Danbury’s Feliz brings a lifetime of boxing wisdom into role as trainer



It’s been said that when life closes one door, another one opens.
It may sound corny, but that certainly applies to the boxing career of Danbury’s Fernely Feliz. After a successful 15-year professional career as a heavyweight fighter ended in 2008, the now 42-year-old Feliz has taken the wealth of knowledge he amassed over the years—both in the ring as a technically sound fighter and out of the ring on the business end of the sport—and applied it to a burgeoning career as a trainer.
One door closes, another opens.
And now, Feliz—whose last name in English appropriately means “happy”—is hoping to open the door to a world title. He came close as a fighter—going 23-9 with 16 knockouts in a career that spanned from 1993 to 2008 and took him all over the globe—and as the trainer for fellow Danbury resident and Dominican native Delvin Rodriguez.
Feliz and the 33-year-old Rodriguez share an unbreakable bond that stretches back more than 20 years to when a grade-school-aged Rodriguez walked into the old Hat City Boxing Club and Feliz took him under his wing. The two have followed remarkably similar paths, both in the ring and out of it. They both moved to Danbury with their families from the Dominican Republic as youngsters and endured many of the same hardships once they arrived here, like difficulties in school because of a language barrier and the ever-present attraction to life on the streets and all the problems that come with it. Both men came from humble beginnings and have had to fight for everything they have—literally and figuratively speaking.
“Delvin is a kid who had to earn it,” Feliz said during a quick break at his used-car business on East Liberty Street—just a few blocks away from the gym. “Whatever it is, he had to earn it.”
For both Feliz and Rodriguez, boxing provided a safe and positive environment—and at times means of self-protection—during those difficult adolescent years. It seems absurd, to think about it now, that a future world heavyweight title contender would have to worry about being picked on at school—at 6-foot-2 and a solid 214 pounds when he was in the ring, Feliz is not exactly the guy you want to provoke—but it happened.
“The situation was tough,” Feliz recalled. “I used to go to school and I had a bunch of kids who used to pick on me. I didn’t know how to speak English. They used to call me names, everything. They jumped on me a few times.
“One day, I decided to go to a place named the Harambee Center. The person who helped me out over there was Bill Curtis. He gave me a job to clean and watch out for the kids. Even though my English wasn’t too good, he gave me a job. And to start me off, he had me clean the gym. When I was sweeping, I saw a ring, a boxing bag in there. I went up to his office and I asked him ‘What is all this? Let’s clean them up and put them up.’ He used to have a boxing gym on Spring Street. So we put the gym together again.
“Some of those guys who used to pick on me at school used to hang out at the Center, and some of those guys who used to jump on me, I started to beat them up in the gym. I started feeling more and more confident, and all of a sudden, everything started to change. I didn’t have any more problems. I started to enjoy going to the gym and working out. It helped me out big-time.”
And for both Feliz and Rodriguez, boxing was a ticket out of Danbury and a means to earn a living. Both fighters have traveled the world and gone places and done things that may not have been possible without boxing.
“I had a beautiful career,” Feliz said. “I had a lot of fun, I traveled a lot of places, I was in Europe many times, and I worked with a lot of big fighters.
“I helped a lot of people make a lot of money,” he added with a laugh.
As Feliz’s career first began to take off, he made sure to keep the teen-aged Rodriguez by his side to show him the ropes.
“We used to go to camp with Evander Holyfield, and I would take him to big camps down in North Carolina,” Feliz remembered. “I used to look at him like a kid and I had to protect him.
“Everywhere we would go, people would want to beat him—he’s got the baby face, he’s a skinny kid,” Feliz added with a smile. “When I used to take him to Holyfield’s camp, he used to box professional fighters like nothing was going to happen. No fear. That’s when I knew this kid was going to be something else.”
Feliz seems to have adjusted smoothly to life as a trainer, but he admits his heart is still in the ring.
“It’s tough, but I like what I do,” Feliz said. “I like to show people my abilities. Anytime improves themselves, like you can see with Delvin, that makes me feel proud. It shows the work that we’re doing.”
Key to his success as a trainer are the lessons he learned himself in the ring—both the good and the bad, the successes and the failures.
“I like doing what I do because it shows me the abilities that I had before that I never used,” Feliz said, “all the things that I could’ve used before in my career to be a great fighter and I didn’t use it.
“To train is hard because you have to have a rhythm,” Feliz added. “You have to have good eyes and you have to see the weakness of the opponent that you’re fighting. You have to see the weakness of your fighter.”
With Feliz in his corner, Rodriguez will step into the ring on Friday night at the Mohegan Sun Arena and square off against Freddy “El Riel” Hernandez in a 10-round, junior-middleweight fight. The fight will be the main event on ESPN’s Friday Night Fights that night.
Rodriguez (27-6-3, 15 knockouts) is the seventh-ranked junior middleweight in the world by the World Boxing Association. He is coming off a win by technical knockout over George “Comanche Boy” Tahdooahnippah on Feb. 15 at the Mohegan Sun Arena. Rodriguez dominated the previously unbeaten Tahdooahnippah from the outset, and the fight was finally stopped after nearly six full rounds of relentless pounding.
“The last time he fought, he looked good, he looked sharp,” Feliz said of Rodriguez, “but there were a few mistakes that he made during that fight that we’re working on to make him better.
“To be honest, I’ve never seen Delvin so serious and so dedicated,” Feliz continued. “The way he’s working, that’s what is letting me know he’s ready to go for the win. He’s hungrier than ever.”
As for that elusive world title, Feliz feels like he already has the most important championship of all.
“I have the best title in the world,” he said with a smile. “I have my wife, my three beautiful kids and I have two grandchildren. My brain is good, I can walk, I can talk, I can deal with people, I can sell cars, I can have fun. You can’t ask for more.
“I’m happy.”
Happy. Feliz, that is. (Read the original story)

