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Ex-NBA Player to become Pro-Boxer

Discussion in 'Other Sports' started by Sishir Chang, Jun 25, 2005.

  1. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Member

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    I figured since Kendall Gill is no longer playing this belongs here in Hangout instead of NBA dish.

    The local T-Wolves broadcasters would often talk about Kendall Gill's martial arts training and toughness so I think he could probably handle himself in a combative sport. I'm wondering how being 6'-5" and only 200 pounds will work out. While he's probably will have the edge in reach on his opponent I'm wondering about his power, speed and balance.

    http://msn.foxsports.com/boxing/story/3710914

    NBA veteran Gill to make pro boxing debut
    Mike Indri / BoxingScene.com
    Posted: 20 hours ago

    On Saturday night, at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago, 37-year-old Kendall Gill will be making his professional boxing debut.

    Yes, 37 years old. Yes, making his pro boxing debut. And yes, Kendall Gill.
    Many sports fans are familiar with the name Kendal Gill. After all he has played 14 seasons in the National Basketball Association after getting drafted in the first round of the 1990 NBA draft by the Charlotte Hornets.

    After playing in only 14 games this past season, Gill was abruptly released by the Milwaukee Bucks.

    "I didn't deserve to go out this way in basketball," said Gill.

    Gill is a a life-long boxing fan who has used his unexpected free time away from the NBA to regain his focus, get hungry again, and also set some interesting personal goals.

    "I've always wanted to (box professionally), even before basketball," said the outgoing and personable Gill. "The Bucks waiving me could be a blessing in disguise."

    "I want to have a couple of fights, return to the NBA, and then come back to boxing," said Gill, an Illinois native. "I'm not leaving basketball this way. I'm coming back big and finishing my career like a champ."

    While a champ on the basketball court, Gill does realize the unlikelihood of his ever placing a pugilistic title belt up on his mantle along with all his basketball trophies.

    The former member of the Hornets, Supersonics, Nets, Heat, Timberwolves, Bulls and Bucks seems content with entering the squared circle and realizing a boyhood dream.

    "I've loved boxing since I was about eight years old," he said. "I grew up watching and admiring guys like (Marvin) Hagler, (Ray) Leonard, (Thomas) Hearns and (Evander) Holyfield. My all-time favorite is Tito Trinidad, and I have the ultimate respect for Bernard Hopkins staying on top for so long."

    The 6-foot-5 Gill, who planned on fighting as a heavyweight due to his natural playing weight being near 215 pounds, logically dropped to the cruiserweight limit (between 175-200 pounds) for his debut.

    "I'm sparring with guys in the 240's and holding my own, but I'll be much more effective as a cruiserweight," Gill said.

    By Gill's own admission, he is a work in progress and he acknowledges that his status as an NBA player more than likely played a major part in this opportunity. He is also confident that when people see how hard he has worked these past 15 months to get this shot, and the sincerity of his efforts, that boxing fans will support him.

    Fighting as the "co-feature" for the June 25, 8-Count Productions fight card, Gill will face Trevor Biley, a carefully selected, hand-picked opponent. The 5-8 Biley (0-1) from Cleveland, was stopped in the first round of his lone pro fight, which was more than 14 months ago.

    The main event will showcase popular local middleweight contender Freddie Cuevas (24-7 with 16 KOs), who trains with Gill at the JABB gym in Chicago.

    The most impressive aspect of Gill's delving into the brutal, yet beautiful, business of boxing is his realistic mental approach.

    Not factored by money or the whimsical notion of fighting for a championship (why fight, if not to become a champion or for the money?), Gill is fighting for pride. Pride in showing that, although financially secure and able to move on to the next stage of his life, it will be done on his terms.

    Gil is taking his shot, taking a rough road instead of the easy path, to show he is a fighter. Not just for his upcoming four-round pro debut, but more importantly for his future.

    Maybe his distasteful exit from the game he loved was "a blessing in disguise," a wake-up call to a sleeping giant. We will find out Saturday night.
     
  2. Life2Def

    Life2Def Member

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    He won't make it.
     
  3. VooDooPope

    VooDooPope Love > Hate

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    one thing... boxing is fixed...

    so... he should do great...
     
  4. RunninRaven

    RunninRaven Member
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  5. SamFisher

    SamFisher Member

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  6. swilkins

    swilkins Member

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    6'5" means nothing if you have chicken legs.

    One hit and those legs will fold like a cheap chair.
     
  7. Aceshigh7

    Aceshigh7 Member

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    Kendall Gill won, and from this article it sounds like he dominated.

    http://chicagosports.chicagotribune...un26,1,3183675.story?coll=cs-basketball-print

    Kendall Gill had to wait until 10:26 p.m. Saturday, through five other fights, for his professional boxing debut.

    By 10:28, he had his first victory.

    The 6-foot-5-inch, 199-pound cruiserweight knocked out 5-10 Trevor Biley (0-2-0) in 1 minute 58 seconds in the feature bout at the Aragon Ballroom. Gill floored the 183-pound Biley three times..

    "I feel great," the 37-year-old NBA veteran and former Illini star said. His trainers told him to take it easy early.

    "But I couldn't resist," Gill said. "I saw him hurting."

    Biley looked nervous before the bout, while Gill was prancing and hopping with endless energy. After just one jab, Biley began holding onto Gill and spent as much time on the floor as on his feet the rest of the fight.

    "My team prepared me exactly the way I'm supposed to be prepared," said Gill, who had been training in Chicago the last seven months for this fight, and the last 18 months for a boxing career.

    "I want to fight one more time and then go back to the NBA," Gill said, adding that he'll return to boxing after his 15th season. "I'm a very young 37."
     
  8. junglerules

    junglerules Member

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    Ha ha ha! For real- that was the most inane article ever. I mean, above all the fluff, you want to know who actually WON the bout, right? There is no way someone can read that article and come to any apparent conclusion about the outcome!

    Anyway, I always liked Kendall Gill as an NBA player- he seemed a little underappreciated to me, but perhaps that's because he played most of his career on a bad upstart Charlotte Hornets team. Maybe he racked up his numbers because he was on such a poor squad early on. Anyway, he always came across as a class act, though. Hope he finds some success in the ring, and then leaves the NBA on his own terms.
     
  9. KellyDwyer

    KellyDwyer Member

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    I was at the fight, and there should be a piece on si.com on the fight Monday afternoon. Unlike the two articles posted above, I actually talked with Kendall at length following the "fight."
     
  10. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Member

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    KellyDwyer;

    So you think Gill has got a future in boxing?
     

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