• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Throwback Hopkins dismisses age as factor in Pavlik bout

NEW YORK
Tue Oct 14, 2008 6:52pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Former middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins said he is a golden oldie and would prove it in the ring Saturday when he takes on undefeated fellow-American title holder Kelly Pavlik.

Sports

Hopkins, 43, described himself as a throwback fighter as he sized up his chances against big-hitting Pavlik, who is 34-0 with 30 stoppages, in their 170-pound, non-title catchweight bout in Atlantic City.

"The Philly throwback fighter, he watches a lot of fights, he rolls when he gets hit, stays in the pocket, knows all the tricks," a trim Hopkins told reporters on Tuesday before taking the dais at a news conference to promote the bout.

"They've been writing that about me for a decade."

The Philadelphia native said his lifestyle, combined with modern day nutrition, kept him fit and youthful.

"It's an investment I put in myself 20 years ago to be here at this table fighting for millions at this stage," he said, adding he was in select company to be thriving at his age.

"There's only two or three athletes in sport history -- (NFL quarterback) Brett Favre is one, myself is another and (cyclist) Lance Armstrong just came back."

Hopkins, whose 48-5-1 mark includes 20 successful defenses of that middleweight crown, likened himself to old timers such as George Foreman, Jersey Joe Walcott, Ezzard Charles, Sugar Ray Robinson and Archie Moore but with certain advantages.

"Things are different now. Only the elite few have taken a page, and I'm one, out of that throwback era.

"We have all the stuff that they didn't have back then. The fighters were not taking vitamins, they was drinking blood. These guys were eating raw eggs that would give you clogged arteries. They wouldn't tell me to eat a raw egg today.

"These guys were doing all the opposite of what was healthy. Now that I've got all these perks from the last 30, 40 years, am I really old by a number?" he said about his age.

Hopkins is proud that doctors are amazed by his age when they study his test results. "The most damage that is done to a fighter is not in the ring," he said. "It's because the candle was burning at both ends, because of a lifestyle."

He is also proud of never being knocked out and bristled over reports that Pavlik said it would be a feather in his cap to be the first to do so.

Pavlik denied making any predictions.

"I haven't in one fight ever predicted a KO," Pavlik said. "I go in there to win. If the knockout comes, that's great.

"I'm definitely ready. This is my chance now. Bernard is a legend. He's had a great career. He's going to go down in the books as the greatest middleweight. I have the same goal. I want my legacy to be great also, and I'm not done yet."

(Editing by Pritha Sarkar)



More from Reuters

Photo

Bank of America names Moynihan next CEO

NEW YORK/CHARLOTTE, North Carolina (Reuters) - Bank of America Corp on Wednesday tapped insider Brian Moynihan as its next chief executive, ending months of speculation about who would succeed Kenneth Lewis to lead the largest U.S. bank.

An office worker is reflected in the pavement as he walks with an umbrella in Singapore's financial district October 8, 2008.REUTERS/Vivek Prakash

Death of a salesman

Old-style sales reps may be fading thanks to a shift in the pharmaceutical market that has created a new gatekeeper in drug sales.  Full Article 

Marine from Delta Company of 2nd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion patrols near the town of Khan Neshin in Rig district of Helmand province, southern Afghanistan September 10, 2009. REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic

A bloody fight looms

Marines on the frontlines of the Afghan surge in Helmand Province are ramping up for a battle that their commander says will be the "end of the line" for insurgents.  Full Article