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Q&A Reggie Johnson!
October 25, 2006
by
Robert Coster
Watch out fight fans, Reggie Johnson
is on the war path again.
The former WBA
Middleweight and IBF Super Middleweight
titlist is returning to the ring with the intention of adding another
page to his illustrious career by winning a third
title in another division: the 175-lb class.
And for his first
comeback fight, he his aiming at light heavyweight star Glen
Johnson, no less.
"Sweet Reggie" is
accustomed to successful ring comebacks. After almost three years
and with only one tune-up fight, Johnson won the IBF 168-lb title
against William Guthrie in 1998 and in 2001, after a 13-month
layoff, he beat 26-1 Chris Johnson for the NABF 175-lb crown.
FightNews sat down
with Johnson to talk about this latest proposed comeback and look
back at his 22 years in pro boxing.
Is it official,
are you returning to the ring?
It was official on
August 27, 2005, when I beat the #15 guy, Fred Moore, after being
away from the ring for 3 years and 8 months due to a promotional
contract that went bad. The Moore fight ended up a bittersweet win.
The so-called chumps, sorry... I mean champs and future chumps;
sorry again... champs don't want to fight me.
What's the
motivation behind this comeback? Cynics might say it's about money.
At age 40, you really feel you can beat the best guys out there at
175 lb?
Money is always a
motivator because money is security. On any given day, I know I can
beat any guy in the world in the 168-lb and 175-lb divisions.
Are you targeting
one fighter in particular?
Reggie Johnson is
the new old school of boxing. I win my fights in the gym. In
preparation, I get young hungry guys like the Dirrell
brothers, Andre and Anthony, Blake Prevost, and Larry Pryor. These
guys are the future of boxing. Glen Johnson may be the toughest
fight in the 175-lb division and he's the #1 contender by the IBF.
It took Antonio Tarver 24 rounds to beat Glen Johnson. Glen knocked
Roy Jones out in round nine. So therefore, if I take care of Glen,
by not only by beating him but knocking him out, then who would they
consider the MAN at 175lb then, me or Bernard Hopkins? Reggie
Johnson vs. Hopkins, the fight that should have happened at 160 lb,
would become a reality at 175 lb.
This will be your
third comeback... right? Now, if you do fight Glen Johnson, there
would be no tune-up? You are that kind of fighter. You won the IBF
title from Guthrie fighting only one tune-up and when you returned
to boxing, the second time around, you beat Chris Johnson for the
NABF title.
This will be my
third Get-Back. I have never officially retired from boxing. Glen
Johnson will be my tune-up for the World title. I think my resume
tells the story. I was away from the ring for a year and nine months
and had one fight before moving up two weight classes and fighting
William Guthrie. When I fought Chris Johnson I was away from the
ring for over two years and fought him without a tune-up and beat
him. Fights like this have always motivated me.
Let's go over
your very illustrious career. Out of seven losses, four were split
decisions, two were razor-thin verdicts and you only really lost in
a lopsided fashion to Roy Jones. Do you feel that judges have given
you a hard time throughout your career? And do you feel that you've
been underrated as a fighter and is this also what this comeback is
all about?
Roy Jones is the
only man to pitch a shutout against me and that fight went 12 rounds
with all the belts on the line and that was a
fight I lost fair and square. I lost my seventh pro fight to Adam George
in my first eight rounder, a fighter from Louisiana.
I lost that fight fair and square. I have people today telling me I
won that split decision loss to Antonio Tarver and I had him down
and out in the ninth round, but in my heart, I know I lost that
fight and the right man got the decision that night. I lost
fair and square. Those three fighters beat me fair and square.
On the other hand, I
know in my heart that James Toney, John David Jackson, and Jorge
Castro in two fights didn't beat me. I called those four fights
political losses and in the boxing industry, they call it being
robbed. When its all said and done, the boxing industry and the fans
will have their say as far as me being underrated.
Thank you for
this great show of honesty, the honesty of a true champion. Now,
what was sweetest, Champ, winning your first world title or the
second one, in another division?
They both were sweet
and special to me. When I beat Irish Steve Collins, I was still
somewhat bitter about the Toney fight and then it was the pressure
of fighting Steve in New Jersey which was like fighting him in
Ireland. Then there was the political loss to my now good friend,
John David Jackson. In Argentina, two Americans fighting for the
world title in Argentina, in Jorge Castro's hometown. So, they give
Jackson the title and leave me as the number #1 contender. Then,
Castro got home cooking in his backyard and split decision wins over
me. They leave me #1 and he and I fight again in his backyard and
history repeats itself in the same fashion. So, when I fought
Guthrie, it was a emotional night for me because I was in a PAYBACK
frame of mind.
Now, let's talk
about Roy Jones. One would think that you would be eager to avenge
that pretty clear decision loss against Roy. Yet, you're talking
about Glen Johnson instead?
I would love a
chance to avenge that loss, but the only way for that fight to
happen is for me to knock out one of the guys who knocked him out.
If Roy called me tomorrow and said" let's do it again", that fight
would be a done deal.
What about
Bernard Hopkins?
I welcomed that
fight before the Jones fight. This is a fight that was supposed to
happen at middleweight, but this will only happen if I take care of
Jones or Glen Johnson.
Now, I know that
you are working on a book. Can you talk to us about that?
"On the Inside
Looking Out From A Fighters Perspective" The
Reggie Johnson Biography... I’ll
tell about what goes on in the boxing industry... I plan to tell
all.
You have had one
the best chins in the business. Is it a God-given attribute?
The chin is a
blessing from God. This is something you can't teach, you have to be
born with it.
A final
statement, Reggie?
I know there's
no other fighter in the world that has been through what I've been
through as boy, man, and boxer. They say experience is the best
teacher and if that's true, I have a master's degree across the
board. The best of me is yet to come and I will prove that every
time that bell rings. And if any fighter from 168 lb to 175 lb begs
to differ, let's see if we can complement each other as businessmen
and then meet in the squared circle. |