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Spence Trainer Derrick James KNOWS Errol Is Ready For This Miracle Comeback Fight

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Spence Trainer Derrick James KNOWS Errol Is Ready For This Miracle Comeback Fight

“I don’t know, Derrick, and I’m not gonna pretend to know, to try and pretend to seem smart,” I said in a Thursday night phoner with Derrick James, trainer to Errol Spence. “Lemme ask you this…Do you KNOW? Does Errol know, as much as can be known, with the understanding that things have to play out?”

“We know,” the ultra low key, serene, even, tutor answered.

Like, 90 percent? 95? 99?

“One thousand percent, and the reason I say that is the way we pushed, we sparred 180 pound guys,” said James, who campaigned himself as a super middleweight, from 1992 to 2008. “I’ve seen it in the gym, seen sparring.”

A thousand percent is the answer I’d expect from James. I see him as an ultimate loyalist to guys he works with, because he invests his soul into this stuff I dare say more than a goodly number of trainers. From the place he’s come from, a humble upbringing, living in circumstances that statistically pegged him for a career and life track much more dreary than what he’s on, James is a blue-check good soul success story. And it can go a couple ways from there, someone can allow their success to inflate their ego, or they can allow room to admit that fate has smiled on them. They can enjoy their prominence with a foundation of humility—and that’s James (click here to see his BoxRec).

Because of the humility, my sense is that loyalty is of heavy import to James, who grew up and lives in Texas. Once a rapport and trust is established, I think, James works to maintain it, and appreciates it, doesn’t take it for granted, and nurtures it.

You won’t see or hear him throw one of his guys under a bus, or even nudge the body in that direction. 

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Back to the call…I pushed, just a bit. I asked for some evidence. Because, I admitted, I don’t see how someone can fly out of a speeding car like 50 feet, roll and tumble, and there not being detrimental effects even a year later. 

Of course, he said, he wanted to assess with his eyes how Spence’s body and mind were functioning once he got back to the point he was able to go back to the gym, and engage in contact drilling.

“You know the say, time heals all wounds,” he asked. That’s what it was, time passed, and the kid healed up.

Healed up enough physically and mentally so that it won’t be seen as folly to fight a Danny Garcia first fight back? 2.

Yeah, to me it signifies that, I don’t know, maybe a higher power has tagged Spence for some extra blessings…and also that he’s young, super strong, and yes, luck was with him on that Texas highway. Really, that he didn’t die its itself a major miracle. 

“The first day we sparred, it was ten rounds, two guys, and I liked what I saw,” James said. “I didn’t even really care that much how he looked, but I saw the fortitude was there. That he would strive for excellence. And then I knew, however good that day was, tomorrow he could be twenty times better. His work ethic was there.”

And it has been touched on, it’s not that his work ethic wasn’t there for the lead-up to the fight he had before his crash, against Shawn Porter, but, c’mon now, he’s been at the top of the game for awhile now. It is exceedingly rare for anyone in that position to be able to match exactly their ambition and dedication which they had at the start of the journey. Silk pajamas, people.

So, for Porter, it sounded like to me, he came to camp heavier than would be ideal, so more time than would be ideal was spent trimming down.

Now, for the record, James said Spence didn’t come into camp this time right near 147, either. “I teased him about it,” he said. “But we’ve been doing it since March, and then with COVID, camp closed for awhile, but from March to May, he was ripped. The summertime, we started picking up the pace.” Bottom line in, he sounded quite happy with what he saw in Errol’s body, and mind.

Here’s a mind boggler for you. Errol was a teenager when he started working with James, OK?

“And for three years, we didn’t have a conversation,” the trainer said. The first time they actually conversed, he said, came when Errol was overseas, at an amateur tourney. “And remember, we had trained seven days a week. We trained during holidays.”

So, point being, there’s not a lot of wasted words between these guys, even now. When Spence says something, it isn’t chatter. “He said, recently, this is gonna be a one sided performance,’’ James continued. “That means he’s gonna kick some ass.

So, to circle back, that helps me comprehend why James says he a thousand percent sure that Errol is healed and ready to rock and roll and drop peak Spence thunder on Garcia. Because his track record indicates that when he uses a phrase like ‘one sided performance’ it’s because he knows that’s what’s to come. 

And so it sounds like there’s no possibility for a scale fail? “He was 147 yesterday (Wednesday),” James told me. NOTE: The weigh in took place, and damn straight, James was right, Spence hit his mark, at 146 1/2.

Hey, it’s boxing, theater of the unexpected. I still need to see for myself that the body holds up for Errol Saturday. Trust, but verify, that’s one of the most useful adages to stick to as a journalist. But put it this way, I’m off my hedging fence, and I’m thinking Danny won’t be so fortunate as to see a diminished Spence in the ring tonight.

Founder/editor Michael Woods got addicted to boxing in 1990, when Buster Douglas shocked the world with his demolition of the then-impregnable Mike Tyson. The Brooklyn-based journalist has covered the sport since for ESPN The Magazine, ESPN.com, Bad Left Hook and RING. His journalism career started with NY Newsday in 1999. Michael Woods is also an accomplished blow by blow and color man, having done work for Top Rank, DiBella Entertainment, EPIX, and for Facebook Fightnight Live, since 2017.

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