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Jermain Taylor to Be Careful What he Eats and Drinks In Germany

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    Jermain Taylor to Be Careful What he Eats and Drinks In Germany

    By Eric Thomas: Former World Boxing Council/World Boxing Organization middleweight champion Jermain Taylor is going to be extra careful while in Germany for his fight against German based super middleweight Arthur Abraham, according to the NWA Online. Taylor, 31, is going to eat out at a restaurant rather than eat at the hotel dining area that he’s staying at. Taylor will be drinking bottled water to make sure that nothing potentially could be slipped into his water that could make him sick. In addition, Taylor will have his gym in Germany checked for bugs or hidden cameras.

    Obviously, this sounds a like a big deal, but there is a lot riding on his Super Six fight against Abraham and Taylor can’t afford to be beaten because of food or drink poisoning. Taylor has lost three out of his last four boxing matches in the past two years and at this point, he needs to make sure he gets by Abraham on October 17th.

    Abraham, the local fighter, will have the benefit of fighting in front of a home crowd in Berlin, Germany, and because of that, he might feel a little less worried than Taylor does about the food and drink issue. Abraham is favored by many boxing people to beat Taylor. It’s hard not to see why. Abraham is undefeated at 30-0, and has knockout power in both hands.

    Abraham might be the hardest puncher in the Super Six tournament in terms of single punch power. He doesn’t throw as many punches as some of the fighters in the tourney, but he usually doesn’t need to throw a lot of punches due to his big power. Abraham can take a lot of punishment and has survived two fights against the hard punching Edison Miranda.

    If Abraham can be beat, it won’t likely be by knockout. He fought most of his first fight against Miranda with a broken jaw in 2006. It was a heroic move by Abraham, although dangerous because of the amount of blood loss and the potential for a blood clot from the broken jaw. Beating Abraham by decision might not be an easy thing for Taylor to do, though.

    Visiting fighters in Germany sometimes complain about finding it tough to win a decision there. Taylor might have to do something sensational, like knock Abraham down to get a win, because the judges may end up being influenced by the loud German crowd who will be making a lot of noise every time Abraham throws a punch.

    Taylor came into training camp for the Abraham fight lighter than unusual, and didn’t have to take off 20-25 pounds like he has in the past. Taylor feels that the weight loss and the long runs that he had to take in order to lose the weight in the past caused him to be weak in his past fights. Taylor wore down in his bouts against Carl Froch and Kelly Pavlik, getting beaten by both of them in the past two years. Taylor started out strong against both Froch and Pavlik, knocking each of them to the canvas in the early going but then fading quickly and getting stopped.

    #2
    yeah they poison him down there

    Comment


      #3


      Is this for real?

      Comment


        #4
        is there a history of fighters poinsoning other fighters in germany??or is this an early excuse??

        Comment


          #5
          Crazy ****.

          Comment


            #6
            Jermain and boxing paranoia
            By Harry King
            THE MORNING NEWS

            LITTLE ROCK — Veteran boxing trainer Pat Burns intercepted the cup of water offered to Jermain Taylor and handed his man a sealed bottle of H2O.

            The liquid could have contained most anything, Burns said, recalling the days when a laxative that looked like chocolate candy was slipped to some fighters shortly before a bout.

            Burns is long-gone from the Taylor team, but paranoia is ever-present in the fight game. Taylor's people sent an advance man to Germany to look for bugs and cameras in the gym where Taylor will prepare for his Oct. 17 super middleweight fight with unbeaten Arthur Abraham. Taylor, the former middleweight champion from Arkansas, will not eat in the restaurant at his hotel; he'll dine out, unannounced, or his chef will fix something.

            Abraham, you see, is from Berlin.

            The Taylor-Abraham bout is part of a six-fighter tournament that guarantees three fights for each participant. Based on points — three for a KO or TKO, two for a decision, one for a draw — the field will be narrowed to four and then two. Each fighter will get about $1.5 million for his first fight and the money goes up for the semifinalists and finalists.

            Even though Taylor has lost three of his last four and the other participants are a combined 133-1, he is the third betting choice. Clearly, oddsmakers have taken into account the quality of Taylor's competition. Nonbelievers in such should note Arkansas 47, Texas A&M 19.

            The favorite is Mikkel Kessler who has won 42 fights, but is best known for his only loss, a decision at the hands of unbeaten Joe Calzaghe in November 2007. Lately, Kessler has knocked out the "Who Dat" pair of Gusmyr Perdomo and Danilo Haussler.

