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Trainer
Says Heavyweight Ray Austin a ‘New Man’
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Rainman
Austin ‘bigger, lighter, faster’
for IBF Challenge to Wladimir Klitschko on
Saturday in Mannheim, Germany
MANNHEIM, Germany—International
Boxing Federation heavyweight mandatory challenger
Ray “The Rainman” Austin is in
Mannheim, Germany, making final preparations
to meet IBF champion Wladimir Klitschko at
the SAP Arena in a match televised live on
HBO next weekend.
Austin (23-3-4, 16 KOs) has
been training for the first time under the
guidance of Stacey McKinley, the man responsible
for the transformation of Samuel “The
Nigerian Nightmare” Peter prior to his
second fight with James “Lights Out”
Toney on Jan. 6.
Peter did not look like the
same man that barely got past Toney four months
earlier; Sam called the training camp where
he showed such great improvement, “the
best of my life.”
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 a tractor tyre for Austin), push heavy
motor cars through parking lots, 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 Jan. 8.
His face and neck are chiseled, the way lower-weight-division
fighters often look. His pants are loose at
the waist.. 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.”
McKinley said the conditioning
will do for Austin what it did for Peter.
“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 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 Klitschko 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.” - Alan
Hopper.
