David Morrell’s manager Luis DeCubas: ‘David is the most talented Cuban fighter I’ve ever worked with’

David Morrell’s manager Luis DeCubas: “David is the most talented Cuban fighter I’ve ever worked with.”

David Morrell makes a strong first impression.

Luis DeCubas Sr., the advisor to so many elite Cuban boxers, first saw the 168-contender when he was shown a video of the then-17-year-old amateur’s fight against Cuban legend Julio Cesar La Cruz. Morrell lost a disputed decision but DeCubas was convinced instantaneously that the teenager could be great.

Morrell was only 5-0 in his pro career when he started working with respected trainer Ronnie Shields in Houston. Shields was stunned by what he saw from a fighter with so few fights.

It was that ability – a combination of natural gifts and years of hard work – that convinced DeCubas that Morrell was capable of fighting for the WBA super middleweight “interim” world title in only his third fight in August 2020.

Morrell (9-0, 8 KOs) easily defeated overmatched veteran Lennox Allen in that bout, winning a one-sided decision and the belt. He has knocked out his other eight opponents and expects to make Sena Agbeko nine on Saturday at The Armory in Minneapolis (Showtime).

DeCubas described Joel Casamayor as the greatest Cuban-born fighter in the post-Castro era but he didn’t have him face such a challenge with a 2-0 record.

“I would never have had Joel Casamayor fight a guy like Lennox Allen when he was 2-0,” DeCubas said. “Allen was 22-0 (actually 22-0-1), a veteran. I never would’ve done that with [Yuriorkis] Gamoba, [Erislandy] Lara, [Guillermo] Rigondeaux … but I put Morrell in there.

“Casamayor is the best of all Cuban fighters since the Castro era. I think he’s proven that. Rigondeaux was very good. [But] David is the most talented Cuban fighter I’ve ever worked with.”

What makes Morrell so special?

DeCubas cited his protégé’s boxing ability, which was polished in the Cuban amateur system. He pointed out that Morrel can hurt opponents with both hands, which has been evident in his nine fights. DeCubas compared him to all-time great Carlos Monzon … “but with better defense than Monzaon.”

And, of course, none that would matter if he didn’t have discipline.

“He has the talent but also the dedication, the drive, the desire,” DeCubas said. “That’s why he was willing to make Minnesota his home [base early in his career], him and Jamal James. He got up at 6 and ran in 30-below-zero temperatures.

“The kid is very determined. He went to Minnesota and followed the game plan.”

The first thing that struck Shields, who has worked with several Cubans, was the young fighter’s skill set but he soon realized that Morrell also was committed to getting even better.

“Once I started working with him I noticed that he was catching on to everything really quickly,” Shields said. “He’s really, really good at so many different things. … He’s determined to be the best fighter in the world.

“He loves the sport, everything related to the sport. He’s all in. That’s the mark of a great fighter.”

Of course, Morrell, 25, is just getting started. He has a perfect record and has become a top contender but he has yet to face a top-level opponent, which is required before can be considered one of the best fighters in the world pound for pound.

He certainly wants to fight the likes of Canelo Alvarez and David Benavidez, the top 168-pounders. In fact, he has been chasing Benavidez for some time now, saying anything he believes will help him lure the two-time titleholder into the ring.

He didn’t want to talk much about Benavidez in the lead up to Saturday, insisting he’s focused on Agbeko (28-2, 22 KOs). DeCubas was less restrained. He said Benavidez is “running away” from Morrell among other comments meant to provoke his fighter’s rival, who is coming off a sensational knockout of Demetruis Andrade.

First things first, however. Morrell must get past Agbeko, a hard-punching Ghanaian. Then he can continue his pursuit of bigger and better things. His handlers are convinced he’ll be ready when the time comes.

“I’ve been in boxing for 40 years,” DeCubas said. “David is one of the best I’ve ever seen [period], forget Cubans.”

[lawrence-related id=40084,36964,34129]

David Morrell’s manager Luis DeCubas: ‘David is the most talented Cuban fighter I’ve ever worked with’

David Morrell’s manager Luis DeCubas: “David is the most talented Cuban fighter I’ve ever worked with.”

David Morrell makes a strong first impression.

Luis DeCubas Sr., the advisor to so many elite Cuban boxers, first saw the 168-contender when he was shown a video of the then-17-year-old amateur’s fight against Cuban legend Julio Cesar La Cruz. Morrell lost a disputed decision but DeCubas was convinced instantaneously that the teenager could be great.

