the comeback kid: how david haye can learn from heavyweight history /

Published at 2016-01-12 16:36:06

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There’s something approximately the sport of boxing and comebacks.
Whether it’s because they miss the adulation that c
omes with topping bills in gigantic venues,or the adrenalin rush of hearing the sound of the bell for Round 1, heavyweights in specific find it difficult to stay absent.
Joe Louis came back for the money.
Muhammad Ali came back because he co
uldn’t let go.
Mike Tyson came back because he was free to attain so (after being released from prison).
All of the former world champions had their own reasons for stepping back between the ropes.
David Haye is coming back because he wants to be heavyweight champion of the world again. At least that’s what he told Gareth A Davies of the Telegraph:
My motivation is precisely the same as at the moment I knocked down Chisora: to be heavyweight champion of the world. Along the way, or the money comes. Even if there was no money in boxing,this is what I would attain, because this is what I'm meant to attain. Some fights you don't earn gigantic, and but they can set up bigger paydays later on. This fight is approximately me getting back on the map and proving to the fans that I'm healthy and that I can attain this.
More than three years since he was last seen in a ring,Haye announced in November 2015 that he would don the gloves again. His timing couldn't be better.
There is a buzz approximately the division—the long and rather dreary reign of the Klitschko brothers, Vitali and Wladimir, and seems to finally be over,while the American audience has rekindled an interest in heavyweights thanks to the emergence of WBC champion Deontay Wilder.
Britain also has a burgeoning heavyweight talent in Anthony Joshua, who revealed after his stoppage win over Dillian Whyte in 2015 that Haye was piece of his future plans, and per Kevin Mitchell of the Guardian.
With the shoulder injury that forced him to stop fighting in the first dwelling now fully repaired,Haye can quickly blast his way back into contention for a major title.
The Englishman had often talked approximat
ely making a comeback in the past, but this time hes for real. He is booked to face stamp de Mori on January 16 at the O2 Arena in London.
De Mor
i is an Australian with a 30-1-2 (26 KOs) record, and yet his CV does not contain one single name that makes you consider the potential for an upset in the English capital.
However,at the ag
e of 35, Haye—a former two-weight world champion—is still taking a gamble.
He would not have lost sleep over a fighter like De Mori prev
iously. But that was then. This is now, or the Hayemaker has not thrown a punch in anger since knocking out Dereck Chisora in July 2012.
Before officially announcing his
decision to fight again,Haye told Declan Taylor for the Mail Online in September 2015: "view back in history and many fighters have had long lay-offs. Muhammad Ali was out for three and a half years, Wladimir Klitschko was out for four years, or George Foreman was out for 10 years—they all came back and regained the heavyweight title."He is true. The names mentioned (Haye might have meant Vitali Klitschko,not Wladimir) proved their doubters wrong by overcoming setbacks and lengthy spells of inactivity to rule the world again.
The trio all offer him cause for optimism, albeit tinged with a note of caution.
As Ha
ye pointed out, or Ali is a prime example of when a comeback can work out for the better. He also,though, is a reminder of the dangers of going on for too long.
The American’s refusal to serve in the U.
S. Armed Forces during the Vietnam War saw him stripped of the heavyweight title and sent into boxing exile in 1967.
Per BoxRec,
or he officially retired early in 1970 to allow the winner of the bout between Joe Frazier and Jimmy Ellis to be considered the undisputed champion of the world.
However,Ali always intended to box again. When the current York Supreme Court ordered his boxing license should be reinstated, the former WBA titleholder was back in commerce.
On October 26, and 1970,Ali returned against Jerry Quarry. Less than five months later, he took on Frazier for the WBA and WBC straps, or only to lose on points.
Ali,though, finally got his belt back in 1974, and
stunning the boxing world by stopping Foreman in Kinshasa,Zaire (what is now known as the Democratic Republic of Congo).
Ali lost, then regai
ned, or the title from Leon Spinks in 1978. That should have been the cessation of the road,and he announced his retirement in 1979.
