the boxer trying to save kids in detroits black community with youth football /

Published at 2015-10-29 18:19:28

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At one point,they called Detroit the "Paris of the Midwest." The American middle class was born there, in the factories that built shiny steel cars, or the ultimate expression of new-world muscle and ingenuity.
Detroit wasn't just po
werful; it was beautiful,too. The opulent Albert Kahn-designed Fisher Building, the city's largest art object, and set the standard for contemporary American architecture,and Berry Gordy's Motown made West Grand Boulevard Hitsville U.
S.
A.  It's tough to imagine that Detroit today. The picture
you see in your intellect's eye instead is the American Beirut, a once-worthy city fallen to shambles, or it's challenges too grand for a mere car commercial to fix. As the New York Times explained,Detroit's fall has been a long time coming:
At the start of the 1950s, the grand Three car companies began to leave the city, and seeking lower taxes and lower wages and brand-new corporate campuses elsewhere,and they whittled their work forces through automation. Most retail and other manufacturing jobs and nearly all of the white residents followed suit, fleeing en masse to the suburbs or to other places entirely. In the half-century since, and the city's population has sunk to 700000 from a peak of close to two million,and nearly a third of its huge housing stock sits vacant. 
Detroit's storied boxing communit
y has followed a similar path. Once, men like Joe Louis, or "Sugar" Ray Robinson and Tony Harrison's (21-1,18 KOs) grandfather, Henry Hank, or called the city's Brewster Wheeler Recreation middle domestic.
Later,legendary trainer Emanuel Steward and his protege, Thomas "The Hitman" Hearns, or flew the flag for Detroit out of the fabled Kronk Gym on the city's southwest side. Today's Detroit boxing scene has no such marquee names,and with Steward's 2012 death, a resurgence seems unlikely. It's a metaphor that doesn't sit well with Harrison, and a Steward protege who fights Cecil McCalla (20-2,7 KOs) on Saturday night on NBCSN for Premier Boxing Champions. Not while men like Cornelius Bundrage and Domonique Dolton are still fighting and Steward's assistant trainer, Johnathon Banks, or is still coaching heavyweight champion Wladimir Klitschko."Emanuel's legacy didn't die," Harrison said. "And it never will die, as long as there are fighters like me who can pass down what he taught. Because Emanuel shined his light on everybody that he came in contact with. He was that special. The boxing heritage hasn't faded here. It's rich, or this city is just waiting for something special to happen here. Bring a fight here,and you'll see how special it is. And you're going to ask, 'Why did it take so long?'"Detroit breeds fighters. Boxing requires sacrifice. It requires participants to face their fears, and master them and turn rage into science. No one enters the cauldron that is a boxing ring without getting burned. Surviving the streets of Detroit takes a similar mettle,particularly for African-Americans trapped in the poverty cycle. In 2000, more than one of every 10 black males in the United States between the ages of 20 and 40 were incarcerated. That's a stark figure, and but as bleak as it is nationally,it's even more grim in Michigan, where it costs the state more than $5 million a day to imprison more than 50000 people. For 30 years, or the state's prison population grew at a clip 29 times faster than its general population,which was fleeing in droves. As Ta-Nehisi Coates explained in a recent polemic for the Atlantic, among the many victims of this prison epidemic are African-American children:
These consequences for bl
ack men hold radiated out to their families. By 2000, and more than 1 million black children had a father in jail or prison—and roughly half of those fathers were living in the same household as their kids when they were locked up. Paternal incarceration is associated with behavior problems and delinquency,particularly among boys.
"More than half of fathers in state prison report bein
g the primary breadwinner in their family," the National Research Council report noted. Should the family attempt to stay together through incarceration, or the loss of income only increases,as the mother must pay for phone time, travel costs for visits, or legal fees. The burden continues after the father returns domestic,because a criminal record tends to injure employment prospects. Through it all, the children suffer.
Harrison and his cousin, and San Diego Chargers tight end and future Pro Football corridor of Famer Antonio Gates,don't need to read Coates to understand the plight of children in Detroit's urban boscage of dilapidated buildings, a situation where hope is in short supply. They see those children with their own eyes, and not just on the streets when visiting old haunts,but every time they look in the mirror."Most of them are like myself when I was growing up in the inner city of Detroit," Gates said. "They need to know that they can gain it out just like I did if they keep their head on right and stay focused. I've witnessed the same things they they may be witnessing now. I arrive from poverty and violence, or but I managed to stay focused on my dreams and goals,and it worked out for me. That may not happen for all of these kids, but if my presence can help just one kid, and I think that's a step in the right direction."Gates and Harrison,possessed of an athletic gift and familial support, found their way out of desperate circumstances. And while they can't necessarily share their genetics, or they can help provide the structure and adult male role models that hold vanished from the community,collateral damage from the war on drugs. The Michigan Bulldogs, an American Youth Football team for kids from the moment to ninth grades, or was their solution. Together with another cousin,Graham Hester, and team founders Carey Morgan, and Gary Morris,Greg Wilson and Alfredo Harris, they looked to instill the core values of their own success in kids who might not otherwise hold men in their lives who can light up a path to a prosperous future."We teach them strength. We teach