Carl Froch handed rare chance of revenge with dream rematch



IBF super-middleweight champion will face Mikel Kessler on Saturday night, tasked with beating the man who handed Froch his first defeat
Last year I saw Vitali Klitschko asking Lennox Lewis for a chance at redemption, the opportunity to clear his head of the memory that was haunting him by granting a rematch.
The pair met in a pitiless blood-fest in Los Angeles in 2003 (below) when Klitschko was rescued, in what looked like a scene from an abattoir, after six rounds of their world heavyweight title fight. His face was shredded but his desire was as strong as ever. At the time of the stoppage all three judges had Klitschko in front by two points. “Vitali still wants a rematch and now his wife has started to ask me to fight him one more time!” said Lewis. The rematch will never happen – because Lewis is retired for good and not because it was too many years ago.
Bernard Hopkins waited 17 years for his rematch with Roy Jones Jr and, just like Klitschko, thought about the first fight all the time. “It never left my mind. Never. I wanted revenge, I wanted a chance to win and that is why I chased Roy for a rematch,” said Hopkins.
In the first fight in 1993, Jones was arguably America’s biggest attraction, a hero from the 1988 Seoul Olympics who had been disgracefully denied gold by officials who had been wined and dined when they shouldn’t have. Jones was being groomed to be world champion, he was on a roll and seemingly unbeatable – and Hopkins was still serving out the iniquitous terms of his parole following years in prison. Jones won a cagey fight over 12 rounds, and a world title.
In 2010, Hopkins gained revenge and won easily against Jones, who had not survived the years of weight-making and hard fights in the ring with enough to bother the extraordinary “Executioner”. “It felt good. Make no mistake, it was worth the wait,” he confirmed.
Not all boxers are as patient as Hopkins and when George Foreman quit the ring in 1977, following an epiphany in the dressing room after Jimmy Young had beaten him, the refusal of Muhammad Ali to give him a rematch remained a significant factor.
In the “Rumble in the Jungle” in 1974 Foreman had been exposed by Ali the veteran and left grasping to make sense of the personal disaster long into the African night. “Big George”, who eventually drifted deep into the church to escape the ignominy, had taken out full-page ads in major American newspapers to try to shame Ali into a rematch. “Nothing worked, he was never going to fight me again,” Foreman said.
In 1987 Foreman returned leaner and meaner and exorcised many of the demons left by Ali’s fists when he regained the world heavyweight title in 1994. He had his crown back but not the thing he wanted most: a rematch with Ali.
On Saturday, at a sold-out O2 Arena, London, Carl Froch has the perfect rematch when he meets Denmark’s Mikkel Kessler. They will each enter the ring as world champions, both are still in or close to their primes and memories of their brilliant first fight in Herning, Denmark, close to the Lego capital of the world, in 2010 are still fresh.
“So many great rematches have been lost over the years and that is why I pushed so hard for this,” said Froch, who is arguably a bit fresher than Kessler in ring years. “I knew that it had to happen, it made sense and I will not make any mistakes this time.” Froch will find out, just like Hopkins said, that it is most certainly worth the wait. (Read the originalstory)

