Emanuel Steward: "I think that Sergio would make Floyd fight out of his comfort zone”
“I don’t know who would win, but I think that Sergio would make Floyd fight out of his comfort zone”
JENNA J: Andy really dominated throughout the entire match. In the second round he also dropped Brian Vera. Do you think, after viewing his performance, that he could have done anything better at all?
EMANUEL STEWARD: Well in rating him, I’d rate him about a 7.5 or an 8 in the fight. I thought he did what was necessary to win. It was not a super devastating performance, because in this fight here the main thing was to fight a technical fight, and that was to outbox him and keep him off-balance with the little right jab over the shoulder because Vera has very bad balance. So every time he started to come forward, Andy would hit him with that right cross type jab to make him fall off balance and then he would try to time him and catch him with straight lefts when he was coming in. That was the strategy. I would liked to have seen him open up and maybe knock him out, but it was a big risk because Vera has a good chin and he’s the type of guy that unless you see he’s really hurt, we learned from the first fight you just have to systematically beat him and if you hurt him you could also knock him out but don’t get too excited, because he falls off balance a lot and you may think he’s hurt and that’s because he has terrible balance. In fact, after the fight we were at the airport and we were saying that the biggest thing we took advantage of was his terrible balance. We kept him off balance all night. So it worked good, and next we try to move on to another fight, but I was glad that fight went that way and that Andy didn’t get hit a lot like he did in the fight with McEwan.
JENNA: Emanuel something that you’re very good at as a trainer is when your fighter has a revenge bout, or a rematch with someone that beat them, they usually always win under you. So what’s that like for you?
STEWARD: Well it’s always pleasant to me. (laughs) I was a very, very competitive guy and to lose is painful, but as Lennox used to say the worst thing in life is when you make the same mistake twice. I usually analyze the fights and after I look at them I can pretty much see what were the strong points and weak points of both fighters. That’s a gift that I have and it’s not something that I think everybody could learn. In the fight with Vera I saw that Vera was physically a pretty strong guy, and even though he may have lost a lot of fights he takes a good punch. Also he’s the type of guy if you get involved in exchanges with him, when he punches he lunges and pushes his weight forward when he’s slugging with you so he really gets a lot of force. So the main thing is to keep him off-balance and not worry about combinations. Just throw one single punch at a time, because if you hit him with punches and you stay there throwing two or three, you’ll get caught with a shot maybe around the side of the head or somewhere where you never even saw it coming. But for this fight Andy kept his left hand in a good position where he was able to catch the roundhouse rights as well as the straight rights. The other fights I had, like Holyfield and Bowe when I worked with Holyfield for the second fight with Riddick Bowe, I realized that Bowe was bigger, had better physical strength, and better boxing ability believe it or not, and better inside fighting, and youth, and size! But the thing that he was weak in was his footwork was not as good as Evander’s. So we had Evander work on winning the fight by moving, changing directions, punching in spots, moving, changing, and so it worked in after twelve rounds we were fortunate and had the championship again. Every fight is different and you have to be very detailed, because when you’re on the top level in boxing every little small detail can make a major difference.