Kenny Adams | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | American |
Other names | The Master Old School King Kenny Little Sugar |
Statistics | |
Weight(s) | Flyweight Bantamweight |
Stance | Orthodox |
Kenneth "Kenny" Adams (born September 25, 1940) is an American professional boxing trainer and former Olympic amateur boxer. Adams is a highly respected boxing trainer. [1] Adams is a pioneer in boxing, having been the first American trainer to implement strength training. [2] He is also the first African-American selected as head coach of the American national boxing team. Adams brings such a strict disciplinarian training style that the eight-time, five-division World champion Floyd Mayweather Jr. refused to work with him. [2] In 1999, the multiple-time World champion Wladimir Klitschko asked Adams to assist him in properly turning over his fist on the left hook for power. [3] In 2005, eight-division World champion Manny Pacquiao requested to train with Adams, but Adams declined to aid to his ill wife at the time. [4]
He is the former boxing coach of twenty-six professional World champions, thirty four Olympians and a total of fifty-six boxers who became World Champion. This list includes Edwin Valero, Vince Phillips, Diego Corrales, Freddie Norwood, Charles Murray, Kennedy McKinney, Frankie Liles, Michael Nunn, Johnny Tapia, Ruslan Chagaev, Samuel Peter, Cory Spinks, and Michael Bentt. [2] Adams also trained notable boxers Evander Holyfield, Pernell Whitaker, Roy Jones Jr., and Riddick Bowe in the Summer Olympic Games with Team USA. [4]
Adams is considered a legend among boxing culture, once going 22 straight World championship bouts without a loss. [5]
Adams' last most promising boxer was lightweight contender Sharif Bogere. Adams has since retired from the sport due to health issues. [6]
He came out of retirement in 2018 and started training Dee-Jay Kriel while he was a WBC International Champion and went on to win an IBF world title at minimumweight. [7]
Adams was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in the Non-Participant category as part of the class of 2024. [8]
Adams grew up with 5 brothers and 4 sisters. He first became interested in boxing when he was 5 or 6, and he admits to always fighting as a little kid. Adams is on record saying that he had a reputation although he was small in stature, he packed quick hands and was brave. He also learned how to curse at a very young age from being around people in the pub where he grew up. Once as a kid in gym class, Adams knocked an older boy out that outweighed him by over one-hundred pounds. [2]
Adams never had a trainer, having his first amateur fight at the age of 12 at a weight of 95 pounds. He had a successful amateur career, winning all Army and Service championships, as well as the East Coast & Florida AU’s titles fighting at Flyweight and Bantamweight. He was nicknamed “Little Sugar” as his good friend Ray Owens, who was a 1964 Olympic alternate, was known as “Big Sugar” both in homage to the great Sugar Ray Robinson. [2]
By 17 years old he was in the army and continued to box, but never elected to turn professional. When was 26 years old, he was offered a pro contract. He considered it, but came to the conclusion that he only boxed for the love of the sport – never for the money. Adams fought in over 200 bouts as an amateur.
Adams considers Carlton Brooks, Pat Nappi, Barron Walker, Bernie Callahan and Thomas Boudion as his boxing teachers.
Adams would go on to complete 30 years of service during which he served in Vietnam and was in the 101 Airborne Division, where as part of a 5-man team he went behind enemy lines.
