincerely perhaps my favorite fighter - definitely one of them. I caught his career near the end of his run at the top when he attempted to regain his champion status by facing the at the time steamrolling Mike Tyson in '87. The Evander Holyfield match was frankly pathetic, Pink had no spirit in that fight for some reason against a fighter I felt he could have beaten. Always good to read about what "Pinky" is up to. He seems like a really humane individual.
Monday Nov 9, 2009 05:17:40 PM
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Pete steward:
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The 1980'S Alphabet Heavyweight Champions were all coke heads alcoholics or both Pinklon Thomas, Tony Tubbs, Tim Witherspoon, Michael Dokes and Trevor Berbick all were talented but just were never consistent enough to rule. Booze and Broads do it all the time.Between the Holmes and Tyson Reigns of supremacy these guys were the filler. What is really sad is that if any one of those guys were in their prime CLEAN and SOBER today? They would CRUSH the Klitchko's and dominate the division. The 2000s make 1980s look like the 1970s heavyweights. Sigghhh! When is Ike getting out?
Monday Nov 9, 2009 06:53:42 PM
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Isaiah@PeteSteward:
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You think one of those guys would ever be able to crush Vitali? Looks like you're the one doing drugs...
Monday Nov 9, 2009 07:31:50 PM
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Smiley C:
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Truth that, Pete. Those Klitchkos are petty terrible fo' sure!
Monday Nov 9, 2009 07:56:54 PM
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Pegleyjr:
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I kinda think David Haye will give the KlitschKOs a run for their money now. As for the 1980s, Tim Witherspoon would likely make things interesting in this decade.
Monday Nov 9, 2009 09:43:53 PM
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Fe'Roz :
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The fact is many if not most athletes, not just boxers, were using and/or abusing drugs, cocaine in particular, during the early 1980's. But there is a huuuge difference between using and being addicted. Dundee was and is old school. Like most coaches and parents for that matter, he neither understood what what was happening nor knew how to respond productively. Most were simply scared. What he thought was tough love was in all probability just further rejection of a very ill man. It may make for great boxing lore but unless Angelo intervened and took Pinklon for help, he was just another player in a tragedy. As for Thomas and the others competing (in their primes) in a fantasy fight with Vitali or Vladimir, I'm with Pete. Pinklon Thomas was a beast. He would have felled the both big boys from the East
Monday Nov 9, 2009 11:08:13 PM
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Robert Curtis:
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You can't reject or enable, but you can help. So much great talent in all sports is lost to drugs and self-sabotage. In their prime, so many were great who fell prey to drugs. I thought Tyson was so amazing in the eighties, but neither he nor his best challengers could go the distance against drugs and self destruction. The people all clean from the get go have no idea. When you've got inner demons to fight bigger than the opponent who wants to take your head off, it's a hell of world.
Tuesday Nov 10, 2009 01:31:18 AM
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Alokwe:
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Nice to see he's doing ok. It's always nice to read updates on retired fighters. Cool write-up.
Tuesday Nov 10, 2009 01:39:12 AM
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bill major:
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oppinions are like a**holes boys,everyone has one as i do.just be glad pink is doing well.we all have or had something im sure that held us back from meeting our potential at one time or another in our lives. feroz has a point on the users of the 80's,i dabled myself im ashamed to say it.you have to know when to stop and move on ,some cant seem to do that where i never had that problem with anything thank God. good luck and God Bless pinklin. angelo, never figured you for someone who would turn there back on a friend .what if he didnt turn around then? man.......
Tuesday Nov 10, 2009 08:48:46 AM
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mortcola:
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Happy to hear about Pink. Now, the ongoing trashing of the K's is just silly by now. Completely dominant heavyweights, skill-wise head and shoulders above anyone in years. Talk, talk, talk. If-if-if. I prefer reality. If they're this dominant now, then they're at least players in the big picture. BTW - do any K-haters consider what it means that Wladimir has achieved the last six years of success by building new technique, tactics, and strategy around his proven shaky chin? That is adaptibility - a measure of intelligence, flexibility, and realism, not to mention strength of character. Enough gossip.
Tuesday Nov 10, 2009 09:49:48 AM
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Pegleyjr:
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KO Magazine did a piece once on the recovering Pinklon Thomas, and this article is like a good follow-up. Thomas was a real champ from 1984-86, to me a Donald Curry type heavyweight in terms of his style - just a fan opinion. Sometimes people simply do not know how to help a situation, even though they may have good intentions, perhaps a big heart. I dunno, really. I was never a champ, but I can relate to Pinklon feeling like he didn't want to be around. He was an entertaining individual in the toughest of sports, seemed to be really good at being a boxer. If you search them you can find his rumbles with Gerrie Coetzee & Mike Weaver when Pink was at his best, the guy was good. Anyway, I'm still here, and I'm glad Pinklon Thomas is, too.
I tried my best on this comment and I want to dedicate it to injured boxer Rita "La Guera" Figueroa.
Tuesday Nov 10, 2009 09:39:33 PM
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the Roast:
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I gotta agree with mortcola. I dont think Pinky at his best could handle the current Champs, the Klit bros. Pinky at his best was just not a GREAT fighter. Very good, yes but not great. Maybe I have seen the highlight too many times, but when I think of Pinklon Thomas, I think of Tyson almost taking his head off. One of my favorite KOs of all time. Best of luck to Pinklon Thomas. Fight the good fight.
Wednesday Nov 11, 2009 06:53:17 PM
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2009 Reader Of The Year Weighs In On Legacies Of Pacquiao And Mayweather
"Pacquiao has proven....in the ring... time and time again that he is the greatest of this time. He has earned his respect. He begs for nothing. He is a man content with his growth, his family and his achievements. A man the world has now turned it's eyes to behold. Floyd Mayweather is not even close in stature. He may possess the greatest skills but he is not the Face of Boxing today. Google Manny Pacquiao. There are 20 million searches. Google Floyd. There are 6.5 million. Look at the NYTimes, the Wall Street Journal and Time. Count how many words were used these past years to mention Floyd Mayweather. Then count the words still being printed about Manny. And keep counting. As I've said many times, Floyd has been too clever by half. He has short changed his public.....and has out-smarted himself. Manny will fight but a few more times. Enjoy it while you can. He is an all time great pugilist. Floyd, with all of his remarkable skills lack the will to be truly great in the biggest sense of the word. His legacy will look more like Holmes that Ali. He has earned it." ---November is half-way gone, but we don't need to keep counting ballots. It's a landslide. Fe'Roz has won the 2009 Reader of the Year award. His comments add to the website immeasurably, and he epitomizes the thoughtful, respectful, educated fan of pugilism we strive to cater to at TSS. Congrats, Fe'Roz, and please accept my thanks for being the valued member of this community that you are. Sincerely, Editor Mike
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