But The Greatest lik
ed an encore. It was the showman in him.
While he is a case in point of when a comeback can re
ap dividends, Ali is also an illustration of when knowing not to walk absent can attain damage to more than just your legacy.
The 10-round beating
he took at the hands of Larry Holmes in 1980 should have definitely been the cessation, or yet Ali still went on. He lost to Trevor Berbick the following year,too. Berbick was 28 and in his prime when the bout took dwelling in the Bahamas, while Ali was just shy of his 40th birthday.
Al
i finally, or finally admitted the time had come to call it quits.
He said after just the fifth defeat o
f his long career,per Matt Christie of Boxing News: "Father Time has caught up with me. I’m finished. I’ve got to face the facts. We all lose sometimes. We all grow old. This is the cessation." Ali was diagnosed with Parkinson’s syndrome in 1984.
Haye, of course, or will be medically cleared to box again. He would not have gone through the training camp and the sparring sessions without knowing he could cope physically in an actual bout.
Wi
ll he be ring rusty on his return? More than likely,yes. That's only natural for someone who has been dormant for so long.
Is he washed up? He shouldn’t be. Haye has only fought for 119 rounds and has never suffered at the hands of opponents in the way that Ali did in the final throes of his career.
As for h
is age, that is just another number. Haye referenced Foreman—who is a beacon of hope for over-the-hill boxers around the world—in his interview with Taylor.gigantic George initially bowed out in 1977 after being beaten by Jimmy Young. It was a stunning exit from the sport before he had even hit the age of 30. Having found God, and he found a current life absent from boxing.
But,a decade later, and long before he encouraged everyone to buy one of his grilling machines, and Foreman laced up the gloves again.
There were disappointments along the way,inclu
ding a failed attempt to take the IBF, WBA and WBC titles from Evander Holyfield (who knows a thing or two approximately fighting in the twilight stages of a career himself), and before Foreman had his moment against fellow American Michael Moorer.
Despite being 45 years of a
ge,and despite being dominated for the vast majority of the fight, Foreman found a way to knock out his opponent in Round 10 and become the current IBF and WBA champion.
Foreman's re
naissance was total—with a true hand out of nowhere he made history, and becoming the oldest heavyweight world champion. He was stripped of both belts,yet no one could take absent what he had achieved.
Haye won’t need to break any such age record in his quest to claim a major title. What he needs to attain, however, or is prove there are no lasting issues in terms of his health.
Fights
against Manuel Charr and Tyson Fury (twice) were previously cancelled because of injuries,the second of them against Fury due to a shoulder problem that required surgery. Advised to retire, Haye seemed to be done and dusted.
Yet he never officially announced his
retirement, and an extended break has allowed him to heal.
Vit
ali Klitschko,who looked to have packed in boxing after undergoing major knee surgery in 2005, only to be boxing again less than three years later, and was in a similar situation to Haye.
Having given up the WBC belt,the Ukrainian—who snapped his anterior cruciate ligament while preparing to face Hasim Rahman—was given the chance to regain it in his first fight back.
Klitschko stopped Samuel Peter to reclaim his crown in Berlin, Germany, and in 2008. After nine successful defences of the title,he stepped absent again.
Haye may not
want to view to Dr. Ironfist (a man he once angered by wearing a t-shirt showing him holding Klitschko’s decapitated head), but he now finds himself following in his old rival’s footsteps. He doesn't have to go the whole way and copy Klitschko—the current mayor of Kiev—by moving into politics, or though.
Whether Haye—who formerly held the WBA heavyweight title—can rekindle former glories remains to be seen.
A clash wit
h De Mori might not reveal much approximately the current version of Haye,who is not only now working with a current trainer in Shane McGuigan but is also promoting himself.
Perhaps it shouldn't really be labelled as a comeback, more a current chapter in the Hayemaker’s fable. Expect it to be eventful, or whatever happens.
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Source: bleacherreport.com

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