Roach´s good intentions not enough with moody Moorer

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  • ThunderWolf
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    #1

    Roach´s good intentions not enough with moody Moorer

    Michael Marley
    June 19, 2009

    RIO DE JANEIRO--Freddie Roach is, after all, capable of human error.

    I´ve got a news flash for you so was his training mentor, Eddie Futch, and ditto for Angelo Dundee, Gerogie Benton, Freddie Brown, Whitey Bimstein and all the rest of the great trainers.

    You can add Manny Steward to the list as well.

    If the road to hell is paved with good intentions, then Coach Roach just hit a minor pothole.

    He told Tris Dixon of The Boxing News in the UK that he has parted ways with former heavyweight champion Michael Moorer.

    (Self-editing note: I´ve come back to this article to make this *********. In speakling to the English reporter, Roach did say he did not `think` Moorer would be part of the Roach training corps any longer.

    So maybe the door at the Wild Card remains open for the Monessen, Pa., native.

    Here is the pertinent question and complete answer:

    How has Amir ´(Khan) changed since you’ve had him?

    I think he’s a completely different fighter now. He’s getting better all of the time. He’s not going to make the mistake he made with [Breidis] Prescott ever again. Between me and [conditioning coach] Alex [Ariza] and my team it’s working pretty good. Unfortunately I don’t think Michael Moorer will be with us anymore.

    Roach, trying to help one of his former charges, brought MM into the Wild Card Gym fold and wanted him to be a second set of eyes and ears for him.

    It evidently did not work out as Roach tells Dixon that `five out of six´of his fighters did not get along well with Moorer.

    I am not surprised. Roach made a mistake in trying Moorer in that role in the first place.

    I´ve known Moorer for many years, dating back to when Steward trained him, when he was a young and rising heavyweight contender.

    Steward could have told Roach, who probably knew it on his own, that Moorer can be a moody guy. And Teddy Atlas, mercurial enough in his own right, could have verified that.

    Moorer is not and never has been a go along to get along guy. He would make a lousy Scoutmaster.

    Moorer did have a verbal row with Manny Pacquiao Canadian Shadow Michael Koncz but I doubt that had any effect on Roach´s decision to unload Moorer.

    The gym marriage of Roach and Moorer was destined to end in divorce because of their different personalities. Moorer thinks he is entitled to a certain status as a former heavyweight champion and I think he is due that.

    The fighters he worked with, though, probably saw it differently.

    Hey, the great Ted Williams did not make it as a manager. Knowing and teaching are two different skill sets.

    No one is really to blame.

    Let´s just call it what it was, a personality mismatch, and let it go.

    I stil give Roach high marks for giving it a shot.

    He meant well and so did Moorer.

    Moorer will land on his feet doing something else. He is a capable person.

    But this is one Hollywood audition which did not work out.
    Last edited by ThunderWolf; 06-20-2009, 03:56 AM.
  • Thickear
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    #2
    The great Ted Williams. Who the hell is that?

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    • ThunderWolf
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      #3
      Originally posted by Thickear
      The great Ted Williams. Who the hell is that?
      Theodore Samuel "Ted" Williams (August 30, 1918–July 5, 2002) also nicknamed The Kid, the Splendid Splinter, Teddy Ballgame and The Thumper, was a left fielder in Major League Baseball. He played 21 seasons, twice interrupted by military service as a Marine Corps pilot, with the Boston Red Sox. He is widely considered to be one of the greatest hitters in the history of baseball.

      Williams was a two-time American League Most Valuable Player (MVP) winner, led the league in batting six times, and won the Triple Crown twice. He had a career batting average of .344, with 521 home runs, and was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1966. He is the last player in Major League Baseball to bat over .400 in a single season (.406 in 1941). Williams holds the highest career batting average of anyone with 500 or more home runs. His career year was 1941, when he hit .406 with 37 HR, 120 RBI, and 135 runs scored. His .551 on base percentage set a record that stood for 61 years. An avid sport fisherman, he hosted a television show about fishing and was inducted into the IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame.

      -wikipedia

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      • TyroneSpong
        Banned
        • Jun 2009
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        #4
        Can anyone confirm this?

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        • Son_of_Dad
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          • Feb 2009
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          #5
          Theodore Samuel "Ted" Williams (August 30, 1918–July 5, 2002) also nicknamed The Kid, the Splendid Splinter, Teddy Ballgame and The Thumper, was a left fielder in Major League Baseball. He played 21 seasons, twice interrupted by military service as a Marine Corps pilot, with the Boston Red Sox. He is widely considered to be one of the greatest hitters in the history of baseball.

          Williams was a two-time American League Most Valuable Player (MVP) winner, led the league in batting six times, and won the Triple Crown twice. He had a career batting average of .344, with 521 home runs, and was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1966. He is the last player in Major League Baseball to bat over .400 in a single season (.406 in 1941). Williams holds the highest career batting average of anyone with 500 or more home runs. His career year was 1941, when he hit .406 with 37 HR, 120 RBI, and 135 runs scored. His .551 on base percentage set a record that stood for 61 years. An avid sport fisherman, he hosted a television show about fishing and was inducted into the IGFA Fishing Hall of Fame.

          -wikipedia

          Ahh, good ole Teddy Ballgame....the poor, racist bastards severed head is floating in cryogenic goo as we speak...

          As for Moorer, I am a bit surprised and am curious now who Roach will "pass his legacy" onto

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