Boxing - Gary Cornish to face Paul Butlin



Inverness heavyweight Gary “The Highlander” Cornish (15-0) will challenge Melton Mowbray’s Paul Butlin (14-18) for the vacant International Masters heavyweight title at the Ironworks Inverness on Friday 5th July.
The minor strap was recently vacated by former Olympic Gold medallist Audley Harrison. It will be unbeaten Cornish’s first title fight.
Promoter Chris Gilmour said: “I have promoted a few of Gary’s contests, and I’m delighted to give him this opportunity in front of his local support. I believe this is the first step in Gary’s quest to become Scotland’s first heavyweight champion”
Cornish, managed by Tommy Gilmour and trained by Inverness based Liverpudlian Laurie Redfern, stated:  “This is a great reward for 2 years of hard work and it will be a chance to show people what Improvements I have made since turning pro. I only had 9 Amateur contests but have been kept busy as a Professional as well as having the experience of sparring with some of the top guys like David Price & Derek Chisora.
“This will be a difficult fight and he has a lot of experience so I will need to be at my best on the night. This is the perfect contest at this point in my career given the quality of the opponents that Butlin has boxed in his career. I aim to be the Champion on Friday 5th July.” (Read the original story)

Boxing - Bellew: I didn’t perform last time



Tony Bellew has vowed to overcome Isaac Chilemba’s spoiling tactics and land himself a shot at the WBC title when the pair re-match as chief support to Carl Froch’s blockbuster bout with Mikkel Kessler at the O2 Arena in London on Saturday.
The Bomber and his South African rival drew agreed a quick rematch after a score draw in their WBC light heavyweight final eliminator in Liverpool in March. The winner will become mandatory challenger for the WBC light heavyweight title, which Chad Dawson defends against Adonis Stevenson in Canada on June 8.
Bellew has promised an improved performance this time around, and says Chilemba had no other option but to fight him again.
“I wanted the rematch straight away and he basically had nowhere to go,” said Bellew.
“He is somebody who no-one wants to fight because at the end of the day Isaac Chilemba is in the ‘who-needs-you’ club because he doesn’t come to fight, he comes to make you miss and make you look bad.
“Ideally we match up very well and we match up to make a really, really great fight but you can’t force a guy to fight in that ring. To make a great fight happen it takes two to tango and it takes two guys who really want to have a fight. I am willing to play my part in it, it is whether he is willing to play his part.
“The real big difference on the night will be in my output and this time I am not going to stop after seven rounds, that is the top and bottom of it. I am not going to fall apart halfway through the fight.
“I didn’t perform last time, it is as simple as that. I did not perform to anywhere near the best of my ability or my potential and I was very disappointed in myself. While I still think I won, and he knows I won deep down, I still didn’t perform well enough and I am paying for that by having this rematch.”
Bellew believes Chad Dawson, 30, will retain his title against Stevenson.
“I think Dawson is too clever for Stevenson,” said Bellew. “But Stevenson has an equaliser in that right hand; he can really, really punch.
“I am not looking too much into that fight, I will pay attention to that once I beat Chilemba, but my head says Dawson because he is at that level and has dealt with people at that level many times before but you can never write off a puncher and Stevenson is definitely, definitely a puncher.” (Read the original story)

