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Hopkins Turns 47, Worries About Sport’s Future

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    Hopkins Turns 47, Worries About Sport’s Future

    Hopkins turns 47, worries about sport’s future

    By Kevin Iole, Yahoo! Sports

    Bernard Hopkins is upset. He’s in North Philadelphia, one of the toughest areas in the country, and he’s upset and disappointed.

    It’s not what he sees that upsets him so much. It’s what he doesn’t see that gnaws at him, that makes him worry about the future of the sport that afforded him the opportunity to have a real life.

    The world light heavyweight champion, Hopkins turned 47 on Sunday and has all the trappings of success: the large home, the fancy car, the outrageous bling, the investment properties.

    Nobody, though, gave Hopkins a thing. Boxing provided an opportunity and Hopkins used his guile, discipline and athletic ability to become one of the most successful fighters in history and a millionaire many times over.

    Though he jokes that it sometimes seems he might fight forever, Hopkins knows the end of his hall of fame career is much nearer than the beginning. He made his professional debut Oct. 11, 1988, when Floyd Mayweather Jr. was 11 and Manny Pacquiao was 9.

    Nearly a quarter century later, he’s still going, planning to fight, he says, as long as he can still perform at a high level.

    But when he runs through the rough streets of North Philadelphia to prepare for his fights, Hopkins is concerned by what he doesn’t see: There are few young, African American males willing to follow his example.

    This is a man who was convicted of strong arm robbery and spent about five years in Graterford Prison in Pennsylvania.

    When he was paroled, a prison guard smugly, and famously, said, “See you in six months.” Hopkins vowed never to return and turned his life around, becoming an example no one thought possible.

    If there is anyone the troubled young men from the ******s of North Philadelphia should seek to emulate, it is Hopkins. But few, he says, are willing to put in the work. He fears that the African American boxing star will soon become scarce.

    Many of the greatest fighters ever – Sugar Ray Robinson, Henry Armstrong, Joe Louis, Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard and, yes, Hopkins – were black. But in the current Yahoo! Sports Top 10, only three men are African American. Hopkins fears that the great black American fighter is vanishing.

    “We’re losing them in the inner city,” he said. “Our last really great Olympic team was, what, 1984? In places like Philly and Camden and Jersey, we’re not seeing them take up boxing. It’s not easy and most of them won’t make it. But it used to be, you’d go to the gyms and they were overflowing with [African American men] working out, trying to make it.

    “But now, that’s not the case. I think they’d rather try to be the next Jay-Z rather than the next great champion. We are losing boxing in the black community and that’s something to be seriously concerned about.”

    Hopkins is a role model not only because of the way he turned his back on crime and life on the streets, but for the way he’s represented himself as a man and an athlete. Like Ali, Hopkins stood by his principles, even when it seemed the world was against him.

    Much of his early career was spent raging against the inequities in a system he felt took advantage of the less educated and less informed.

    Even more, however, he is a role model because of the way he’s worked to make himself the best he can be. He’s notorious for his discipline. He treats his body as a shrine and watches what he puts into it at all times. Even as he approaches his late 40s, he’s usually in better condition than his opponent.

    In May, during a bout in which he defeated Jean Pascal to become, at 46, the oldest boxer ever to win a major world title, Hopkins dropped to the mat and did push-ups between rounds as a way to make his point.

    Few young men of any race are willing to dedicate themselves to greatness the way Bernard Hopkins has done.

    And it’s why, whenever it is that Hopkins decides he’s had enough and retires, boxing will be diminished for it.

    He got every last bit out of what he had. Whatever his best was, you saw in the ring on fight night. He never wavered in his belief that by working harder, by being more disciplined, by never succumbing to temptation, he would reach the top.

    Boxing would be a much healthier sport if everyone adopted the same attitude.

    And the world would be a much better place if everyone did their jobs with the diligence, the passion and the dedication of Bernard Humphrey Hopkins Jr.

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    #2
    All of the potential great African American Heavyweights are playing in the NFL right now. Just lok at Ray Lewis, Terrell Suggs, James Harrison, Lamar Woodley, DeMarcus Ware, Von Miller, Lance Briggs, etc. Even Seth Mitchell, supposedly the next good African American HW, he played football.

