ALIEN ENCOUNTERS: FORMER OPPONENTS OF BERNARD HOPKINS REFLECT ON THEIR FIGHTS WITH HIM
ROBERT ALLEN:
I remember he made me so mad before the first fight. I was so mad that he didn't want to be in the ring with me, so he jumped out. I was real angry that night. I wanted to kill him, you know what I mean? For the second fight, he made sure he didn't even talk to me. He never pissed me off again after that. Honestly, I was never prepared for the second or third fight anyway, but after the first fight, he made sure to never say anything to me. I thought he would try to use his mind games in the other two fights, but he never did. The first time we fought, I did my best. I was sharp, I was faster, and I didn't have a problem making the weight. I was able to match his speed, power, and strength. For the next two fights with Bernard, I couldn't really make the weight no more. I struggled to make the weight, but he just beat me in the next two fights. I was best prepared in the first fight. He had a time with me in that fight. In the next two fights, he didn't have no problem beating me. I am the only guy that can say I fought Bernard Hopkins 3 times.
Bernard is able to still compete at this level at almost 50 years of age because he keeps himself in great shape, he's very disciplined, and these guys aren't making him fight when he don't want to fight. They are letting him walk around the ring and pick his spots. He's been able to make his career like that. He's fighting at his pace and having fun, but what these guys don't understand is you gotta get lowdown and dirty in there and jump on him and beat him like he's an old man. You can't stand there and and admire him. You gotta get in there and kick him and dog him and elbow him; you got to be angry and you got to beat his ass. You can't try to box with him. You gotta go in there and hurt him. That's the only thing Bernard respects. If you don't do any of that, he's gonna beat you with the bullshit. If you go in there and use some of the tactics that he likes to use and turn it into a dog fight, he don't want that.
LUPE AQUINO:
Bernard Hopkins is a great fighter. He is very cagey and always stays fit. Middleweight wasn't my weight, but I admire this unique pugilist.
ENRIQUE ORNELAS:
I remember my fight with Bernard not being a hard fight, but more frustrating than anything. I was more tired afterwards from carrying his weight. My shoulders were heavy from him holding me and laying his weight on me to carry. Remember, I was coming from 160 pounds up to 175. To me, his legend was harder than the fight itself. He is amazing for his age and what he has done. He is very beatable boxing-wise, but he is also a very smart boxer that knows all of the tricks in the book, and more importantly, the judges and referees allow it and turn their eye to it.
KEITH HOLMES:
The mind games that Bernard plays before fights is a good strategy for him. He got me out of my game. If he can disturb peace, then he has basically won the game. He is really good at that and I have to commend him on his career and being that way. As far as our fight goes, I grew up in the streets and I was very aggressive growing up. When he did his pre-fight talk, it took me out of my game of boxing and it took me into a street mentality. He basically tricked me into that situation. But overall, that didn't deter me from wanting to destroy him in the fight. I was going through a lawsuit with Don King at the time. Me and Don King was arguing 2 nights before the fight. I wasn't even focused on the fight like that. It was a great opportunity for Bernard Hopkins at that time to fight me because I wasn't prepared mentally and my training camp wasn't that good. I had about 35 rounds of sparring and usually I go into every fight with at least 150 rounds of sparring. That fight right there was the most important fight of my life and it was the least effort I ever put into training. And that was very disappointing, especially right now. When you think about it, all people can remember is the Bernard Hopkins fight and that could be understood because Bernard Hopkins is a great legend today. But when you go back to my career, in 1993, I fought 8 fights and won 6 by knockout. In 1994, I fought 8 fights and won 6 by knockout, and then once I signed with Don King in 1995, the most I ever fought in one year was twice. Then I went 14-1, and also with the Bernard Hopkins fight at the end of the line, I hadn't fought in 14 to 15 months and Bernard Hopkins was just coming off of a fight. It was so much dealing with the situation and the Don King camp and all of that stuff. I became so inactive and that depletes your skills. I heard Andre Ward talk about it; if he can get 3 to 4 fights a year, you would see a different Andre Ward and I totally agree with that because timing is key and for Bernard Hopkins, it was great timing for him at that time. I have no excuses though, man. That was my mistake because I had those things occurring in my life. Even though sparring is different from boxing, when I go train with him and stuff, it's not the same. The fight would be totally different today than it was yesterday.
I'm not a person that gets caught up in the age thing because right now, I'm 45 years old and I'm doing things that I wasn't doing when I was 26 when I first won the world title. So I don't concentrate on Bernard's age so much. One thing for certain, you get wiser and that's why Bernard is escaping a lot of things. You are much more wiser and your skills are basically preserved. You know how to do this because of all of the fights you've had over the years. It really works to Bernard's favor, especially if you're looking at him because of his age because he's still a fighter. No matter what, he's still gonna fight you back. But he is intelligent in that ring. Until you get somebody that can really press him and not let him walk around that ring, he's gonna stay young. You gotta pull the old man out of him. He is preserving himself because if you look at the fights that he's in, he's walking around the ring a lot of the time. He's not fighting the whole fight. He ain't got nobody really pressing him like Maidana did Mayweather. You have to stay on top of him and make him expend energy and until that happens, Bernard is still gonna have his way. John David Jackson is right in everything that he is saying leading up to this fight, but he ain't the one in there. Kovalev is still a young cat. The question is, will Bernard get him out of his game? That's the key. Will he get touched more than he's ever been touched before and when that happens, do he change his game and fall into the game of Bernard Hopkins? That is the key. You have a very experienced fighter and then you have a guy that has never went a whole fight before. He has never fought an entire 12-round fight before. Boxing is a very mental game and Bernard Hopkins plays it well.
GILBERT BAPTIST:
Bernard and my bodyguard got into it before our fight. A guy named "JP" Jimmy Palmer. Him and Bernard had some words and Jimmy Palmer is the type of guy that would hit you, so I'm just glad they didn't get into it. That's part of the game. The person that originally started all that was Sonny Liston. He started the staring you down and looking you down. And Sonny's stare was so cold, a lot of guys would back down. That's why Ali talked crazy and acted crazy towards him. Ali went off screaming and yelling and going to his house and they went back and forth. Me and Bernard's fight was highly competitive. I don't think Bernard ever had anyone go to his body the way that I did. Butch Lewis and Michael Spinks was standing ringside holding up their left hand because I was hitting him with a beautiful left hook to the body. Bernard got to the point...he is a very smart fighter. His people promoted the fight. I would have to knock him out to win and he knew that too. So what Bernard did was in the 6th, 7th, and 8th round, Bernard saw he wasn't gonna knock me out and he boxed. I kept the fight coming to him, but he is a smart guy; very smart fighter. My biggest thing with Bernard is...fighters and athletes suffer from 3 different versions of trauma: insomnia, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. I limp on my left side when I walk from trauma. Insomnia is the lesser of the three. Alzheimer's like Jerry Quarry had, he was gone at the end. Parkinson's is what Ali has. Ali knows what's going on, but he has no motor skills. I'm just hoping when Bernard retires that all of that stuff don't come down on him. Bernard took good care of himself. I have never heard of Bernard drinking or using drugs. You wouldn't believe the fighters in this game that really fuck with drugs and alcohol. Drugs and alcohol and punches to the head don't work. I never drank a day of my life and I have damage from fighting. Punches and drugs and alcohol is not good. Out of respect for the game, you wouldn't believe the amount of fighters that can't put a conversation together or hold a sentence.