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    Story of Cus D' Amato and Fear.

    Story of Cus D'Amato and fear

    NOTE: No copyright infringement intended.

    THE BLACK LIGHTS: Inside the World of Professional Boxing by Thomas Hauser

    Pages 18-20

    One of boxing's foremost authorities on the subject of fear is

    Cus D'Amato, the legendary trainer of Jose Torres and Floyd

    Patterson. A diminutive, outspoken man who has worked with young

    fighters for most of his 77 years, D'Amato often looks back on

    his own experiences to put the subject of fear into context.

    "I remember the first time I got involved in what I call a

    waiting fight," D'Amato reminisces. "In the neighborhood in

    which I lived, which was a pretty tough neighborhood, you got

    involved in fights all the time. Whenever you got angry, you

    fought or you lost respect. Under those conditions you didn't

    think about being frightened. You replaced fear with anger. But

    it's different when you have the experience of waiting, an

    experience I had once. I lived in an Italian neighborhood, and a

    few blocks away there was an Irish neighborhood. I never used to

    have trouble with the Irish; I got along with everybody. But

    then the neighborhoods had some trouble, and both sides

    said, 'You bring a guy and we'll bring a guy, and they'll fight

    it out. Instead of both gangs fighting, we'll have two guys

    representing the neighborhoods.' I was 16," D'Amato

    continues, "and the Italian guys chose me. I wasn't mad at the

    Irish, I wasn't mad at anybody. But three days ahead of time I

    knew I had to fight this big Irish guy at nine o'clock on

    Saturday night. So comes the night of the fight, I didn't want

    to fight because this guy never did anything to me, but I got no

    choice. All the Italian guys and I go over to the street between

    the neighborhoods, and wait under a big street light. We got

    there, maybe five minutes to nine, with eighty or ninety guys,

    and the Irish must have had a hundred but their fighter hadn't

    shown yet. I sat down on the curb, and I was thinking to

    myself. 'How the hell did I get into this mess?' To tell the

    truth, I was scared. All my life, when I got mad I'd fought. I

    was fighting grown men when I was fourteen, but now I'm

    saying, 'Jesus Christ, what's the matter with me? I got to be

    crazy to do this. The next time some guys try to get me to

    fight, I'll fight them first; I got nothing against these Irish

    fellows.'" D'Amato's eyes grow larger, his face more animated,

    as his tale progresses. "Anyway, I'm sitting there, really

    sweating. I reached up, felt the sweat on my forehead, and

    figured it was blood, but it was only sweat. Nine o'clock comes

    and the Irish guy isn't there. Quarter after nine, the Irish guy

    isn't there. Nine-thirty, I'm still waiting, and all the time

    the waiting is getting worse because this guy is gonna be there,

    and I'm gonna have to fight him. Finally, at ten o'clock, one of

    his buddies comes and says the Irish guy is scared. He ain't

    showing. It was the happiest moment of my life."

    Fighters are the most exposed athletes in the world. During a

    fight, the crowd observes every twitch and movement. Still,

    spectators rarely see fear in a quality fighter. "That," says

    D'Amato, "is because the fighter has mastered his emotions to

    the extent that he can conceal and control them." But whatever a

    fighter says, the fear is there. It never goes away. He just

    learns to live with it. "And the truth is," D'Amato

    continues, "fear is an aspect to a fighter. It makes him move

    faster, be quicker and more alert. Heroes and cowards feel

    exactly the same fear. Heroes just react to it differently. On

    the morning of a fight, a boxer wakes up and says, 'How can I

    fight? I didn't sleep at all last night.' What he has to realize

    is, the other guy didn't sleep either. Later, as the fighter

    walks toward the ring, his feet want to walk in the opposite

    direction. He's asking himself how he got into this mess. He

    climbs the stairs into the ring, and it's like going to the

    guillotine. Maybe he looks at the other fighter, and sees by the

    way he's loosening up that his opponent is experienced, strong,

    very confident. Then when the opponent takes off his robe, he's

    got big bulging muscles. What the fighter has to realize,"

    concludes D'Amato, "is that he's got exactly the same effect on

    his opponent, only he doesn't know it. And when the bell rings,

    instead of facing a monster built up by the imagination, he's

    simply up against another fighter."

    Enjoy..

    #2
    This guy was the best trainer of the past without a doubt.

    Comment


      #3
      cool story

      Comment


        #4
        Actually the better story hasn't been told yet but when it does...Ouch!...alot of people are going to be sick to their stomachs. There were certainly unsavoury things aplenty in the Catskills.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by NichtGeflechten
          Actually the better story hasn't been told yet but when it does...Ouch!...alot of people are going to be sick to their stomachs. There were certainly unsavoury things aplenty in the Catskills.
          Wow a decent relply, carefull dude your indanger of being civilised, welcome back to the human race.

          P.S I agree with what you said, the story will be worth reading.

