A Conversation with Legendary Phoenix Boxing Writer Norm Frauenheim

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By Rick Assad

It seems all along that Norm Frauenheim was destined to become a boxing writer.

Two critical elements were at play that led the 75-year-old scribe to that profession.

"I was always interested in boxing, even as a kid,” said Frauenheim who spent 31 years with the Arizona Republic beginning in 1977. “I'm an Army brat. I was born in January 1949 on a base, Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, a city I didn't really see until I hit the NBA road covering the [Phoenix] Suns for more than a decade starting in 1979-80.”

Frauenheim, a longtime correspondent for The Ring magazine who writes for various boxing sites such as boxingscene.com and 15rounds.com, added more background: "One of the many places I lived was Schofield Barracks on the Hawaiian Island of Oahu from 1962 to 1966,'' he continued. "I delivered The Stars & Stripes to troops with the 25th Infantry Division, which was headed to Vietnam, along with my dad.

"Anyway, boxing and Schofield have long been linked, mostly because of a novel and film, ‘From Here to Eternity’ (the James Jones novel starring Frank Sinatra on the big screen). The troops were still boxing, outdoors, at the barracks along my newspaper route. I was 13 to 17 years old. I'd stop, watch and get interested. I've been interested ever since."

Frauenheim added: "From there, my father and family shipped to Fort Sheridan, then a base north of Chicago where I spent one year and graduated from high school. Then my dad went back to Vietnam and I went to Vanderbilt University in Nashville (1967 through 1971) and graduated with a major in history. I was also a competitive swimmer, pre-Title IX.

"Competitive swimming is also at the roots of my sportswriting career. I was frustrated that Vanderbilt's student newspaper didn't cover us. I offered to do it. The newspaper agreed. I don't swim as well as I used to. I look at a surfboard and look at the waves I used to take on and wondered what in the hell I was doing. It's a lot safer to be at ringside."

After a more than five-decade stint covering boxing, Frauenheim is glad that the manly sport is still around but with more outside competition.

"It's surely not the [Muhammad] Ali era. It's not the Golden 80s, either. It's a fractured business in a world with more and more options for sports fans. MMA is just one example,'' he said. "Boxing is not dying. It has been declared dead, ad nauseam. I read the inevitable obits and think of an old line: Boxing has climbed out of more coffins than Count Dracula.

"Still, the sport has been pushed to the fringe of public interest. But it's been there before. Resiliency is one of its strongest qualities. It'll be around, always reinventing itself."

In some respects, boxing, like the other sports, has always been dependent on rivalries like the NBA's Celtics versus Lakers, which drives the public's interest and storylines.

"[Larry] Bird-Magic [Johnson] was basketball's Ali-[Joe] Frazier,” Frauenheim says. “It transformed the league, setting the stage for Michael Jordan. It can happen again, in boxing or any other sport."

Boxing is still the same but with tweaks here and there.

"When I started, championship bouts were 15 rounds instead of 12,” said Frauenheim who began his journalism career in 1970 at the Tallahassee Democrat and worked at the Jacksonville Journal before being lured in Phoenix. “There were morning weigh-ins instead of the day-before promotional show. There was also a lot more media. A big fight in Vegas meant all of the big media people were there. The last time that happened was Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather Jr. in 2015, a fight that failed to meet expectations and I think eroded much of the big media's appetite for more," continued Frauenheim whose byline has appeared in USA Today, the Los Angeles Times and the New York Times.

Mexican legend Saul Alvarez is still a major draw, but there are others on the horizon who are ready to step in and take over like the undefeated super middleweight David Benavidez.

"The clock is ticking on Canelo's career, and I think he knows it. At this point, it's about risk-reward. The 27-year-old Benavidez is too big a risk. Canelo, I think, looks at Benavidez and thinks he'll beat him. I don't think he would,'' Frauenheim noted. "Benavidez is too big, has a mean streak and possesses a rare extra gear. He gets stronger in the late rounds.

"Even if Canelo wins, there's a pretty good chance that Benavidez hurts him. There's still a chance Canelo-Benavidez happens. But I think it'll take some Saudi [Arabian] money."

Boxers stand alone in the ring, literally and figuratively, but have a small supporting crew.

This makes them unique compared to baseball, football, basketball and hockey.

"Boxers are different from any other athlete I've ever covered. It's why, I guess, boxing has been called a writer's sport. There are plenty of NFL and NBA players who have grown up on the so-called mean streets,'' Frauenheim said. "But they have teammates. They don't make that long, lonely walk from the dressing room to the ring."

Stripped naked, boxers are an open book, according to Frauenheim.

"They can be hard to deal with while training and cutting weight. But after a fight, no athlete in my experience is more forthcoming,'' he said. "Win or lose, they just walked through harm's way in front of people. In my experience, that's when they want to talk."

Selecting a career highlight or highlights isn't easy for Frauenheim, but he tried.

"There are so many. I was there for the great Sugar Ray Leonard victory over Thomas Hearns [1981], a welterweight classic,'' he recalled. "A personal favorite was Michael Carbajal's comeback from two knockdowns for a KO of Humberto Gonzalez in 1993, perhaps the best fight in the history of the lightest weight class. I was also there for the crazy, including Mike Tyson-Evander Holyfield's "Bite Fight" and the "Fan Man" landing in the ring like the 82nd Airborne Division midway through a Riddick Bowe-Holyfield fight behind Vegas' Caesars Palace."

Three boxers set the tone and backdrop for Frauenheim's illustrious tenure as a writer.

"Roberto Duran is the greatest lightweight ever. His lifestyle sometimes got the best of him. That was evident in his infamous ‘No Mas’ welterweight loss to Sugar Ray Leonard in New Orleans,'' he said of that November 1980 bout. "He told me that he took the rematch, on short notice, because of the money. "Women-women-women, eating-eating-eating, drinking-drinking-drinking,'' he told me in an interview of what he had been doing before Leonard's people approached him for an immediate rematch of his Montreal victory. But take a look at Duran's victory in Montreal [June 1980]. Watch it again. On that night, there's never been a better fighter than Duran."

Frauenheim added another titan to that short list: "Leonard, who is the last real Sugar,'' he said, and ended with the only eight-weight division king. "Manny Pacquiao, an amazing story about a starving kid off impoverished Filipino streets. He was a terrific fighter, blessed with speed, power and instinct. Add to that a shy personality unchanged by all the money and celebrity. He is an example of what can still happen in boxing. He's the face of the game's resiliency."

That's quite a trio, and they're the best of the best that Frauenheim’s seen and covered from ringside.
 
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