Three top trainers give their thoughts on impact of lock down

Trainers Robert Garcia, Freddie Roach and Andre Rozier give their thoughts on the impact of the coronavirus lock down.

The trainers understand the impact an extended coronavirus lock down will have had on boxing, both short term and long term, as well as anyone.

DAZN commentator Chris Mannix spoke to three of the best – Robert Garcia, Freddie Roach and Andre Rozier – on the show “From the Corner,” which can be seen on Matchroom Boxing’s YouTube channel.

Here is what the trainers had to say.

ON THE LOCK DOWN

Garcia: “It’s tough, fighters fight for a living and without having any income coming in they have to look for support elsewhere. There are some fortunate fighters like Mikey Garcia and Manny Pacquiao that are getting big paydays, but besides those guys, boxers are going to struggle especially if this goes on for four, five more months, fighters are going to be in trouble.”

Roach: “This has attacked the whole world, we weren’t prepared and it’s hitting us hard, it’s killed all sports. I’ve told my fighters, ‘Don’t get caught off guard, be ready. You have to be in shape at all times,’ because if you get the first call out and you say, ‘I’m not ready yet’, that’s not going to go down well with the promoters.”

Rozier: “Maintain cardio, that’s really important. You are in the house, what do you do? You watch TV and you eat, and some of my guys eat and eat and eat. So, I am telling them to make sure they keep then roadwork going, do as much as you can. You’ve been taught everything in the gym already. Do your exercise, shadow box, just work, that’s all you can do right now. You have to be prepared because when we get back to a new normal, you have to be ready because the first guys that are ready to go will be the first guys to really go.”

ON THE IMPORTANCE OF SPARRING

Garcia: “I’ve thought about it, and we cannot stop sparring. The guys need it. Like Freddie, I remember the days when I would spar every day, I think three days a week is enough now to get the rounds in. We don’t have to bring outside guys in really with the guys we have in there, but sometimes I’ll call the Wild Card [Boxing Club] and ask if there’s someone for one of my guys, and sometimes I’ll get the call from the Wild Card to send a guy over there. We won’t really have a problem as all the guys are living, eating and training together, so it’s not going to affect us too much. Jose Ramirez always wants to spar Vergil Ortiz, because he gets the best work from him.”

Rozier: “Sparring is the essence of practice. I’m not saying your guys have to kill each other in sparring, but you have to formulate your attack plans, your footwork, your ring generalship and that’s how you gain your experience, by sparring. So, it’s going to be really difficult. The only good thing going on with my crew of guys is that they are so diverse that they can spar with each other. I don’t have to call guys in from outside.”

Roach: “Mike Tyson said to me one day, ‘Why do I have to spar with three different sparring partners? Can’t we make it fair and have me spar with one guy for the whole day?’ I said, ‘Well Mike you know that’s not how it works,’ but he tried to convince me! Mike was a character! He KO’d a lot of guys in sparring early in his career, but he wasn’t bad on them later in his career when he was with me. He said to me once, ‘Freddie, you don’t have to get up in the morning and do road work with me, I will do it myself anyway.’ And I said, ‘Yeah, I am just here to spy on you a little bit and make sure you get up!’”

ON BOXING BEHIND CLOSED DOORS 

Garcia: “It’s going to have to happen, like it or not. Boxing is going to change. Jose Ramirez, for example, told me that he’d rather not fight [without fans] but with things going the way they are going, he’s going to have to. There’s nothing else he can do. He doesn’t like the idea, but what else are you going to do? Fighters that have already accomplished so much might be able to retire, or those that haven’t been in the sport for long and aren’t making money could consider doing something else if they don’t like fighting without fans. But those that are in the position where the purses are already huge or they are in world title fights, they are going to have to fight, there’s no way they will make that sort of money.

“Having millions of people watching on TV is just not the same as have the live crowd cheering your name or against you, which can motivate you. It’s something boxing needs, but we’re going to have to deal with it and teach our fighters how to handle it. The gyms are going to change too. Sparring sessions sometimes have lots of people in the gym, but maybe that will be just the trainers and the fighters so that they can get used to this.”

Roach: “Gabriel Rosado had a fight in an empty arena in Phoenix, and it was really hard to motivate him. We had to push him to fight after the [Daniel] Jacobs-[Julio Cesar] Chavez Jr. fight had emptied the arena. It was unusual, but at least he’s had practice at it. It was difficult for him to get his combinations going and get pumped up. There was no crowd, just some officials, judges and the cornermen, that’s it. And we’ll have to get used to that for some time because that’s the path we’re on right now.”

