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Deontay Wilder fighting tomorrow night

647 Views 5 Replies 5 Participants Last post by  adamcanavan
Seems like it's been time for him to it step up for years now. Don't really know much about Kelvin Price but I'm guessing he's not that big a step up, though he does have a win over Hamer which is aight.

Who would you like to see Wilder in against after tomorrow night?
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Russ Anber, Wilder's cutman and co-trainer (along with Jay Deas and Mark Breland) take on the big man from Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

Wilder Thing, You Make My Heart Sing
Ex-Charlotte 49ers basketball player Kelvin Price in fight of his life – as a boxer

By Tom Sorensen
charlotteobserver.com

Posted: Friday, Dec.14,2012

In the late 1990s, Charlotte 49ers basketball coach Bobby Lutz needed a big man and he chose Kelvin Price. Price was tough and athletic. But at 6-foot-7 he was undersized for a power forward and center.

As a boxer, his height suddenly is ideal. The sport’s popularity hasn’t grown, but the size of its heavyweights has. Longtime champion Wladimir Klitschko is 6-6. Price’s opponent Saturday, Deontay Wilder, is 6-7.

The Wilder fight, at the Los Angeles Sports Arena, is by far the biggest of Price’s five-year career. Wilder-Price will be on the Amir Khan-Carlos Molina undercard, and televised by Showtime at 10:30 p.m. (EST).

Wilder is favored. He has fought 25 opponents and knocked out 25 opponents, some with his left hand and some with his right. He also was the lone medalist on the 2008 U.S. Olympic boxing team. He won a bronze.

“Obviously, he’s good,” Price says by telephone from Los Angeles.

Price says he doesn’t expect to trade punches. Price has superb footwork, and despite his 79-inch frame, he’s difficult to hit.

“We’ll put on a good show,” he says.

Price is 13-0 with six knockouts. He’s 37 years old, 10 years older than Wilder.

Unlike another 49ers’ heavyweight, Calvin Brock, Price did not proceed from the campus to the ring.

Price averaged 11 points and 7.2 rebounds for Lutz after transferring from Louisiana-Lafayette, and he tried to parlay the numbers into an NBA gig. He tried out for the Charlotte Hornets and played professionally in Australia, the Philippines and Venezuela.

Price, who grew up in New Iberia, La., was playing for a minor-league basketball team in Pensacola, Fla. Another player there was Roy Jones, who dabbled in basketball but in his prime was among the best boxers in the world. Jones’ father, Big Roy, ran a boxing club in Pensacola, and Jones told Price he ought to box.

Price is a superior athlete, and people often suggest he try something new. At Charlotte, track coaches wanted him to compete in the triple jump. Lutz, now the associate head basketball coach at N.C. State, suggested Price go to the NFL scouting combine.

“He would have been an unbelievable tight end,” says Lutz. “He has great hands and feet.”

Lutz and Price still talk. Price will ask his opinion about a variety of subjects, boxing among them.

“I love my school,” Price says. “And I’d love to come back and fight in Charlotte.”

How would Lutz describe Price to people who might not remember him?

“He’s tough, athletic, and has a great attitude,” Lutz says. “Very intelligent. He didn’t start fights but he stood up for his teammates. Very loyal.”

At one practice Lutz told his players to run a challenging array of sprints. Price laughed – the sprints weren’t challenging for him.

“Chip Sigmon was the trainer for the Hornets when Kelvin tried out, and Chip told me Kelvin had the best footwork of any player he had worked with,” Lutz says.

Despite Price’s feet, and his size, his career has been quiet – five years, 13 fights. He has fought on two weeks’ notice; he has served as his own trainer. His signature victory was against then undefeated Tor Hamer in Madison Square Garden in 2010.

Boxing doesn’t have a schedule. Because of Price’s size and lack of a national reputation, he is not an opponent others seek.

So here he is, on the cusp of his biggest challenge and opportunity. And he’s giving away 10 years. Is age a disadvantage?

“I hate that question,” Price, who is courteous and laid back, says with sudden feeling. “I hear that all the time.”

Price talks about Wladimir Klitschko, who is 36, and his heavyweight brother Vitali, who is 41. He says all the boxers who fans talk about are in their 30s – Manny Pacquiao is 34 and the man who knocked him out last week, Juan Manuel Marquez, is 39.

“I’m young in body,” says Price.

He’s right; he’s sustained less damage than fighters 15 years younger. Price had only one amateur fight.

Age can be an advantage.

“I know life,” Price says. “I’ve been through it.”

He gave up a $100,000 a year basketball salary to box. He gave up a relationship.

“I sacrificed,” Price says.

If he upsets Wilder he will be neither old nor undersized. He’ll be a fighter fans talk about and contenders no longer can avoid.
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