While serving, Adams was in charge of constructing and training the United States Army team, who had been losing to Germany handily. Adams made a strong emphasis in that the fighters were in shape and were sound technically. After much success against the Germans, Adams grew confident in his abilities to coach and was invited to bring a team to the German Olympic training camp. There and then, Adams would become the first American ever to implement strength training into boxing. Adams also utilized plyometrics to boost the fighters cardio and wind. [2]
After completing his service time, Adams would assist the 1984 American Olympic team in achieving 9 gold medals, one silver and one bronze. His students would include future World champions in Evander Holyfield, Meldrick Taylor, Pernell Whitaker, Mark Breland, Frank Tate, Henry Tillman, and Virgil Hill. [2]
Four years later, he moved up as head trainer for the 1988 American Olympic team. Adams was suspended for six months for assaulting USA/ABF controller J. Kersten Dahl in an incident at the federation's headquarters in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The two engaged in a shouting match that ended with Adams grabbing him by the throat. [9] Adams would be reinstated after he appealed the decision to the federation's board of directors. [10]
He was again very successful winning 3 gold medals, 3 silver, and 2 bronze. His students would include even more future world champions in Roy Jones Jr., Riddick Bowe, Michael Carbajal, Kennedy McKinney, Kenneth Gould, Anthony Hembrick, Andrew Maynard, and Ray Mercer. Many believe that Roy Jones Jr. was robbed of the gold medal in the final against Park Si-hun of South Korea. Adams similarly believes that Michael Carbajal also suffered the same fate. To add, Adams believed that the Riddick Bowe fight was stopped prematurely against Lennox Lewis of Canada. [2]
At the professional level, his first world champion was Rene Jacquot of France, who stunned Donald Curry in 1989 in what was voted "Upset of the Year" by The Ring magazine. His first American champion was Eddie Cook, who stopped Israel Contreras in early 1992.
At the professional level, Adams has also trained world champions in William Abelyan, Michael Bentt, Al Cole, Diego Corrales, B.J. Flores, Michael Nunn, Johnny Tapia, Samuel Peter, Ruslan Chagaev, Cory Spinks, Frankie Liles, Kennedy McKinney, Ray Mercer, Charles Murray, Freddie Norwood, Vince Phillips, and James Kirkland (briefly after his second prison stint). [11]
Adams currently trains lightweight contender Sharif Bogere, middleweight Bastie Samir, and Cuban amateur standout lightweight Raul Cespedes out of the Long Life Fighter Gym in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Adams marvels at studying and watching his opponents' films and tapes. He is known for successfully predicting in what round and with what combination his fighter will win. [12] He is also known for never losing a re-match with any opponent, due to his great ability to make adjustments after the first fight. One of Adams' many sayings is "nobody beats me twice!".
Adams brings an extremely strict disciplinarian style to the gym with him. He demands a strong work ethic and he lives with the mentality that he is always the boss - it's his way or the highway. [13] Adams exclaimed that “they asked me to work with Floyd Mayweather Jr. back in the late 90s and early 2000s, so I headed over to the gym and was working out with another guy out front. When he showed up, he had one of his guys come and tell me he was ready for me out back. I told his guy that 'I'm the boss' and to come out front. In the end, we went our own separate ways.” [2]
Adams worked with the undisciplined World champion Edwin Valero up until his death in 2010. Adams stated that “Valero always used to try to overrule people, but I was always up with him. The way I catch mitts I think drew him to me. I'd bust a cat upside the head if his defense wasn’t working. So when he made mistakes, I’d bust him by the side of his head. I think he respected that because most people didn’t stand up to him". [2]
Adams is a strong believer in the "hit and don't get hit" style of boxing. He has mastered the defensive art of "stepping to the side, using angles and moving your head". [14] He believes that his fighters will have longer careers if they can master his defensive techniques, while also learning his gritty, offensive attacks. [15]
In late November 2010, Adams (aged 69) was admitted to a hospital in Las Vegas when his bladder and prostate swelled up, leaving him close to kidney failure. He recovered very quickly, in time to be ringside to see his fighter Sharif Bogere win on the undercard of Khan-Miadana in mid December. [16] Adams was back on the mitts just two days later.