Rozier: “Sergey Derevyanchenko and I spoke about it. I asked him about there being no fans, and he’s such a nonchalant guy, he just said, ‘It’s OK coach, I do what I have to do.’ Fighters are going to have to make it work. You can’t say no, you have to fight. You can’t tell a promoter, ‘Oh, I don’t have an audience so I can’t fight.’ I’m praying we’ll be back eventually, but to get the ball bouncing, we’re going to have to get in the ring in arenas by ourselves. And Robert and Freddie and I will be the guys cheering the fighters on from our corners! The guys that are always in swing-bouts will be ready for this big time!”

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. overweight, to face Daniel Jacobs at 173-pound catch weight

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. missed weight by almost five pounds, forcing him to renegotiate his contract with opponent Daniel Jacobs.

PHOENIX – Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. weighed 172.7 pounds, 4.7 pounds heavier than the super middleweight limit, at the official weigh-in Thursday morning, forcing him to re-negotiate the contract for his fight with Danny Jacobs at Talking Stick Arena.

Promoter Eddie Hearn and Francisco Meneses, executive director of the Arizona Boxing & MMA Commission, said Jacobs (35-3, 29 KOs) and Chavez Jr. (51-3-1, 33 KOs) agreed on a catch weight of 173 pounds for the bout Friday on DAZN.

Jacobs made weight, coming in at 167.7 pounds. The exact terms of the new deal were not disclosed.

“It’s not a surprise,’’ Hearn said. “He had a nightmare camp with the legal situation hanging over him and all.’’

Chavez Jr wasn’t cleared to fight until Tuesday. That’s when a Nevada judge granted him an injunction, lifting his suspension by the Nevada State Athletic Commission for allegedly refusing to submit to a drug test in late October. The Arizona Commission had already licensed Chavez. If the judge had ruled against him, however, the license would have been withdrawn.

Daniel Jacobs feeling strong, energized at his new weight

PHOENIX – A new weight might mean a renewed Daniel Jacobs. He’s climbing up the scale and away from the grinding, often dangerous battle to make weight. Call it a debut and a departure from a struggle that has left Jacobs drawn, drained and – in the …

PHOENIX — A new weight might mean a renewed Daniel Jacobs. He’s climbing up the scale and away from the grinding, often dangerous battle to make weight.

Call it a debut and a departure from a struggle that has left Jacobs drawn, drained and – in the end – defeated.

“You guys don’t understand the damage I was doing to my body trying to make weight,’’ Jacobs (35-3, 29 KOs) said at the final news conference before his first fight at super middleweight against Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. (51-3-1, 33 KOs) Friday at Talking Stick Arena on DAZN.

In his last fight, in early May, Jacobs, still a middleweight, lost a decision to Canelo Alvarez. He also lost some money, a fine assessed when he failed to make the weight mandated by a re-hydration contract clause on the morning of the bout.

Daniel Jacobs will be fighting for the first time as a full-fledged 168-pounder against Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. on Friday in Phoenix. Ed Mulholland / Matchroom Boxing USA

Jacobs was 3.6 pounds heavier than the mandated 170, which is 10 pounds heavier than the 160-limit he made at the formal weigh-in less than 24 hours earlier. According to the contract, he was penalized $250,000 for each pound. Any ounce more than three pounds would be rounded up to a fourth pound, also according to the contract. It wound up costing Jacobs $1 million.

Damage to the body.

Damage to the wallet, too.

Time to move.

“I feel strong,’’ said Jacobs, who has dedicated the fight to the late Patrick Day, his longtime friend who died four days after suffering head trauma in a fight on Oct. 12. “I feel like this is the perfect weight for me. I’m only two pounds away from 168, and for me, that’s the first time ever. I’m probably going to eat breakfast on the morning of the fight.

“We looked exceptional in the gym but, those last two weeks prior to making weight, we’d leave it in the gym. Now, I have an opportunity to carry over those skills, to be hydrated, to be 100 percent. The skills in the gym that my team sees? I am allowing the world an opportunity to see that.’’

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.-Daniel Jacobs is on but controversy lingers

Arizona proceeded with plans for the Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.-Daniel Jacobs card without any unforeseen issues at a meeting Wednesday.

PHOENIX – The Arizona State Boxing & MMA Commission proceeded with plans for the Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.-Daniel Jacobs card without any unforeseen issues related to the licensing of Chavez at a meeting Wednesday.

Chavez, who faces Jacobs in a super middleweight bout Friday at Talking Stick Arena on DAZN, was cleared to fight Tuesday after a Nevada district judge granted him an injunction, lifting his suspension by the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

Chavez already had been granted a pending license by the Arizona Commission, a three-member regulatory board which approved the Matchroom-promoted card at its Nov. 18 meeting.

