The new McGirt goes old
school to revitalize his fluctuating career
December 23, 2008
VERO BEACH, Florida (December 23, 2008) –
Team McGirt has reevaluated middleweight prospect James McGirt, Jr.
(19-1-1, 9 KOs) and, after considerable soul searching, has collectively
decided that the 26-year-old southpaw will return to old-school training
and incorporate a more aggressive attack in order to take better
advantage of his hand speed, as well as to avoid his frustrating “fight
to the level of his opponent” pattern.
McGirt’s somewhat up-and-down career, at least of late, found him losing
for the first time on April 11 to a fighter he had out on his feet,
Carlos “Baby Sugar” DeLeon (20-2-2, 12 KOs), rebounding from that with
an impressive performance on ESPN to defeat former IBO and WBU
middleweight champion Raymond “Hallelujah” Joval (37-4, 16 KOs) by
10-round decision last July, which moved McGirt up as high as No. 8 in
The Ring’s ratings, but then fighting a disappointing 10-round draw with
Marcus Upshaw (8-3) in his last fight this past November.
“I need to stop taking people lightly,” McGirt admitted. “This isn’t a
joke; boxing is a serious sport. I looked past him (Upshaw) to an HBO
fight in January (since scrapped). He trained for 5-6 weeks and really
came to fight. I take my hat off to him. I had to lose some weight at
the end that I shouldn’t have had to worry about and I paid the
consequences. I am now working hard to take control of myself, mentally.
Guys are coming to beat me and my father (former 2-time world champion
and James’ trainer, “Buddy” McGirt). They bring their ‘A’ game. I hurt
him (Upshaw) in the first round and then waited around too long, loading
up for a one-punch knockout. If the fight’s easy, I get lackadaisical
and go into a slump for a few rounds. Before I know it, I’m behind, and
then I need to come on. I had a bad day, got a draw, and now there’s
nothing to do now but learn from it and move on. I want to fight the top
middleweights but, mentally, I have to be in control. It’s not like in
basketball when you’re in a zone and you feel nobody can stop you. You
can’t do that in boxing because punches are being thrown at your head.”
McGirt’s next fight is January 16 on ESPN2 Friday Night Fights in a
10-round co-feature against veteran Angel “Toro” Hernandez (28-7, 16
KOs) from Key West, Florida. Hernandez, who took “Winky” Wright 12
rounds in their 2003 IBF light middleweight title fight, is a former
NABF title holder.
McGirt has already gotten into his old-school training regiment, working
hard twice a day - in the morning and night with rest after 9 PM – and
constantly coming forward in the ring towards his opponent, letting his
hands go in laser-like fashion. “I’ve been on James 24/7,” his
father/trainer Buddy reported from their Vero Beach training camp. “I’m
an old-school guy but today a lot of fighters train 3 or 4 times a day.
That’s too much wear and tear on the body for James. He’s ready at 6:45
every morning. If he’s scheduled to run, he runs even if it’s raining.
No excuses. I believe in hard work, a prepared diet, and rest. It’s
working. I went to his place today and he was waiting for me to go at
6:45.
“I’ve told James since he started boxing that he has three strikes
against him -- al three strikes are having McGirt as his last name. The
fighter and his trainer want to beat James and me. They want to get at
me through James. He has a lot to handle in the ring and it’s not his
fault that his last name is McGirt. It is what it is. I told him he
can’t fight like me. The problem is he didn’t see what I had to put into
training when I was coming up. He was too young for that. But he saw
what it was like when I was world champion and thought that was the way
it’s like. He didn’t see all of the work that went into it.
“James’ big problem is everything in sports always came easy for him,
whether it was playing basketball, baseball or football. No matter what
sport he played, it came easy for him on the field or court. But you
don’t play boxing. I told him after the last fight that if he wasn’t
going to take it serious, he should quit and get out of boxing. Nobody’s
going to give him anything. I told him to take a few weeks, not
overnight, to think about it. He says he wants it and he has done
everything he has to do. James needs tunnel vision. You can’t just go
home from the gym and go back the next day and pick things up. You have
to take it home - shadow box and practice things there, too. He needs to
be dedicated and isolated. James has an opportunity to make a better
life for him and his two kids. This is it from now until he retires.
When he loses the edge, I’ll pull the plug.”
The pressure associated with a fighter who is the son of a popular world
champion, coupled with his tremendous natural athletic ability, have
made it easy yet difficult at the same time for James McGirt, Jr. The
new McGirt will hopefully allow James to go back to the future and
become the world title challenger he’s destined to be.