I met him one time. Jackie picked us up and took us down to some hotel type thing. He was very pleasant and almost docile knowing what he did as a profession. Later on that year I fought on team Michigan vs team Leonard at the Palace. Good times and great memories. And Sugar Ray was the boxer of his time, why else would they call him Sugar? …...Rockin'
Look at Ruiz, he’s fat with short arms and slow feet but his fundamentals are among the best in the division, add an undentable chin and he’s a force in the division.
I remember speaking with Bill Miller when he told me, "with good basics you could travel the world as a fighter". This was years after I walked away and I was just in the gym messing around. I was sparring though, why go to a fighting gym and do no fighting? Anyway, the guy that Bill was working with was giving me fits sparring when I was working as an aggressive fighter. Then I just said F it and went back to my amateur days, walking the ring and controlling with feints and my jab. He couldn't do nothing to me. Catching him with my jab made feinting easy. Feint, righthand. He was lost. Bill told me later that if I was to get into shape that I could do something. I took that as a great compliment. That man was great! Bill Miller, R.I.P...….Rockin'
Yeah do the basics as best you can , but some boxers are just born to box, god given talent with timing , speed , reflexes , killer instinct , grit.....other wise every fighter would have been great as ray leonard or Ali but they are not.
There is ordinary , good , really good and special.....special comes along once or twice in a generation and that’s it.
Look at Ruiz, he’s fat with short arms and slow feet but his fundamentals are among the best in the division, add an undentable chin and he’s a force in the division.
Yup. Ruiz has a pedigree lacking at heavyweight. His experience and fundamentals can lead him to the top if he trains hard. So many guys seem to skip the basics. People **** on having a good jab but your jab is ****ing day 1 lol
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