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March 3, 2006 |
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EXCLUSIVE:
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Wayne McCullough is "calling out" Erik Morales, But not
to fight him. McCullough wants to train the Mexican
great, Boxing2006 has learned.
McCullough, who is not officially
retired and is hoping to fight junior featherweight
champ Israel Vasquez, sent a fax and email to directly
Morales' and his right hand man and advisor, Fernando
Beltran this week to find out if they were interesting
in giving Wayne an "audition," with the hopes that the
Irish former champion would be in their corner for
Morales rematch with Manny Pacquiao on Sept. 16. The
McCulloughs are eager to hear an answer.
"I told them (Morales camp) that
Wayne would love to work with him," said McCullough's
manager/wife Cheryl. "I said if Erik liked it he would
stay, or if he didn't like it, Wayne would walk away. I
also said Wayne could take him (Morales) back to the top
of his game."
McCullough, unlike many boxing
observers, does not think Morales' career is close to
over.
"I believe Eric Morales is not
done," McCullough said. "I think it (Jan. loss to
Pacquiao) was partly the fault of conditioning and
nutrition."
In addition to boxing, McCullough
has been a personal trainer and nutritionist for several
years, and recently tried his hand at training.
McCullough spent six weeks working
with highly-ranked junior lightweight contender Alex
Arthur (22-1) for his Feb. 18 fight with Ricky Burns for
three junior lightweight titles -- European, British,
and Commonwealth.
Arthur won a unanimous decision by a
wide margin, and more importantly, many boxing insiders
said the Scottish fighter had never looked better.
"A lot of people thought Alex would
be too much for me to train," McCullough said. "But then
they saw me in his corner. Alex got a cut over his left
eye in the third round, McCullough calmed him down while
the cutman worked, and "people told me later how well I
had worked." The commentator, former WBA featherweight
champ and Irish icon, Barry McGuigan said, "Wayne is
going to be the next Buddy McGirt."
What McCullough did for Arthur is
teach him some of Morales' moves.
"Alex fights like Morales, he stands
straight up," McCullough said. "I had Alex watch tapes
of Morales fights. He saw that Erik stood straight up,
but with his chin in, always moving and picking his
shots, using the double jab and straight right to the
body."
McCullough knows first hand what
Morales is capable of doing. On Oct. 22, 1999,
McCullough fought then unbeaten Morales (34-0) for the
WBC junior featherweight title and lost a unanimous
decision
"He fought me hard all 12 rounds, so
I know he is capable of carrying his punch the
distance," said McCullough, whose six losses have all
came in championship fights. "I love the way he fights.
He's an all-time great."
McCullough feels Pacquiao was only
able to stop Morales in the 10th round because Erik was
not in top condition.
"I thought Erik was winning the
fight after five rounds, then he made the mistake of
laying on the ropes," McCullough said. "Once he stopped
moving, it was over. I think it was his
conditioning because he just suddenly hit a stone
wall. With the right conditioning, he could have coped.
Look how easily he won the first (Pacquiao) fight."
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Some would think the 35-year-old
McCullough (27-6) is being a bit presumptuous asking to
train an all-time great Mexican fighter with limited
training experience. But he comes very highly
recommended. In fact, what better recommendation could
there be than the late Hall of Fame trainer Eddie Futch.
In 1993, Futch was training A-list
boxers Mike McCallum, Riddick Bowe and Montell Griffin
in Las Vegas. McCullough was just an unbeaten, little
known prospect in his first year of professional boxing,
yet Wayne was brought over from Ireland to work with
Eddie. Eddie was the only reason why Wayne left Belfast
for the States.
"I got him to see me fight, and he
said later that I could be a champion," McCullough
recalled. "I worked with him a while and he gave me a
letter saying I would make a great trainer some day. My
eyes just opened up watching Eddie. The way he was so
calm all the time, all the tricks he knew."
McCullough knew back then that one
day he would have to try his hand at training.
"If I didn't pass on what Eddie
taught me, I would be selfish," McCullough said.
As for McCullough fighting again, he
only wants to do so if it's for a title. McCullough lost
his last two fights to WBC junior featherweight
champion, Oscar Larios.
Their last meeting, on July 16 of
2005, McCullough was stopped on a 10th round TKO, a
bitter and frustrating decision because he took pride in
never having been stopped before.
McCullough pleaded to be able to go
on, but the fight was stopped, which he said was a case
of the referee and ring doctor ignoring his history of
going the distance.
Larios went on to lose his title in
his next fight to Israel Vasquez, and McCullough has
made no secret of the fact he has little respect for
Vasquez and can beat him.
"We're talking to Sycuan Promotions
who promote Vazquez , it's not over," said McCullough.
There is also the chance that Wayne could end up in the
ring with Ponce De Leon, who is also on McCullough's
short list.
In the meantime, McCullough is
hoping to get a different kind of shot -- training a
world class fighter like Erik Morales. McCullough and
Morales are both great warriors, and Boxing.2006 is
looking forward to seeing what happens if they hook up.
After the Larios fight, McCullough
went through a whole battery of tests and was given a
clean bill of health. But Wayne's former trainer,
Freddie Roach, came out publicly and said McCullough
should retire and he would not longer train him, a
statement that got right under the skin of Cheryl
McCullough who retorted, " Wayne hasn't trained one day
with Freddie since his last fight and it was made very
clear to us when we started training with him that he
worked fight to fight. In fact, last October, I asked
Joe Goossen to work with him instead, so Freddie
couldn't drop Wayne because he didn't have him.
"I like Freddie, but what he did was
unprofessional," McCullough said. "We should have talked
this over behind closed doors. My wife is my biggest
critic and manager. She would tell me when I was done
before anyone. She was disgusted the fight was stopped.
She could see I was fine."
Stay tuned to Boxing2006.com & Pound4Pound.com as we will bring you any updates on these comments as we get them. |
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