If the Nevada judge had ruled against Chavez and upheld the suspension, it’s likely that the license would have been withdrawn. Under the Muhammad Ali Act, federal law mandates that one state’s suspension be honored nationwide. An item on the Arizona Commission’s agenda Wednesday indicated it was prepared for that possibility. Possible action was mentioned regarding the main event, including an option to move into a private Executive Session if necessary.

It wasn’t necessary.

Yet controversy lingers.

Chavez Jr. was suspended after he allegedly refused to submit to a drug test while training at the Wild Club Boxing Club in Los Angeles in late October. First, Chavez said he was asked for a test sample by someone who failed to show him credentials proving he was a Voluntary Anti-Doping Association representative. Then he said he did not believe he had to undergo the test because he had yet to sign for the fight, although the bout had already been scheduled for Las Vegas.

That’s when Matchroom’s Eddie Hearn moved the card to Arizona. Then the Nevada Commission upheld its suspension of Chavez Jr. at a meeting in mid-November. Chavez Jr. then filed his lawsuit.

The Nevada Commission, angry at Hearn’s decision to move the card, has threatened his promotional license. Hearn is using the Arizona license held by Phoenix-based Iron Boy Promotions to promote Friday’s card. According to the Arizona Commission, Matchroom has applied for a license. The U.K.-based promoter plans to stage more cards in the state in 2020.

“We have no quarrel with Nevada,’’ Scott Fletcher, Chairman of the Arizona Commission, said Wednesday. “We share a border.’’

But there is a quarrel between Top Rank’s Bob Arum and Hearn. Arum ripped into Hearn during a session with reporters last weekend while promoting Terence Crawford’s fight against Egidijus Kavaliauskas.

Hearn, Arum said, is “in a strong position in the U.K. where the fans really buy tickets, but he’s falling on his ass in the United States, because he doesn’t understand the market and says stupid things. And what he’s doing now with Chavez, putting himself at risk with the Nevada Commission, is senseless.”

Hearn, of course, read the comments. And, of course, he fired back at a news conference Tuesday after the court ruling in favor of Chavez Jr.

Hearn took the podium at Talking Stick and thanked Chavez for enduring what he called “an ordeal.’’ He thanked Chavez’s attorney.

“I also want to thank the haters,’’ Hearn said. “Thank you, Bob Arum. I saw his comments.’’

Hearn accused Arum of also “shopping” a controversial card from one state to another. Hearn cited Antonio Margarito. Margarito couldn’t fight in California after he was found to have used altered hand wraps before losing to Shane Mosley on Jan. 24, 2009 at Los Angeles’ Staples Center. While under suspension in California, Margarito fought his next bout in Mexico. Then he was licensed in Texas for his loss to Manny Pacquiao on July 23, 2010 on the Dallas Cowboys home field in Arlington.

Arum also argued that the Nevada Commission should begin drug testing once a fight is announced.

“Once a fight is announced, the Nevada Commission has jurisdiction to test a fighter,’’ Arum said. “A lot of fighters take performance enhancing drugs and then clear their system by the press conference, so if you wait until the press conference, you will miss that they took performance enhancing drugs.’’

Hearn said that Chavez is being tested, but not by VADA. Instead, Hearn said, the tests have been conducted by Drug Free Sports, which conducts testing for the NFL.

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. granted license in Arizona, will fight Daniel Jacobs

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. has been granted a license to fight in Arizona, which means he’ll face Daniel Jacobs on Friday in Phoenix.

PHOENIX – The Arizona State Boxing and Mixed Martial Arts Commission has granted Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. a license, allowing him to fight Danny Jacobs on Friday night at Talking Stick Arena on DAZN.

Francisco Meneses Jr., the Commission’s executive director, told Boxing Junkie Tuesday that the three-member regulatory board voted to license Chavez.

“He has a license,’’ Meneses said.

According to an unsourced report from The Athletic on Twitter, Chavez was granted an injunction by a Nevada court, lifting his suspension by the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

Chavez sued Nevada after it upheld his suspension for refusing to submit to a drug test at the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, Calif. in late October. Chavez said then that a VADA testing representative did not show his credentials. He also said he didn’t think he had to submit to the test because he had yet to sign for the super middleweight fight.

The Arizona Commission is scheduled to meet Wednesday. Meneses said Chavez is not required to appear. Chavez and Jacobs appeared together at the Portland Trail Blazers-Phoenix Suns game Monday night at Talking Stick. The weigh-in is scheduled for Thursday.

The Matchroom-promoted card has generated a lot of controversy. The Nevada Commission threatened to suspend Eddie Hearn’s license after he moved the card to Phoenix in the wake of the Chavez suspension. The bout had been scheduled for Las Vegas.