− | Former World Champions |
* | Current World Champions |
Nationality | Name | Weight Class | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Armenian | − William Abelyan | Featherweight | |
American | − Michael Bentt | Heavyweight | |
Ugandan | Sharif Bogere | Lightweight | |
American | − Riddick Bowe | Heavyweight | |
American | − Mark Breland | Welterweight | Only for 1984 Olympics |
American | − Michael Carbajal | Light Flyweight | Only for 1988 Olympics |
American | Israel Cardona | Lightweight | Only for Paul Spadafora fight |
Russian | − Ruslan Chagaev | Heavyweight | |
American | − Al Cole | Heavyweight | |
American | −Eddie Cook | Bantamweight | First pro USA Champion (1992) |
American | − Diego Corrales | Lightweight | |
American | − B. J. Flores | Cruiserweight | |
American | Kenneth Gould | Welterweight | Only for 1988 Olympics |
American | Andrew Maynard | Light Heavyweight | Only for 1988 Olympics |
American | Anthony Hembrick | Middleweight | Only for 1988 Olympics |
American | − Virgil Hill | Light Heavyweight | Only for 1984 Olympics |
American | − Evander Holyfield | Light Heavyweight | |
France | − René Jacquot | Light Middleweight | First pro Champion (1989) |
American | − Roy Jones Jr. | Light Middleweight | |
American | − James Kirkland | Light Middleweight | Briefly after his second prison stint |
American | Deandre Latimore | Light Middleweight | |
American | − Frankie Liles | Super Middleweight | |
Venezuelan | − Jorge Linares | Lightweight | |
American | − Ray Mercer | Heavyweight | |
American | − Kennedy McKinney | Bantamweight | |
American | − Charles Murray | Light Welterweight | |
American | − Freddie Norwood | Featherweight | |
American | − Michael Nunn | Middleweight | |
Nigerian | − Samuel Peter | Heavyweight | |
American | − Vince Phillips | Light Welterweight | |
American | − David Reid | Light Middleweight | |
Kenyan | Chris Sande | Middleweight | |
American | − Cory Spinks | Middleweight | |
American | − Johnny Tapia | Super Flyweight | |
American | − Frank Tate | Middleweight | Only for 1984 Olympics |
American | Henry Tillman | Heavyweight | |
American | − Meldrick Taylor | Light Welterweight | Only for 1984 Olympics |
Venezuelan | − Edwin Valero | Lightweight | |
Kenyan | Robert Wangila | Welterweight | |
American | − Pernell Whitaker | Lightweight | Only for 1984 Olympics |
− | Former World Champions |
* | Current World Champions |
Nationality | Name | Weight Class | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
American | − Keith Berry | Light Heavyweight | UFC |
American | − Frank Mir | Heavyweight | UFC |
Boxing is a combat sport and a martial art in which two people, usually wearing protective gloves and other protective equipment such as hand wraps and mouthguards, throw punches at each other for a predetermined amount of time in a boxing ring.
Lennox Claudius Lewis is a boxing commentator and former professional boxer who competed from 1989 to 2003. He is a three-time world heavyweight champion, a two-time lineal champion, and held the undisputed championship. Holding dual British and Canadian citizenship, Lewis represented Canada as an amateur at the 1984 and 1988 Olympics; in the latter, he won a gold medal in the super-heavyweight division.
Tommy Morrison was an American professional boxer and mixed martial artist who competed from 1988 to 2009. Best known for his left hook and formidable punching power, Morrison won the WBO heavyweight title in 1993 with a unanimous decision victory over George Foreman. He lost the title in his second defense to Michael Bentt that same year. Morrison's other boxing highlights include his fight with Ray Mercer in 1991, and with Donovan Ruddock in 1995. Morrison is also known for his acting career, having starred alongside Sylvester Stallone in the 1990 film Rocky V as Tommy Gunn. He retired from boxing in 1996 after testing positive for HIV.
Riddick Lamont Bowe is an American former professional boxer and former professional kickboxer who competed between 1989 and 2008 in boxing, and from 2013 to 2016 in kickboxing. He held the undisputed world heavyweight championship in 1992, and won the super heavyweight silver medal at the 1988 Summer Olympics.
Michael Bentt is an American film and television actor, and former professional boxer who competed from 1989 to 1994. He was born in East Dulwich, London, but raised in the Cambria Heights section of Queens in New York City. Bentt won the WBO heavyweight title from Tommy Morrison in 1993, losing the title in his first defense in 1994 to Herbie Hide.
Herbie Hide is a British former professional boxer who competed from 1989 to 2010. He held the WBO heavyweight title twice between 1994 and 1999, as well as the British heavyweight title in 1993. Hide was known for his formidable punching power and killer instinct in the ring.
