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SUGAR
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SPICE
By Bert Randolph Sugar,
Sr. Boxing Analyst at-large for CMXsports

"WHILE WAGING THE WAR ON POVERTY, MANY
EX-BOXERS WANT TO KNOW WHERE TO SURRENDER."
What happens to boxers when they put their careers away in moth balls and
find their existence no longer defined by the ring? When they have to
deal with the world after boxing and discover that the world can be a
quagmire of quicksand, its particles shifting rapidly, and that they are,
perhaps, ill-prepared to handle this sometimes daunting task?
It’s one of the most dependable stories in all of sports: the tale of the
ex-boxer who, having voyaged, Columbus-like, into a new world, is totally
adrift at sea. The stories are almost too numerous to recount; the story
of a King Levinsky reduced to selling ties; of a Beau Jack shining shoes;
of a Johnny Bratton, homeless and sleeping in cars, etc., etc., etc.;
these et ceteras going on for at least four or five pages or more.
Oh, sure, there are those fighters who have made a life for themselves
after boxing--boxers like George Foreman, Max Schmeling, Sugar Ray
Leonard, Jimmy McLarnin and a gloveful of others. But they are rare
exceptions who merely prove the rule of what happens to so many.
For boxers are the only professional athletes without a safety net.
Unlike former baseball, football, basketball and hockey players, when a
boxer retires he has no pension plan, no health benefits, no nothing.
(For many former MLB, NFL, NBA and NHL players, the most annoying part of
real life is buying his own plane ticket and booking his own hotel room,
now that the team isn’t doing that for him.) Stripping it of its fig
leaf, it means these boxers who have given us so much are now left, when
they retire, as bereft as Robinson Crusoe, without a boat to fend for
themselves.
Senator John McCain has introduced the Muhammad Ali Act, a bill sculpted
to helping current boxers. But what about those who not only have slipped
off the radar screen but through the cracks of society as well?
Even as we write, there are two groups dedicated to helping former
fighters, both headed by former fighters who understand how life
relentlessly stalks the very men who once stalked their opponents and who
now need help.
One of those is the F.I.S.T., standing for “Fighters’ Initiative for
Support and Training, a non-profit organization headed up by former world
heavyweight title contender Gerry Cooney. Acknowledging that most
ex-fighters wind up with their bank accounts up for adoption, Cooney’s
organization helps boxers “Turn the page and find new goals.” Not with
handouts, but with training to “Help them stand up and get going again.”
Cooney underlines his organization’s approach to helping ex-boxers by
saying, in words worthy of being stitched into every sampler hung on every
former fighter’s wall: “You can give a man a fish, but it is better to
teach him how to catch them.”
The second organization is the Retired Boxers Foundation, run by former
world middleweight title contender Alex Ramos. Ramos’ goals are
slightly different from Cooney’s. Ramos told New York sportswriter Tim
Smith, “I help who I can and don’t care whose fault it is that they’re in
the situation they’re in.”
For all the sport’s hard knocks and bad press, Gerry Cooney and Alex Ramos
are two shining examples of boxing’s good side, of the caring and
compassion one boxer has for his fellow fighters. And why these two
gentlepersons, while never champions during their careers in the ring,
have proven to be champions after they left as they help boxers cope with
their challenges after they also have left.
Bert Randolph Sugar, CMXsports’ Sr. Analyst At-Large, called “ The Guru of
Boxing,” has a new book Bert Sugar On Boxing,” (or “The Best of Bert
Sugar, The Worst of Bert Sugar, What the Hell’s the Difference?”),
published by The Lyon Press and currently available at Border’s, Barnes &
Noble and
Amazon.com
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