Thursday, February 10, 2011

Aging Hopkins (Hopkins Versus Pascal II)


Just as when you think you’re most able and strong life has a way of surprising you by giving it from a weird angle. The blows you don’t see coming are always the hardest to deal with and that’s how I’ve learned never to become overconfident about anything. You need to keep that guard up, move away, move around, at least until after the pain becomes bearable and you regain yourself. Yes, it’s been rough since and it’s been a difficult year so far. I’m wobbled and standing on rubbery legs, but I’m circling the ring to keep the fight going.

When I think of overcoming adversity I think of a man I admire for good reason. I think of Bernard Hopkins; That Philadelphian who bounced back from a life of crime and imprisonment to become a future hall of famer boxer famous for his ten year reign as Middleweight champion of the world.

Nobody weathers the storm like Bernard Humphrey Hopkins Jr. and his fight against Canadian, Jean Pascal last Dec. 18, 2010 reminds me of his tenacious nature.

After he was knocked down at the first (albeit a very controversial one) and third round by a champion almost half his age who was fighting with more agility and speed, Hopkins stood his ground. I reckon he’s the type of person who sticks to the basics when under duress. He exhibited calmness when an ordinary man under such circumstance would have panicked. It took him time to measure the current WBC, IBO, and Ring Magazine Light Heavyweight world champion but kept an uncanny cool under pressure, taking it one step at a time. Alas! Weathering a storm seemed becoming a tougher task for the now 46 year old warrior, but when he finally got his tempo going, he sure made the youthful Canadian champion dance to his tune and took care of majority of the rounds. Looking back to that fight I think it wasn’t the skillful display that charmed me watching Hopkins fight that day. It was his unwavering personality.

The fight may have been decided a majority draw and Pascal remained the champion, but Bernard Hopkins won in our hearts. In championship matches a contender has to really take the fight away from the champion and not merely edge it. I believe Hopkins won that bout and had it not been a championship fight he might have been awarded the victory.

Controversy aside, let bygones be bygones. The future for Bernard Hopkins is taking its form in a rematch with Pascal this coming May 21st in the champion’s hometown of Quebec City Canada. It shall be a time to correct the wrong and settle the issues that surrounded the first fight. Hopkins seems determined as he ever been, but he’s also not as fast or as physically capable as he was in his youth. Those advantages go to the younger champion in Jean Pascal, yet Bernard is one of a kind. He’s like aged wine. He has qualities that seem to show stronger in time.

Many expect the rematch to be as exciting as the first bout, but let me say that with Hopkins’ boxing I.Q. he has probably figured out Pascal by now.



Mark F. Villanueva
Philippine Islands
boxinginsight.blogspot.com



Mark currently lives in Iloilo City and can be followed through http://twitter.com/markfvillanueva

2 comments:

  1. Another good article. Your article about the 1st fight is why I watched that bout. This article has gained my interest in the rematch. You're definitely raising awareness and doing work for the sport. Keep it up.

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