Mark Anthony Breland is an American boxing trainer. As an amateur, he was a Gold Medal winner at the 1984 Summer Olympics, with a 110-1 record as an amateur and is regarded among the greatest amateur fighters ever. He competed as a professional from 1984 to 1997, and held the WBA welterweight title twice between 1987 and 1990. He later became an actor with a wide range of movie and television credits, having made his debut in The Lords of Discipline, and also appeared in the music video for The Pointer Sisters' 1985 hit single, "Dare Me."
Ruslan Shamilevich Chagaev ; born 19 October 1978) is an Uzbekistani former professional boxer who competed from 2001 to 2016. He held the World Boxing Association (WBA) heavyweight title twice and was the first Asian boxer to win a world heavyweight title by any of the four major sanctioning bodies. He was ranked as a top 10 heavyweight or contender by The Ring magazine at the conclusion of each year between 2006 and 2015; at the end of 2008 he was ranked third, only behind the Klitschko brothers.
Aleksandr Viktorovich "Alex" Miroshnichenko was a Russian-Kazakh professional boxer. As an amateur he represented the Soviet Union at the 1988 Summer Olympics, winning a bronze medal in the super-heavyweight division.
Benjamin "BJ" Flores is an American former professional boxer and a current boxing trainer. He challenged once for the WBC cruiserweight world title in 2016, and twice for interim world titles at cruiserweight and heavyweight.
Alex García is a retired Mexican-American boxer, who competed from 1987 to 2005 in the heavyweight division, best known for his short but nevertheless outstanding amateur career in 1986, and later to be a contender in the 1990s.
Alexander Gennadiyevich Yagubkin was a Soviet Olympic boxer, who competed between 1979 and 1988. The only Soviet boxer to become the World heavyweight champion (1982), he never turned pro due to political restrictions imposed by the Soviet government. He was ranked the world's #2 amateur heavyweight by the AIBA in 1984, and #1 in 1986.
Justann John Crawford is a retired indigenous Australian Olympic boxer. Justann earned 9 international gold medals and represented Australia at the 1992, 1996 Olympic Games and 1994 Commonwealth Games. He also held 9 Australian boxing titles mainly in the middleweight division, or in the light heavyweight division.
John Alfred “Johnny” Lewis OAM is an Australian boxing trainer and the head coach of six world champions, most notably Jeff Fenech, Jeff Harding, Gairy St. Clair and Kostya Tszyu.
Sharif Bogere is a Ugandan professional boxer in the Lightweight division. He is a one-time WBO NABO Lightweight Champion and was named the 2010 Outstanding Young Male Boxer of the Year. Bogere is currently signed to Mayweather Promotions. Bogere is known for his flamboyant ring entrances and aggressive fighting style. He is currently trained by legendary trainer Kenny Adams.
Chris Pearson is a former American amateur boxer and currently a professional boxer in the Middleweight division. He signed a professional managerial contract with Al Haymon to launch his pro career, whose stable of fighters includes Floyd Mayweather Jr., Jermain Taylor and Paul Williams.
Sendai Tanaka is a Japanese boxing trainer. He is one of the few outstanding trainers from Asia, and has a reputation especially for his focus mitts training.
Riddick Bowe vs. Andrew Golota, billed as "Big Daddy's Home", was a professional boxing match contested on July 11, 1996. The fight was held at Madison Square Garden in New York City and was televised on HBO in the United States, and on Sky Sports in the United Kingdom.
Riddick Bowe vs. Andrew Golota II was a professional boxing match contested on December 14, 1996 at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The bout was a rematch of a controversial fight held earlier in the year at Madison Square Garden in which Bowe was largely outboxed by Golota, but won the fight by disqualification because the Polish fighter repeatedly hit him with punches below the belt.
Don Diego Rivelino Alfredo Poeder is a former Dutch professional boxer. After his pro debut in 1994, Poeder was undefeated for 21 consecutive boxing matches. He gained the WBU cruiserweight title with a knock out over American Terry Ray in 1997, defending it once against Courtney Butler before falling to former world champion Robert Daniels in a bid for the IBO title.