          Comment


            #6
            Before anyone overlooks it, CUS BROUGHT MIKE TYSON TO THE WORLD's attention. He discovered Mike, nurtured him and set up the management team that put Mike on the road to greatness. if Mike failed to live up to his full potential, D';Amato is not to blame. After D'Amato died, Mike was never ever the same. D'Amato had Floyd Paterson and Battling Torres, two of the biggest over-achievers boxing has ever seen before Evander came on the scene. These two did not have the raw talent that most trainers look for in a fighter, yet, Cus made them champions of no mean caliber. He invented the "peek-a-boo" and taught Floyd that style so well that Paterson became the FIRST HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION TO REGAIN THE TITLE! Torres became champ in the middleweight division when the division was populated by TRUE challengers! D'Amato was, with respect to Torres and Paterson, THE MAN who learned Merlin's secret of changing crap to gold. Nota Bene:Even after having brought up three champions, D'Amato still slept most of the time in a cot in a seedy Brooklyn gym, bothering to go up to his upstate New York home every "so often" to visit Camille, his lifelong companion. Camille also fed and took care of the young Mike Tyson's basic needs.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by semjasa View Post
              Story of Cus D'Amato and fear

              NOTE: No copyright infringement intended.

              THE BLACK LIGHTS: Inside the World of Professional Boxing by Thomas Hauser

              Pages 18-20

              One of boxing's foremost authorities on the subject of fear is

              Cus D'Amato, the legendary trainer of Jose Torres and Floyd

              Patterson. A diminutive, outspoken man who has worked with young

              fighters for most of his 77 years, D'Amato often looks back on

              his own experiences to put the subject of fear into context.

              "I remember the first time I got involved in what I call a

              waiting fight," D'Amato reminisces. "In the neighborhood in

              which I lived, which was a pretty tough neighborhood, you got

              involved in fights all the time. Whenever you got angry, you

              fought or you lost respect. Under those conditions you didn't

              think about being frightened. You replaced fear with anger. But

              it's different when you have the experience of waiting, an

              experience I had once. I lived in an Italian neighborhood, and a

              few blocks away there was an Irish neighborhood. I never used to

              have trouble with the Irish; I got along with everybody. But

              then the neighborhoods had some trouble, and both sides

              said, 'You bring a guy and we'll bring a guy, and they'll fight

              it out. Instead of both gangs fighting, we'll have two guys

              representing the neighborhoods.' I was 16," D'Amato

              continues, "and the Italian guys chose me. I wasn't mad at the

              Irish, I wasn't mad at anybody. But three days ahead of time I

              knew I had to fight this big Irish guy at nine o'clock on

              Saturday night. So comes the night of the fight, I didn't want

              to fight because this guy never did anything to me, but I got no

              choice. All the Italian guys and I go over to the street between

              the neighborhoods, and wait under a big street light. We got

              there, maybe five minutes to nine, with eighty or ninety guys,

              and the Irish must have had a hundred but their fighter hadn't

              shown yet. I sat down on the curb, and I was thinking to

              myself. 'How the hell did I get into this mess?' To tell the

              truth, I was scared. All my life, when I got mad I'd fought. I

              was fighting grown men when I was fourteen, but now I'm

              saying, 'Jesus Christ, what's the matter with me? I got to be

              crazy to do this. The next time some guys try to get me to

              fight, I'll fight them first; I got nothing against these Irish

              fellows.'" D'Amato's eyes grow larger, his face more animated,

              as his tale progresses. "Anyway, I'm sitting there, really

              sweating. I reached up, felt the sweat on my forehead, and

              figured it was blood, but it was only sweat. Nine o'clock comes

              and the Irish guy isn't there. Quarter after nine, the Irish guy

              isn't there. Nine-thirty, I'm still waiting, and all the time

              the waiting is getting worse because this guy is gonna be there,

              and I'm gonna have to fight him. Finally, at ten o'clock, one of

              his buddies comes and says the Irish guy is scared. He ain't

              showing. It was the happiest moment of my life."

              Fighters are the most exposed athletes in the world. During a

              fight, the crowd observes every twitch and movement. Still,

              spectators rarely see fear in a quality fighter. "That," says

              D'Amato, "is because the fighter has mastered his emotions to

              the extent that he can conceal and control them." But whatever a

              fighter says, the fear is there. It never goes away. He just

              learns to live with it. "And the truth is," D'Amato

              continues, "fear is an aspect to a fighter. It makes him move

              faster, be quicker and more alert. Heroes and cowards feel

              exactly the same fear. Heroes just react to it differently. On

              the morning of a fight, a boxer wakes up and says, 'How can I

              fight? I didn't sleep at all last night.' What he has to realize

              is, the other guy didn't sleep either. Later, as the fighter

              walks toward the ring, his feet want to walk in the opposite

              direction. He's asking himself how he got into this mess. He

              climbs the stairs into the ring, and it's like going to the

              guillotine. Maybe he looks at the other fighter, and sees by the

              way he's loosening up that his opponent is experienced, strong,

              very confident. Then when the opponent takes off his robe, he's

              got big bulging muscles. What the fighter has to realize,"

              concludes D'Amato, "is that he's got exactly the same effect on

              his opponent, only he doesn't know it. And when the bell rings,

              instead of facing a monster built up by the imagination, he's

              simply up against another fighter."

              Enjoy..
              Quality read, Cus knew what was up!

              Comment


                #8
                Damn...that's really enlightening....if you've lived it, you know what's up

                Comment


                  #9
                  now thats wisdom

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Really good read. Insightful, funny at times, and brutally honest.

                    Comment

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