Morrell was only 5-0 in his pro career when he started working with respected trainer Ronnie Shields in Houston. Shields was stunned by what he saw from a fighter with so few fights.

It was that ability – a combination of natural gifts and years of hard work – that convinced DeCubas that Morrell was capable of fighting for the WBA super middleweight “interim” world title in only his third fight in August 2020.

Morrell (9-0, 8 KOs) easily defeated overmatched veteran Lennox Allen in that bout, winning a one-sided decision and the belt. He has knocked out his other eight opponents and expects to make Sena Agbeko nine on Saturday at The Armory in Minneapolis (Showtime).

DeCubas described Joel Casamayor as the greatest Cuban-born fighter in the post-Castro era but he didn’t have him face such a challenge with a 2-0 record.

“I would never have had Joel Casamayor fight a guy like Lennox Allen when he was 2-0,” DeCubas said. “Allen was 22-0 (actually 22-0-1), a veteran. I never would’ve done that with [Yuriorkis] Gamoba, [Erislandy] Lara, [Guillermo] Rigondeaux … but I put Morrell in there.

“Casamayor is the best of all Cuban fighters since the Castro era. I think he’s proven that. Rigondeaux was very good. [But] David is the most talented Cuban fighter I’ve ever worked with.”

What makes Morrell so special?

DeCubas cited his protégé’s boxing ability, which was polished in the Cuban amateur system. He pointed out that Morrel can hurt opponents with both hands, which has been evident in his nine fights. DeCubas compared him to all-time great Carlos Monzon … “but with better defense than Monzaon.”

And, of course, none that would matter if he didn’t have discipline.

“He has the talent but also the dedication, the drive, the desire,” DeCubas said. “That’s why he was willing to make Minnesota his home [base early in his career], him and Jamal James. He got up at 6 and ran in 30-below-zero temperatures.

“The kid is very determined. He went to Minnesota and followed the game plan.”

The first thing that struck Shields, who has worked with several Cubans, was the young fighter’s skill set but he soon realized that Morrell also was committed to getting even better.

“Once I started working with him I noticed that he was catching on to everything really quickly,” Shields said. “He’s really, really good at so many different things. … He’s determined to be the best fighter in the world.

“He loves the sport, everything related to the sport. He’s all in. That’s the mark of a great fighter.”

Of course, Morrell, 25, is just getting started. He has a perfect record and has become a top contender but he has yet to face a top-level opponent, which is required before can be considered one of the best fighters in the world pound for pound.

He certainly wants to fight the likes of Canelo Alvarez and David Benavidez, the top 168-pounders. In fact, he has been chasing Benavidez for some time now, saying anything he believes will help him lure the two-time titleholder into the ring.

He didn’t want to talk much about Benavidez in the lead up to Saturday, insisting he’s focused on Agbeko (28-2, 22 KOs). DeCubas was less restrained. He said Benavidez is “running away” from Morrell among other comments meant to provoke his fighter’s rival, who is coming off a sensational knockout of Demetruis Andrade.

First things first, however. Morrell must get past Agbeko, a hard-punching Ghanaian. Then he can continue his pursuit of bigger and better things. His handlers are convinced he’ll be ready when the time comes.

“I’ve been in boxing for 40 years,” DeCubas said. “David is one of the best I’ve ever seen [period], forget Cubans.”

[lawrence-related id=40084,36964,34129]

Adam Kownacki collecting admirers in the business

Trainers Joe Goossen and Ronnie Shields are big fans of fast-rising heavyweight Adam Kownacki, who fights Robert Helenius on Saturday.

Adam Kownacki is accumulating fans worldwide as a result of his aggressive, heavy-handed style and ongoing success.

Among those fans are respected trainers Joe Goossen and Ronnie Shields, both of whom expressed their admiration for the Polish-born heavyweight on the most-recent The PBC Podcast. Goossen has had several up-close looks at Kownacki, in the opposite corner as trainer of Chris Arreola and as a Fox TV analyst. Shields has watched from afar.

Kownacki (20-0, 15 KOs) faces Robert Helenius (29-3, 18 KOs) in a title eliminator Saturday at Barclay’s Center in Brooklyn, Kownacki’s hometown, on Fox.

“I love this guy,” Shields said on the podcast. “He’s one of the most exciting heavyweights in the division right now. He brings it, man. Just looking from the outside looking in, he’s a very exciting guy and he can fight.

“So I look forward to seeing his fights all the time. He’s one of those guys you just want to keep looking at over and over because you know he’s going to bring it.”

