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September 26, 2000
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Yesterday's
Olympian of the day
To be a champion in your sport is cause for celebration.
To maintain your mastery over 10 years, or more; to know for better
than a decade that every single person who takes to your sport has as his
ultimate ambition a win over you and yet, to remain unmoved, secure in
your absolute mastery -- that is rare.
'Rare' describes Felix
Savon perfectly. In fact, the Cuban heavyweight has probably only one
equal, in boxing history -- the legendary Teofilo Stevenson, whose record
of winning the gold in three successive Olympics Savon should equal here
in Sydney.
The 33-year-old resident of San Vincente, 6'5" in his socks, is one of
the most elegant boxers to have ever stepped into a ring -- another
rarity, given that power, not elegance, is the chief characteristic of the
heavyweights.
As a youth, Savon was attracted to track and field, but his coach at
the Cuban sports school exhorted him to try boxing. His mother objected to
her teenage son participating in 'violent' sports, and told him that if he
took up boxing, he could never return home.
Felix spent that night lying on the grass, in an adjoining field,
staring up at the stars as though seeking to read his future there. As he
recalled it later, "I fell asleep, and when I woke up, I was a boxer."
His mother bowed to the inevitable and took her son back into the
family fold. Two years later, Savon made his debut in the middleweight
class in a national tournament, knocked out his first three opponents, and
then defeated the reigning champion to take the title.
At age 17, he was the heavyweight junior champion of the world. Today,
he is a two-time Olympic gold medallist -- Barcelona 1992 and Atlanta
1996. He should have had more, but then Cuba boycotted Seoul in 1988, and
before that, Los Angeles in 1984.
The real story of his mastery is told in this -- Felix Savon won his
first world championship in 1986, repeated in 1991, then won again in
1993, 1995 and 1997 -- remembering that the Worlds come around once every
two years.
In 1999, Savon was placed second -- and not because he lost. Furious
over what they called "unjust" decisions in the preliminary round, the
Cuban delegation decided that a welterweight bout Juan Hernandez and
Russia's Timour Gaidalov was about all the bad refereeing they could take,
and withdrew. Savon, thus, did not take the ring for his final against the
American, Michael Bennett.
Bennett won in a walkover. And in the manner of heavyweights
everywhere, shot from the lip. "I was kind of hoping that he would come
back out and do battle," Bennett said then. "You want a chance to knock
off the king of the hill and when it comes, you don't want to miss it."
A second chance came his way. On September 26, in the Sydney boxing
ring. And Bennett prepared for the showdown as well as he knew how --
adding to his chances by roping in Evander Holyfield to coach, and assist,
him.
Primed for the big one, watched by Holyfield, Bennett stepped into the
ring. And received a lesson from the master. Delivered with the Cuban's
usual air of calm mastery.
The referee had to step in, and stop the fight in the third round, with
Savon -- not even boxing flat out -- leading 23-8.
Bennett had just enough wind left, after the bout, to say: "Felix Savon
is boxing history. There is very little you can do against him."
Champions are like that -- where they walk the earth, humility follows
in their wake.
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