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Trainer Says Ray Austin Is A 'New Man'
Greetings from Mannheim, Germany, home to Carl Benz of later Mercedes-Benz
fame who invented and tested the world's first car here in 1885. Even
though about half of Mannheim was destroyed in World War II, it is a
beautiful Southern German city today.
Ray Austin's training regimen leading
up to his mandatory challenge of IBF heavyweight champion Wladimir Klitschko
on Saturday at SAP Arena, attached and pasted below. HBO subscribers in America can see the fight live on Saturday at 4:45 p.m.
ET/1:45 p.m. PT and again by replay later the same day at 10 p.m. ET/PT.
March 5, 2007 -
Trainer Says Heavyweight Ray Austin is ‘New Man’
Stacey McKinley Helped Transform Top-Ranked Heavyweight Samuel Peter;
Claims to Have Worked Similar Magic for Ray Austin Prior to IBF Showdown
with Champion Wladimir Klitschko on Saturday in Mannheim, Germany.
MANNHEIM, Germany—International Boxing Federation heavyweight mandatory
challenger Ray “The Rainman” Austin arrived in Mannheim, Germany, on
Thursday to make final preparations before meeting IBF champion Wladimir
Klitschko at the SAP Arena in a match televised live in America on HBO
Saturday at 4:45 p.m. ET/1:45 p.m. PT and replayed at
10 p.m. ET/PT.
Austin (23-3-4, 16 KOs) has been training for the first time under the
guidance of Stacey McKinley, the man responsible for the remarkable
transformation of Samuel “The Nigerian Nightmare” Peter prior to his second
fight with James “Lights Out” Toney on Jan. 6. Peter, literally, did not
look like the same man that barely got past Toney just four months earlier
and called the training camp where he showed such great improvement, “the
best of my life.”
Only eight pounds lighter for the second fight, Peter had also converted a
considerable amount of fat to heavier muscle, resulting not only in more
stamina, but a boxer lighter on his feet.
McKinley says the same thing has happened with Austin, a fighter who will
stand eye-to-eye with Klitschko at 6 foot 6 inches and has about the same
reach.
“Ray has always been a big, strong, rangy heavyweight,” McKinley said, “just
ask anybody who has ever sparred with him. Now we took this man out of
Cleveland and secluded him in South Florida for an extended training camp
just like we did with Sam Peter.
“I’m telling you Ray Austin is a dangerous man right now. I’m feeling an
upset brewing.”
McKinley is an Old School trainer, fond of having his fighters chop wood (a
sledgehammer on an old tractor tire was the substitute for Austin), push
heavy cars through parking lots from the rear, and log plenty of road work
every morning.
“My training techniques help fighters to not only get into shape but to get
them to the point where they can actually feel it, which helps them with the
mental part of the equation as well.”
Austin already looks different after training with McKinley since January 8, 2007,
His face and neck are chiseled, much like lower-weight-division fighters
often look. His pants are falling off of him. A few weeks ago, Austin
wondered if he might be overshooting the runway.
“When I started weighing under 240 pounds I started to eat more,” Austin
said before quipping, “I'm training to win a fight, not a marathon.”
McKinley predicts his fighter will be right on target.
“Ray came into camp around 270. He was down around 235 at one point. I’d
like to see him go in the ring at 232, but anywhere below 245 will be fine.”
Asked if the conditioning will do for Austin what it did for Peter, McKinley
said it’s a given.
“I've been focusing on conditioning and footwork. When you're in good
condition, your footwork improves immediately. Ray’s legs are stronger.
He’ll move better than he ever has in the ring.
“The next step is balance. The improvement in footwork leads to better
balance and will yield quicker, more powerful punching.
Austin is saying what he has said since before the match was announced.
“Klitschko has a soft heart and a weak chin and I’m going to knock him out,”
Austin said. “I’m not one of these inexperienced, undersized heavyweight
contenders. I’m not Calvin Brock. I’m not a 213-pound Chris Byrd, either.
I’m a full-grown heavyweight.
“The last time Klitschko faced a man his weight was against Samuel Peter,
who knocked him down three times while giving away five inches in height.
Same thing when Lamon Brewster knocked him out.
Austin added, “It was raining when we arrived in Germany. That’s an omen.
Some rain is going to fall on Klitschko real soon. I’ve got a plan. Now
it’s time to execute it.”
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