Goossen feels the same way about Kownacki, who is 6-foot-3 and weighed in at a typically thick 265½ on Friday.

“Listen,” Goossen said and then chuckled. “He’s an unusual character in this game. He’s a real force in the ring. … When you see him up close and personal, he’s a very, very sturdy looking guy and I’m using the loosest of terms. Just his wrists, his calves, his thighs. Just everything about him is extra big, extra thick.

“Not only that but he’s very, very active in the ring. In other words, he throws an inordinate number of punches for a heavyweight. … And he takes a great punch. He’s very hard to dissuade from enforcing his will upon you and he normally succeeds at doing just that.”

Of course, Goossen said, Kownacki isn’t a perfect fighter.

For example, Kownacki landed an impressive 369 punches (of 1,047 thrown) but also took 298 (of a heavyweight record (1,125) in his 12-round, unanimous-decision victory over Arreola in August. In other words, Kownacki can be hit.

That’s something he should work on, Goossen said.

“He’s hard to hurt, I tell you that,” Goossen said. “But … defensively, yes, he makes some mistakes that could cost him dearly against extremely powerful punchers.”

And Goossen feels Kownacki was surprised by the resistance he met from Arreola, so much so that he learned a valuable lesson.

“Kownacki said something very interesting to me in his last fight, which was against Arreloa, in the ring after the fight. … He said, ‘I needed this fight,’” Goossen said. “… I think we kind of caught him off guard. I think he may have let his guard down in training just a bit. Being a professional he probably worked very hard but he might say to himself, ‘I can work harder,’ like every fighter. … I think that fight really woke him up.”

Still, Goossen believes Kownacki has been ready for a title shot for some time.

“A world title shot for him could’ve come several times just in the past year or so,” he said. “It’s not that he wasn’t ready to fight somebody for a world title. It’s just a matter of getting that business opportunity. I think that’s going to be coming up once the air clears soon with [titleholders Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua].

“With a big win Saturday night, I think he puts himself very close to getting an opportunity to fight for a world title. … I think it’ll eventually happen for Kownacki. And when it does, he’s got a great chance of becoming a world champion.”

Guillermo Rigondeaux wants to move down again, win title at 115

Guillermo Rigondeaux wants to move down to 115 pounds and win a title there, according to his trainer, Ronnie Shields.

Guillermo Rigondeaux has two immediate goals at 39 years old.

One, the two-time Olympic champion wants to unify 118-pound titles after he moved down from 122 to outpoint Liborio Solis and win a vacant title last month. And two, believe it or not, he wants to move down to 115 to win a belt in that division. He certainly has no problems making 118 even though he fought at 128½ in his loss to Vassiliy Lomachenko.

Call him the incredible shrinking man.

“I put him on the scale even before the last fight,” Ronnie Shields, Rigondeaux’s trainer, said on The PBC Podcast. “He comes into the gym at 121 pounds. So three pounds is nothing. He actually wants to go down to 115 just to win a belt there just to say he did it … and then go back up to 118.

“I told him, at 39 years old, he’s doing the opposite of what everyone else in boxing is doing. Everybody else is going up to fight in different divisions; he’s going down.”

Rigondeaux (20-1, 13 KOs) has won three consecutive fights since Lomachenko forced him to retire after six rounds in December 2017, two by knockout and a split decision over Solis that most people believe should’ve been unanimous.

Shields considers the Lomachenko setback a blip.

“He never should’ve [fought] Lomachenko,” Shields said. “He was just way to small for him. … To put him in that fight was really ridiculous. The powers that be did it and he paid the consequences. At the same time, he came back and now he feels good.

“Even at 39, he’s capable of beating a lot of people out there.”

Especially if he doesn’t try fight like a slugger.

Rigondeaux surprised everyone by trading punches in a wild slugfest against Julio Ceja last June, winning by eighth-round knockout. And then, against Solis, he came out with a similar mindset in the opening round.

That didn’t sit well with Shields, who set him straight after the round. Rigondeaux responded by boxing the rest of the way.

“I tell him, ‘Look, you’re a pure boxer,’” Shields said. “That’s what you have to be. You can punch but, at the same time, defense works for you. Offense takes over everything. So after the first round, he came out and he finally started boxing, started getting his rhythm.

“He took 31 punches in the first round and then he took 33 punches in the other 11 rounds. And that’s the way it should be for a guy like him. … That’s the Rigo who won two gold medals and was the unified champion in the 122-pound division.”