by David P. Greisman - The instants replay, constantly and alternately taunting and haunting Jermain Taylor.
It is late Saturday night in late September in Atlantic City. The second round is underway in Taylor’s defense of the middleweight championship against a hard-punching challenger named Kelly Pavlik. Taylor, once loftily publicized, is now often criticized for the mediocre manner in which he has ruled his division.
Boom.
Taylor lands an overhand right, following with several more punches that leave Pavlik flailing. An onslaught of hooks sends Pavlik falling forward onto the canvas.
Pavlik rises. The round is long, the odds against him longer.
A looping right hand high on Pavlik’s head sends him stumbling across the ring. Taylor fires away with more hooks, but he appears to punch himself out. Pavlik holds on. The bell rings. Pavlik’s head doesn’t.
“I think about it all the time,” Taylor said last week on a media conference call. “What comes into my head is how I could have trained harder or finish him off in the second round. And all the should-haves, could-haves in the world is not going to change anything.
“If I get him in that position again, I’m going to finish him,” he said. “That’s what I’m training for. I just felt like I wasted a lot of energy. I threw a lot of ****** punches and I should have put them together, gone to the body, uppercuts. I could have done a lot of things I didn’t do.” [details]
It is late Saturday night in late September in Atlantic City. The second round is underway in Taylor’s defense of the middleweight championship against a hard-punching challenger named Kelly Pavlik. Taylor, once loftily publicized, is now often criticized for the mediocre manner in which he has ruled his division.
Boom.
Taylor lands an overhand right, following with several more punches that leave Pavlik flailing. An onslaught of hooks sends Pavlik falling forward onto the canvas.
Pavlik rises. The round is long, the odds against him longer.
A looping right hand high on Pavlik’s head sends him stumbling across the ring. Taylor fires away with more hooks, but he appears to punch himself out. Pavlik holds on. The bell rings. Pavlik’s head doesn’t.
“I think about it all the time,” Taylor said last week on a media conference call. “What comes into my head is how I could have trained harder or finish him off in the second round. And all the should-haves, could-haves in the world is not going to change anything.
“If I get him in that position again, I’m going to finish him,” he said. “That’s what I’m training for. I just felt like I wasted a lot of energy. I threw a lot of ****** punches and I should have put them together, gone to the body, uppercuts. I could have done a lot of things I didn’t do.” [details]
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