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The Biofile Emanuel
Steward |
The Biofile Emanuel Steward
By Scoop Malinowski
Status: Hall of Fame boxing trainer/manager and HBO
ringside analyst.
DOB: July 7, 1944 In: Welch, West Virginia
Childhood Hero: "Floyd Patterson. I've never told
him but we sat side by side many times. I read
everything about him. A classy person. I used to walk
like him, talk like him, eat the same foods he ate -
pork chops, yams and sweet potatoes! Ray Robinson as
well, naturally."
Hobbies/Interests: "I'm very limited, believe it or
not. My favorite hobby is being alone. I like to be
alone. I also like dancing, fishing, playing poker
sometimes and vegetable gardening - corn, tomatoes,
cucumbers, I have a big garden every year."
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Nicknames: "Sonny. Manny - which I don't like. Don
King and Howard Cosell mainly called me that."
Favorite Movies: "Rocky III - I don't usually
like boxing movies, they're not realistic. But I liked
that one.
Days of Wine and Roses with Jack Lemmon. It was just
realistic about how one thing leads.
Some people fall victim to something bad and then some
have the willpower to get out of trouble. Great movie." |
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Musical Tastes: "Motown, country and western."
Favorite TV Shows: "Dukes of Hazzard - Boss Hog
had me laughing, naturally funny. Wild Wild West. The
Red Skelton Show."
Childhood Ambition: "When I was a little kid I
wanted to be an artist or a painter. But once I got into
boxing, all I wanted was to box."
First Job: "Selling popsicles in Detroit (age
13). I had my cart going up and down the street all day
long. I made enough money to buy a car."
Early Boxing Memory: "I started boxing when I was
eight. I enjoyed when I could hit someone and they
couldn't hit me back. It was like a game for me. The
feeling of knocking someone out. My first knockout
victory was when I was ten. He went down and his nose
started to bleed, so they stopped it."
Favorite Meal: "Meat loaf, mashed potatoes, green
beans, tomatoes."
Favorite Breakfast Cereal: "Fruit 'n Fibre,
Mueslix."
Favorite Ice Cream Flavor: "Strawberry or
vanilla."
Pre-Fight Feeling: "Very nervous. You never know
what's going to happen. It's a really tightly detailed
day because what happens that day is gonna be something
we're all gonna have to live with for the rest of our
lives. This is it. This is history.
The state of mind of a fighter is so important. I don't
like to see a fighter stay locked up in a room.
Sometimes it works against them. They think and they
worry.
They dwell, sitting in that dark room. You come back and
they're psyched out. I like to see boxers eat and then
walk, mingle with people. You have to have a certain
amount of movement.
Stay active. If you stay locked up in the room all day,
the brain cells actually become dormant, become dead, so
to say. They're the same guys that come out in the first
round and can't even get started, can never wake up. The
brain cells are still sleeping. I like to get to know
the fighter, like to see where he lives. I went fishing
with Julio Cesar Chavez in Mexico. I spend time with
Lennox in Canada. He's a quiet guy. He liked to spend
time with his Canadian friends, one day they'd play
baseball and tennis, another they're all going swimming
or he was taking his girl down to Jamaica."
Greatest Sports Moment: "Winning the National
Golden Gloves Tournament of Champions in Chicago (1963).
That was the greatest. (Who did you beat?) A guy named
Frank Glover, who was a big favorite to knock me out. He
was like Mike Tyson - knocking everyone out. I was only
18 (bantamweight). I lost the first round then won the
last two real big in order to pull it out. That was the
biggest win of my life probably. That same Golden Gloves
Larry Hazard was representing New Jersey as a
middleweight. That's how long we've known each other."
Most Painful Moment: "Tommy Hearns losing to
Sugar Ray Leonard, the first fight was the most painful
moment. I know because I cried. Every damn time they
showed that fight I had to leave the room. If I'm at a
bar or something, I just leave. I don't want to see it.
It's a nightmare. (You thought Hearns should have beat
him?) Well, it was the conditions how we lost too. And
we lost it before the fight. And at the time it was so
much emotions going into that fight.
Because Ray Leonard was the first hero at The Kronk, I
don't know if people realize that. Ray was an amateur,
like '73, '74, the whole Kronk gym was decorated with
Ray Leonard. We became very close with him, him and
Tommy. So it was more like a family type of fight or
competition.
Then Ray won the Olympics, he trained in Detroit the
whole summer of '76 to make the Olympic team. And when
he was training for the fight with Floyd Mayweather,
Tommy went instead and they worked out together.
And when they had the fight, it was for like bragging
rights of our own little world we were in. Then Tommy -
we got in arguments for the first time in our life in
training. And came in overtrained, and you can't do that
with a fighter like Ray Leonard who's always one of the
best finishers in the game.
Ray always could close the show down. And I knew after
the end of the 12th round, even though Tommy was back in
it, I knew we didn't have enough calories to make it
through the next few rounds. And it was just so painful
to see him go down like that. And actually the people
came from Detroit the last night before the fight, the
betting favorite was Hearns, not Ray Leonard. They came
in, so much money was bet, the whole town was
emotionally - people got loans on their homes - it was
just unbelievable.
Cause Ray was like a Detroit favorite, he won the
eastern regionals in Detroit and came up and trained
there when he fought Lalonde he came up and trained
there a few days even then believe it or not. So it was
a real emotional thing. We all knew Tommy was running
two times a day. We all just wanted him to run once.
Came in weighing 145. Everyone was shocked at the
weight. And after the 12th, Ray knows how to come on
good. One of the best fighters of all time. So we lost a
fight I felt we should have won. That was the most
painful moment in my career."
Favorite Boxers To Watch: "I like to watch today
- even though he's supposedly retired again - Felix
Trinidad was my favorite to watch. Always so much
emotions. He fought with such high spirit. And after
him, believe it or not, the junior welterweights. I like
all of them. I like Cotto. I like Vivian Harris. I like
Gatti and Mayweather. Very talented men. And even Ricky
Hatton. He's a little, exciting, maybe not as good a
defense but that's a division most all the guys I like
to watch.
But beyond that, the heavyweights - probably mainly
because I train him, Wladimir Klitschko right now.
Watching him, I like the way he's learning how to really
control a person with just a left jab and his his reach
and height now. I like watching that.
I'm trying to go back to Pacquiao, is just plain
excitement. And seeing Mike Tyson. These are my
excitement fighters I like to watch. Still is my
favorite to watch. It's gonna be some drama when Mike
fights. I don't give a damn if it's the referee is gonna
be knocked out or somebody's gonna be hit after the bell
or Mike is gonna be knocked out himself. Mike is still
one of my favorites to watch."
Favorite Fights: "Ali-Frazier I, III. Hearns and
Roldan - so dramatic. It was going back and forth, back
and forth, the most excitement I ever experienced in my
life. Gomez-Pintor. Caveman Lee-John LoCicero, what a
fight. And while I'm at it, I'll go for one more,
Foreman-Lyle. And one more, Kenty-Espana - my first
world champ."
People Qualities Most Admired: "I think people
who have values and stand up for what they believe. And
loyalty. That's one of the most amazing qualities I
love. And that's why I say the people I admire most in
my life - loyal people - as opposed to wishy washy,
depending on who is the guy that can do the best for me,
or get the best favors. And the people who been with you
when you weren't on your feet, you should remember to
stay loyal to them."
Family: Wife, Marie; daughters, Silvia, Sylvette. |
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