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Where Are They Now???
On this page I will look back at some of the
well known heavyweights of yesterday and beyond and take a look where they are
now and what has happened to them after their career in the ring ended.
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Tommy Morrison.

Tommy In His Fighting Days.
To Hell and Back
November 1, 2002
Everybody remembers bits and pieces of information about Tommy Morrison -- tough
white kid with a standout left hook who defeated George Foreman, was massacred
by Ray Mercer. Co-starred in ROCKY V. Announced he was HIV-positive. Got into
trouble with the law. Dropped out of sight.
Not terribly trusting of reporters, he's rarely interviewed. But when he decides
to talk to you and you fill in some of the blanks, you discover there's more to
Tommy Morrison than you thought.
He's been to hell and back, been screwed and tattooed, been up, been down, is
now, at age 33, living quietly in Sparta, Tenn., working on his autobiography,
looking for a publisher, and attending acting school. Because he was a famous
white heavyweight in a fighting fraternity largely made up of minorities, lots
of fans assumed he started out with some kind of silver spoon. Uh uh.
Morrison began entering tough man contests AT AGE 13 to put food on the table.
He was living in Jay, Olka., when his parents divorced. "My mom was a
stay-at-home mom. I had to quit school and get a job at 13," he explained.
"I worked on an oil rig, at construction, and meanwhile my mother completed
nursing school. I got exposed to a lot of stuff that year, including tough man
contests."
Tommy, raised in a boxing family, first put on the gloves when he was seven. He
fought in 242 amateur fights, "most by the time I was 13."
After a year, his mother completed training for a nursing license and Tommy was
able to re-enroll in school. Meanwhile, he knocked around different locations on
weekends following the tough man circuit through Oklahoma, Missouri and
Arkansas.
His knockabout life was similar to the early days of the great Jack Dempsey, who
followed a trail through mining camps and railroad yards, doing back-breaking
labor by day and fighting in barroom contests at night for extra cash.
Back in Jay, Morrison excelled in high school football. "But then my senior
year in high school my mom said she wanted me to fight in the Golden Gloves. My
brother had won the Golden Gloves in Kansas City. We had lots of fighters in my
family. I knew eventually it would be my turn.
"Oddly enough, it was something I was gifted at to some extent. But I never
had a passion for it." What is his passion?
"Acting," he answered immediately. He had a three-picture deal when he
performed in ROCKY V, but he was so busy training and fighting, he just let it
expire.
In 1988, his senior year, he won the Kansas City Golden Gloves. In the Olympic
trials, he advanced to the finals and lost to Army Sergeant Ray Mercer, eight
years his senior.
Three years later Morrison would challenge then-WBO champ Mercer in Atlantic
City, where Mercer caught him with a huge shot in the fifth round and knocked
him unconscious with a vicious combination. It was one of the most brutal
heavyweight knockouts ever seen on TV.
But Morrison was no easy mark. Before losing to Mercer, he'd stopped James
(Quick) Tillis and Pinklon Thomas, both in round one. In 1993 he decisioned
Foreman for the vacant WBO heavyweight title. Before he was through Morrison,
whose final record was 46-3-1 (40), would stop Joe Hipp, Carl Williams, Michael
Bentt, Bryan Scott and Razor Ruddock. He had a natural, one-of-a-kind,
bread-and-butter hook that could end a fight at any time.
"Whenever I fought, the guy's entire career hinged on me," he
recalled. "I felt like I was always subject to 10 times more criticism just
because I was white. This great white hope thing was never down my alley. I
always look forward to the day fighters can be recognized for their skill, not
the color of their skin. But I was not in control of that."
Morrison's proudest moment may have been his 1992 victory in Reno, Nev. over
tough journeyman Hipp. Morrison was cut, broke both hands, and his jaw was so
severely fractured the bone separated in two. But he refused to quit and stopped
Hipp in round nine.
"I had a three-fight deal signed with Don King. It was a $38.5 million
contract, and the third fight was going to be with (Mike) Tyson after he got out
of prison. I know I would have beaten him. That would have been my last fight -
win, lose, or draw."
Then his world collapsed. The Nevada commission had just begun to test for HIV.
Morrison tested positive in February 1996. A heterosexual who'd never injected
drugs, he figured he was infected by a woman. But which one? "Wilt
Chamberlain had nothing on me," he said. "Infidelity was one of my
biggest battles in life. I couldn't overcome it. It probably helped my first
marriage crumble."
Morrison announced the lab results at a press conference in Tulsa. When he got
back to Jay an hour later, the highway signs reading, "Home of Tommy
Morrison" were already torn down. "My best friends wouldn't even wave
at me," he recalled. "These people were just complete idiots.
Uneducated people. No class at all."
He came home from a ski trip to discover his house had burned down. He moved to
Fayeteville, Ark. "I had a lot of old friends there. It seemed they were
all into the drug scene. I tried it for a couple months, didn't like it, and
that was that."
He was stopped several times on traffic offenses, including DUI. Meanwhile, a
"friend" was supposed to be getting a security system installed in
Morrison's Corvette.
"He was cooking up speed and trading with this other guy for cocaine, I
found out later." His friend kept stalling on returning the car, so
Morrison just took it back. Police had staked out the man's house. They followed
Morrison and found "either 11 or 18 grams of cocaine in the trunk,
depending on which report you believed," Morrison said.
He had a permit to carry a firearm. Having the drugs and gun together got him
charged with six felonies, each punishable by 40 to life. He copped a plea and
in January 2000 was sentenced to two years. In prison, another con leaned on
him, and Morrison "busted him up some. They put me in the hole for
awhile." After that, "I was really well-liked among the inmates."
But not among guards. They despised him for being famous, for being a drug
felon. He said they repeatedly planted contraband tobacco in his cell. He didn't
smoke. Each time his sentence was extended two months. He spent much time in the
hole and in a lockup with mentally ill inmates who "did the thorazine
shuffle," too zoned out on medication to speak.
To keep himself from going crazy, he told himself, "I did a lot of things
in my life I didn't get caught for."
Eventually, through correspondence, he found an ordinary citizen who took his
case to the corrections department, and he was moved to another institution. He
served 14 months altogether.
The ex-millionaire's bankroll was down to $11,000. His wife, who'd divorced him,
ended up with appreciably more, he said. He gets a disability check and his
second wife, Dawn, works as an interior designer.
He takes a drug cocktail and has never showed HIV symptoms. His wife had a son
through artificial insemination, and they recently discovered a new lab process
that will "wash" his semen so he and Dawn can safely conceive his
child. That would be his fourth.
Tommy Morrison remains a boxing fan and talks knowledgeably about what's going
on in the game.
"I spent two Christmases in prison," he said. "It changed me as
an individual." The changes, he said, were positive ones.
Click
Here For Tommy Morrison's Complete Professional Record,
All Records From
www.boxrec.com
This Article Is Courtesy Of HBO
Boxing.
And Was Written By Ivan Goldman
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