Pugilist-specialist wrote:Clint Magnum wrote:
I would've said Brendan Ingle but having seen his gym over the years I firmly believe he hindered as many as he helped. He created some great fighters but a hell of a lot of lads had no career cause they didn't have the natural timing and reflexes needed for his loose, preferred training style.
Absolute garbage. Brendan has helped hundreds and hundreds of people. He had young offenders training there in the 80's who still speak of how he turned there lives around.
Anderson, Saunders and Keeton didn't box in the stereotypical "Ingle" style yet all won British titles. How were they hindered?
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Never once said he didn't turn around the lives of hundreds of lads.
I've met him a few times before he took poorly and he's a cracking fella.
The question was who is Britain's greatest trainer not who's done the most for the local community. If you read my post fully you'd see my opinion was that he nearly made it as my choice as the greatest but FOR ME some of his training methods & styles meant he didn't quite make him the best.[/quote]
You said that he had hindered more than he'd helped which is nonsense.[/quote]
No I didn't. Read it properly before spouting.
I said his style hinders as many as it helps. There were hundreds of lads you've never heard of who went through his gym. They were taught excellent life values, skills & fitness but his unorthodox approach only works on a select few who have the reflexes and timing to get away with it. As I stated, he's one of Britain's best trainers, just not THE greatest for that reason.