            Neither will be mistaken for Bernard Hopkins, Kelly Pavlik, or Winky Wright — all of whom are on Taylor's resume.

            Abraham is the second choice and this is his first fight at 168 pounds. In football parlance, Abraham would be hard-nosed. Edison Miranda broke Abraham's jaw in the fourth round of their fight in the summer of 2008, but Abraham went 12 rounds and won.

            Also in the field are a couple of Olympic medalists best described as up and comers and Carl Froch, who won the WBC title with a 12th round TKO of Taylor when Taylor was well ahead on points. One of the first things that George Foreman told Taylor when he began training in Houston was that he would teach Taylor some old-school tricks to extend his eight-round prowess to 12 rounds.

            Taylor's camp believes their man has finally subdued an ego that said he was so good he could gain weight and then take off 20-25 pounds at training camp. Supposedly, he was only 12 pounds overweight when he began nine weeks of training with Foreman.

            "In the past, I was over-training with my morning runs because of the weight I had to lose," Taylor said. "I was running six miles every day, even on sparring days."

            Such a regimen is debilitating.

            Taylor says he has made the changes necessary to win. We'll see.

            Taylor, who turned 31 in August, was recently reminded that it's not too late.

            After Vernon Forrest was shot to death during a car******* attempt in Atlanta this summer, one of Taylor's advisers told him that Forrest was Ring ****zine's Fighter of the Year in 2002.

            Where is this going, Taylor asked.

            Forrest was 31 in 2002, the man said.

            Comment


              #7
              Jermain Taylor's trainer

              [IMG]//sc****tv.com/News/News%20Pages/Politics/images-2/scarface-tony-montana.jpg[/IMG]

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Chr0nic View Post
                By Eric Thomas: Former World Boxing Council/World Boxing Organization middleweight champion Jermain Taylor is going to be extra careful while in Germany for his fight against German based super middleweight Arthur Abraham, according to the NWA Online. Taylor, 31, is going to eat out at a restaurant rather than eat at the hotel dining area that he’s staying at. Taylor will be drinking bottled water to make sure that nothing potentially could be slipped into his water that could make him sick. In addition, Taylor will have his gym in Germany checked for bugs or hidden cameras.

                Obviously, this sounds a like a big deal, but there is a lot riding on his Super Six fight against Abraham and Taylor can’t afford to be beaten because of food or drink poisoning. Taylor has lost three out of his last four boxing matches in the past two years and at this point, he needs to make sure he gets by Abraham on October 17th.

                Abraham, the local fighter, will have the benefit of fighting in front of a home crowd in Berlin, Germany, and because of that, he might feel a little less worried than Taylor does about the food and drink issue. Abraham is favored by many boxing people to beat Taylor. It’s hard not to see why. Abraham is undefeated at 30-0, and has knockout power in both hands.

                Abraham might be the hardest puncher in the Super Six tournament in terms of single punch power. He doesn’t throw as many punches as some of the fighters in the tourney, but he usually doesn’t need to throw a lot of punches due to his big power. Abraham can take a lot of punishment and has survived two fights against the hard punching Edison Miranda.

                If Abraham can be beat, it won’t likely be by knockout. He fought most of his first fight against Miranda with a broken jaw in 2006. It was a heroic move by Abraham, although dangerous because of the amount of blood loss and the potential for a blood clot from the broken jaw. Beating Abraham by decision might not be an easy thing for Taylor to do, though.

                Visiting fighters in Germany sometimes complain about finding it tough to win a decision there. Taylor might have to do something sensational, like knock Abraham down to get a win, because the judges may end up being influenced by the loud German crowd who will be making a lot of noise every time Abraham throws a punch.

                Taylor came into training camp for the Abraham fight lighter than unusual, and didn’t have to take off 20-25 pounds like he has in the past. Taylor feels that the weight loss and the long runs that he had to take in order to lose the weight in the past caused him to be weak in his past fights. Taylor wore down in his bouts against Carl Froch and Kelly Pavlik, getting beaten by both of them in the past two years. Taylor started out strong against both Froch and Pavlik, knocking each of them to the canvas in the early going but then fading quickly and getting stopped.
                c'mon JT, german food isn't that ****ty

                Comment


                  #9
                  I saw that earlier, you can never be too sure.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    rather OTT Jermain!!

                    Comment

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