Félix Savón and
Mike Tyson were contemporaries. In
Tyson’s prime there were probably few people outside
Cuba who could understand why Félix Savón continued to refuse grand offers to leave Cuba, turn professional and take on the fearsome
American in a matchup that would have generated a huge purse. With the benefit of hindsight, the attractions of fighting for
Don King were perhaps overrated and many years into retirement, Félix Savón remains a much loved and legendary Cuban fighter who maintains a deep admiration for
Fidel Castro as his spiritual father and source of inspiration.
Today Savón participates in discovering and training new Cuban boxers. He has been a regular feature in Cuba’s bouts in the
World Series of Boxing at the
Ciudad Deportiva where his nephew
Erislandy Savón Cotilla has been one of the leading lights of the Domadores team in the super heavyweight division as they have progressed to the finals to the held on June 6-7 in
Azerbaijan.
With 342 victories and 17 defeats (all avenged), the three-time
Olympic and six-time world champion is a legendary figure not only in Cuban sport but on a world level. For me, my abiding memory is seeing him mesmerize the crowd (and demolish his opponents) at the
Kid Chocolate Arena during the
Havana 1991 Pan-American Games.
Now 23 years later, I meet him for the first time at his modest home in
Fontanar,
Boyeros (an outlying suburb of Havana).
Surrounded by his five spirited children, he recounts some of his life story. It is a story told simply and without pretension. He is dressed casually in light blue. We made ourselves comfortable in a small living room that houses all his memorabilia: medals, trophies, photos, boxing gloves, shoes and other prized items related to the sport.
He talks about his humble childhood spent in a remote part of
Guantanamo province where there was no electricity. The neighborhood kids would go to watch TV at the house of a neighbor who had a generator. At night, he and his friends spent hours gazing at the lights of the US
Naval Base of
Guantanamo, fearful that the
Americans would arrive.
Back in those days, before boxing he practiced rowing.
Always talented and with incredible physical prowess, once he found his way to a boxing ring there was no looking back. He remembers the first time he knocked out his opponent that scared him. He was to get used to it as his left straight punch followed by a powerful right hook in a spectacular combination knocked down all comers.
One of his greatest friends once he joined the national team was another great champion,
Teófilo Stevenson, who taught him and showed great solidarity. They shared quarters at many competitions and training sessions. Another important name that comes up is that of
Alcides Sagarra, Cuba’s principal boxing trainer. It was Sagarra’s rigor and mastery of ring strategy that Savón still acknowledges as a great debt.
At just 18 years of age, in
1985, Savón had already been crowned as the world youth champ. If Cuba had taken part in the
1988 Seoul Olympics, the 91-kg fighter would have had a good chance to walk away with his first Olympic title. But he had to wait another four years. In
Barcelona in
1992, we heard the emotion in his voice after winning the medal. He has intense memories of listening to the national anthem and feeling the weight of the gold on his chest.
Patriotism is deeply rooted in him; he is a man with solid connections to the fate of his people and an athlete who craves the love of his fellow citizens.
In
1990, he married
Maria Dranguet from Guantanamo; they have five children (the twins
María Félix and Félix
Mario born in
1997, Raicelis born in
1999, and then twins Félix Humberto and Félix
Javier born in
2000).
Among his other awards, the fighter has also received the
Olympic Order from
Juan Antonio Samaranch, the former president of the
IOC. Savón has also been included on the list of the
100 best athletes of the twentieth century. In
2012 at the
London Olympic Games, the underground stations were temporarily named after important sports figures. One of the names chosen was that of Félix Savón.
I am sure that
Cubans in
London would have been tempted to take the train to Félix Savón underground station wherever their journey ended up.
- published: 01 Mar 2015
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