Boxing - Commey tops bill at York Hall on July 13



Goodwin Promotions are planning a bumper end of season with two Saturday night shows at York Hall in the space of two weeks. On 13th July, Saturday Night Fever sees Olivia Goodwin promote alongside Streetwise Promotions from Ghana and top of the bill is IBF African champion and knockout specialist Richard ‘Azonto’ Commey (15-0) against former Commonwealth featherweight champion Paul Truscott (19-3). The fight is a final eliminator for the Commonwealth lightweight title which is being contested on the same night by Derry Mathews and Tommy Coyle.
Commey says: “I have total respect for Truscott but the one I want is Derry Mathews. His manager said I was no good on Twitter, and I want to show him by beating his boy. First however I have to fight Paul who is a quality fighter and I am looking forward to the challenge.”
Chief support is a heavyweight title bout over ten rounds for the British Masters belt where Brixton banger Ian Lewison (7-2-1) takes on Irishman Colin Kenna (17-12-3), who beat Lewison in his last fight back in November 2011.
“I am going to hurt and punish Kenna,” said Lewison. “The fight will be a destruction. I will be at my lightest and fastest ever. Don’t blink as Kenna hits the canvas”.
Philip ‘Quicksilver’ Bowes (6-0) from Leytonstone competes for the Masters light-welterweight crown against Yorkshire-based Morrocan Joe Elfidh (7-3), and Carshalton’s ‘Pretty’ Ricky Boylan (8-0) competes for the International Masters Bronze title over eight rounds against an international opponent yet to be confirmed.
The card sees the return of Tom ‘The Bomb’ Dallas (16-3) in a six round International contest. This is Dallas’ first fight since signing a promotional deal with the Goodwins. Unbeaten Watford Light-heavyweight Miles Shinkwin (3-0) will take part in his first eight round contest.
Two weeks earlier on 29th June Olivia’s father Steve Goodwin stages a 13-fight card headlined by two Masters title fights.
Prizefighter finalist Hari Miles (9-8) defends his British Masters cruiserweight title against Menay ‘The Emperor’ Edwards (10-2). Welshman Miles has been taunting Caryford’s Edwards on social networking sites after Edwards won their first clash with Miles claiming late notice as the reason for the loss.
Edwards said: “H Bomb is one bomb that never detonates. He can’t punch, has a big mouth and I will shut him up once and for all on 29 June. He needs to go back to being a journeyman. Thats his level.”
Hard punching Grays middleweight Lee ‘Banjo’ Markham (8-1) defends his British Masters middleweight title against Huddersfields Alistair Warren (8-4-2).
In a bout dubbed as ‘The Rematch’, former British title challenger Michael Lomax (19-5-1) from Chingford faces former Commonwealth champion Bradley Pryce (33-13) over eight rounds. Pryce won their first encounter in Wales, and Lomax wants revenge.
What could be fight of the night sees Brentwood middleweight  ‘Smoking’ Joe Mullender (4-0) take on former Southern Area champion Gary Boulden (7-8-2) over eight rounds.
The undercard features the debut of former professional footballer Leon McKenzie who competes at super-middleweight, and also the debuts of heavyweight Dominic Akinlade and light-welterweight ‘Showstar’ Sohail Ahmad, who has been working with former Prizefighter champion Yassine el Maachi.
Southern Area super-featherweight champion Michael ‘Chunky’ Devine (9-1) takes on the Belarusian banger Andrei Hramyka (10-6-2), who has won nine of his ten victories inside the distance. Devine is susceptible to a punch, as seen when he was floored early on in his recent Southern Area title victory Dan Naylor. (Read the original story)