Johnson added to Jones-Hanshaw PPV

01/07/2007

Johnson added to Jones-Hanshaw PPV

PRESS RELEASE: He’s bold and he’s brash. He’s cocky and confident. There is an air of the young Cassius Clay in the personality of super middleweight prospect Ron Johnson. The 9-1, 168-pounder even has the nerve, the temerity, the gall and the chutzpah to grandly label himself “The American Dream” [despite a loss to Darnell Boone in December 2005].

Doesn’t that bring back memories of the verbose, poetry-spouting kid from Louisville who became an icon named Muhammad Ali? But, if the 21-year-old boxer from Cleveland does not qualify as a rhyme maker himself, he does have two strong poetic connections. His mother, whose nom de plume is Tori J (her book on sale now is “Journey Through Darkness”), is a published poet and his trainer is none other than wanna-be poet, Floyd Mayweather Sr.

There is even a bit of poetic license in the story of how another Ron Johnson’s fate may have predestined this Ron Johnson’s ring career.

“My uncle, Ron Johnson, was a boxer,” Johnson said, “and he died in the ring just before he had his first professional bout. He was only 19 and he was my father’s brother. When I was born, everyone said I looked like him and that I might be a boxer myself. They were right.”


Johnson moved from Ohio to boxing hotspot Las Vegas to be tutored by Floyd Mayweather’s father in the finer points of pugilism.  Now Johnson has been signed to a promotional deal by Murad Productions (Murad Muhammad) and will fight on the undercard of the July 14, 2007 Biloxi, Mississippi pay-per-view show starring ring legend Roy Jones Jr. and unbeaten Anthony ‘Tyger” Hanshaw. Johnson is sparring in Vegas on a daily basis with Hanshaw and he predicts a rough fight for both men at the Mississippi Gulf Coast Coliseum.

“Roy is such a giant in boxing,” Johnson said. “He has given so much to our sport. I’ve been friendly with Tony since age six, though, and he was the man in Ohio amateur circles. I saw him fight Jermain Taylor, Kelly Pavlik and many more. All of us in Ohio looked up to Tony as a boxer.