
easier on me and partly because I wanted to watch Ernie. No doubt about it, he had had some good
coaching in the past. He knew all the standard exercises and a couple I'd never seen but which made
sense once I stopped to think about them. He seemed in pretty good shape, too, and it looked to me like
he was eager to get into the ring. That was starting to worry me a little. It wasn't because he was black;
three of my twelve fighters were black and that never caused any problem. But Ernie was the smallest
guy here today, outweighed by ten to fifty pounds, and I didn't want him to get run over on his first day. I
hoped he would see that and have the sense to stay off the canvas.
He either didn't notice, which is bad, or didn't care, which is worse, because after Ray and Hal had
finished their bout Ernie asked to have a turn in the ring. I wished I could say no, but I'd already sort of
told him he could and I couldn't go back on my word. The only guy even close to Ernie's size was
Chuck, who still had ten pounds and an inch or two on him. But there was no help for it, so the two of
them put on the head protectors and oversized practice gloves and got in the ring together. Holding my
breath, I tapped the bell.
Ernie demolished him. I mean, completely.
It was the strangest fight I'd ever seen. Ernie didn't seem to be particularly fast, but halfway through each
punch there was this weird little jerk of some kind, and suddenly that hand was behind Chuck's guard
and was bouncing off his head. At least three out of five of those jabs were landing, which was ridiculous
for someone as good as Chuck. And on top of that, Chuck's own punches weren't connecting with
anything except air, because that jerk of Ernie's was as good for getting his head back as it was for
getting his fist forward.
The whole thing began to get to Chuck in the middle of the second round and he started throwing
everything he could find, so I had to stop the fight. But I'd seen enough. I had a real Golden Gloves
contender on my hands in Ernie.
It took the other guys awhile to see it, and awhile after that to see what it might mean in prestige for the
whole town, but they eventually figured it out and from then on Ernie was one of the gang. At the end of
the session Chuck announced that everyone was chipping in to buy Ernie a soda at the drugstore, and
they all trooped off together. Me, I went home and startled my wife by telling her we were going out to
dinner.
The next few weeks went by quickly, kind of surprising when I looked back at all the work I'd done. My
gym classes at the high school took up a lot of my time, except for the two weeks between summer
school and the fall quarter. Ernie was kept pretty busy with studies himself, and so we didn't work out as
much as we had before. But every minute that I could get Ernie and at least one other guy together I
spent at the Club. For a while I worried that I was neglecting the other guys in my work with Ernie, but
Ray told me that they were getting more from my coaching, now that I was really fired up, than they ever
had before. Ever since that day back in college when I broke my wrist and had to drop out of the boxing
team, I'd really wanted to get a shot at working with real champion material. I guess my excitement was
just boiling over.
And gradually, I got to know Ernie.
The last of five children, he grew up in the St. Louis ghetto area. His father didn't earn too much money,
but Mister Lambert must have put a lot of time into raising his kids, because Ernie seemed better
adjusted than a lot of richer kids I've known. He was about average height and build and sort of
plain-looking, and he wore his hair short instead of in one of those Afros. He was soft-spoken and polite,
and though I finally broke him of the habit of calling me "sir," he never called me "Ron" like some of the
others did. It was always "Coach" or "Coach Morrissey."