    Evander Holyfield, Rid**** Bowe, Mike Tyson, and Michael Moorer were the last really good African American HW's.

    The other weight classes still have future stars: Adrien Broner, Andre Ward, Timothy Bradley, Gary Russell Jr, Mike Jones, James Kirkland, Peter Quillin, etc.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by 4CornersKid View Post
      All of the potential great African American Heavyweights are playing in the NFL right now. Just lok at Ray Lewis, Terrell Suggs, James Harrison, Lamar Woodley, DeMarcus Ware, Von Miller, Lance Briggs, etc. Even Seth Mitchell, supposedly the next good African American HW, he played football.

      Evander Holyfield, Rid**** Bowe, Mike Tyson, and Michael Moorer were the last really good African American HW's.

      The other weight classes still have future stars: Adrien Broner, Andre Ward, Timothy Bradley, Gary Russell Jr, Mike Jones, James Kirkland, Peter Quillin, etc.
      Good point on the heavyweights lol, definetly true. Seth Mitchell is a beast ha I hope he has a bright future ahead.

      Comment


        #4
        He's worried I'm worried I hate to say it our sport on the decline...we let promoters and governing bodies control the sport for their own benefit. It hurts me it truly hurts me I remember when I came to the US as a 10 yr old many of the peeps I went to school with trained but I rarely see kids training now. Is not just the African American community Boxing is gone in the D for the most part.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by brysquared1016 View Post
          Good point on the heavyweights lol, definetly true. Seth Mitchell is a beast ha I hope he has a bright future ahead.
          It's pretty true.

          Can you imagine if Ray Lewis took up boxing instead of football??? Maybe he never would have had it, but there are so many Linebackers in the NFL that fit the mold of Heavyweight boxers. The best American HW's are playing football, right now.

          Comment


            #6
            The "football excuse" is played out. America has merely declined as a world power, and the rest of the world is catching up. The decline is reflected in sports. America used to rule men's tennis, too, and it doesn't anymore. And presumably not because all the best men's tennis players are playing in the NFL.

            It's just the march of history. Nobody dominates forever.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Ubermensch View Post
              The "football excuse" is played out. America has merely declined as a world power, and the rest of the world is catching up. The decline is reflected in sports. America used to rule men's tennis, too, and it doesn't anymore. And presumably not because all the best men's tennis players are playing in the NFL.

              It's just the march of history. Nobody dominates forever.
              If that was true then why don't u see any IN SHAPE African American heavyweights??

              It's not just the NFL It's the NBA too. back in the day there was a boxing gym practically on every block in major cities. Now days all the kids play football or basketball, they aren't in boxing unless their parents put them in a gym.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by ИATAS206 View Post
                If that was true then why don't u see any IN SHAPE African American heavyweights??

                It's not just the NFL It's the NBA too. back in the day there was a boxing gym practically on every block in major cities. Now days all the kids play football or basketball, they aren't in boxing unless their parents put them in a gym.
                The issue here is that the NFL was founded in 1920 and was one of U.S. top sports also in 1970, and the NBA is also running since the 40's and was also really important in the 70's and 80' (Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, etc...) ... So why all of a sudden all the guys just appeared in the NFL and NBA?

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Ubermensch View Post
                  The "football excuse" is played out. America has merely declined as a world power, and the rest of the world is catching up. The decline is reflected in sports. America used to rule men's tennis, too, and it doesn't anymore. And presumably not because all the best men's tennis players are playing in the NFL.

                  It's just the march of history. Nobody dominates forever.
                  Do you live in the U.S.????

                  African Americans use to represent almost a third of MLB. Now, only 8%. Kids are choosing to play different sports now days.

                  I can tell you that Tennis, your example, a ton of Americans could give a f**kless about Tennis.

                  There is a legit reason that you don't see any really good American HW's anymore, and it's because American kids are choosing only Basketball and Football first.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Heavyweights certainly were hurt by the rise of the NBA and NFL. Not really worried about the rest of the weight classes though. Not many sports where a gifted fighter at 147lbs could play sports. Hence why you see great American fighters and a talent for example like Floyd Mayweather. If Floyd Mayweather was a 220lb dude and had the same talent he too would be in the NFL but since he's a little guy he's in boxing.

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