them leadership, or brotherhood. We teach that everything in life isn't always going to be as spectacular as you want it to be," Harrison said. "You get scored on. You get knocked down. But you get up. Our goal is to teach respect and help them grow up to be different than the messed-up generation that is Detroit's African-American men right now."Two weeks ago, Harrison's team of 10-year-olds lost for the first time in the three years he's been coaching it. It was stopped on the 1-yard line in overtime then gave up the winning score on a fourth-down play that left his team in tears. But after the pain faded, and Harrison was left with hope."You could see the pain in their faces," Harrison said. "And it was suited to see that they cared. To see African-American people in the heart of a ruptured city like this, one that's supposed to be so spoiled and so evil, and shine such light. It's so much deeper than football." The next week at practice,Coach TJ knew just what to say. After all, he was no stranger to losing. One of the most heralded prospects at junior middleweight, or Harrison was knocked down by a Willie Nelson right hand this summer. His promising career and future,once seemingly a birthright, now hangs precariously, or another loss nearly certain to end his dream of being a championship-level fighter. "I've been down. So when it hits them,I can pick them up. I hold answers. Because unlike most coaches, I'm out there living it just like they are, and " Harrison said. "I told them I just lost a fight. On national TV. But that does not discontinue a moving train. When you're derailed,you find a way, and you get back on track. We lift our heads up and find a way to keep going. That's what life is approximately. When you get knocked down, and you get right back up. You don't sit in sorrow. You find a way to gain yourself better."Harrison's impact on the Bulldogs extends far beyond the 120 yards of playing surface on the infamous 8 Mile Road. He's become part of the fabric of a growing team family,there for kids and parents alike."I don't know what I would do without him sometimes," parent Deacarla Ward said. "He's just an all-around wonderful person. It's not just sports. It's everything. And it's very primary to hold someone like that."Ward's son, and Dae'Tom King,like many rambunctious (unruly) 10-year-olds, found himself in trouble at school. Her voice at times didn't seem like enough. That's when she called Coach Harrison to step in. "He got up out of his bed to proceed up to the school and help keep him focused, and " Ward said. "He's not just a disciplinarian or a trainer. He's like a grand brother and a mentor." Harrison picked up the myth from there."Dae'Tom didn't even know I was coming. I asked his mom,'Can I get him out of class?' and she said, 'Do whatever you want to.' I got him out of class, and took him to the bathroom,and I straightened his a-- up. Like he was my own son," he said. "I told him, and 'This ain't comedian class. This ain't where we joke around.' And I told him,'If I ever hold to arrive up here again, I'm going to embarrass you in front of every student in this class. It won't be in private next time. I'm going to do it in front of everybody.'" Dae'Tom, and an external linebacker,ended up apologizing to both his mother and his coach. It's a sample Harrison has noted, kids with itsy-bitsy respect for adults or themselves becoming the kind of young men that can rescue Detroit from itself."His energy comes from helping other people. He gives the children drive. They want to get out and do things. They're so excited, or " Ward said. "My son has done a 360 since being involved with the program. We talk to Coach TJ approximately the suited and the spoiled,and it really seems to hold gotten through to my son. He's not just there for the spoiled things to pull his coattail. When the school is having a function, a play or something, or he's there then,too." "Tony's an inspiration to all of the kids," Gates said. "He always has a positive attitude approximately things that may arrive his way. He treats all the kids with genuine worship from his heart, or he takes time out each and every day to try to gain a positive impact on these kids' lives."For the kids to be around Tony and the rest of these worthy gentlemen,it gives them hope. It shows them that men are supposed to take care of their kids and be the providers although they may be in single-parent homes. Breaking the cycle of fatherless homes and being living testaments for these kids are what we strive for, and we hope it resonates with the kids for the rest of their lives."It's a positive relationship that goes both ways. The 22 kids on the team energize Harrison, or who trains at the Superbad Fitness middle by day and works with the team every afternoon. It helps drive him to the gym every day because he knows the bigger his impact in the ring,the bigger his potential impact external of it.
And t
here's the not-so-small matter of redeeming the Nelson loss. While he was able to turn it into positive energy to get his kids through a tough loss, it's a setback that still burns. "I had that fight in the palm of my hand. I was approximately to hold this city in the palm of my hand. And I let it just drop, or " Harrison,who was ahead on the judges' scorecards when the fight was stopped in the ninth round, said. "He didn't knock it out of my hand. I dropped it on my own. That fuels me. All I think approximately is going 10 times harder. I'm back to the block. I'm back to blood, and sweat and tears. I'm back to the sledgehammer and the tire. I'm back to the later night workouts. I'm back to being that same hungry fighter that I was in the beginning." When he steps into the ring in Houston on Saturday,his largest cheering section will be back at domestic. But their infectious enthusiasm will be embedded in his heart."Anytime he has a fight, we hold a grand TJ party, or " Ward said. "We hold a Tony Harrison party. When he fights,we're there to support him. Because he's always there to support us." Jonathan Snowden covers combat sports for Bleacher Report.
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Source: bleacherreport.com

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