PonyExpress
In the Starting Line-Up
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- Feb 12, 2006
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Mangini has been celebrated in the NY press for his motivational techniques, which have focused on the use of boxing clips before games to illustrate lessons to his Jet players. The most notable example was the Pryor Arguello 1982 fight, considered the fight of the year and the decade by some. But there is a twisted subtext to this fight that the fawning NY media has glossed over- a twisted subtext of which the cerebral Mangini, a boxing buff, must have been aware. Pryor/Arguello I is among the most controversial bouts in history, as fellow fight fans know. After dominating early, Pryor was victimized by some devastating punches in rds 11-12. After the 12th, his trainer famously was heard on TV asking for "the bottle that I mixed" to be given to the wobbly and shaken Pryor. This bottle, laced with an unknown stimulant illegally introduced into the ring, provided Pryor with a noticeable "kick" in the 13th and 14th rds, enabling him to overcome the devastating punishment and TKO Arguello in the 14th rd. After the fight, against boxing regulations, no drug test was administered to Pryor. When the public became aware of the scandal, the outrage was significant enough to force the governing body to schedule an immediate rematch.
So what message did Mangini, a boxing buff who knew the controversial nature of that fight, really send to his players by making Pryor the team mascot and showing them Pryor/Arguello I as motivation? On the surface, Mangini can claim he was merely showing an example of a staggered champion shaking off adversity with heart and grit, rising from the ashes to claim victory. But IMO Mangini also showed that fight to illustrate that the Jet coaching staff and players have a pact to do whatever is necessary, illegal or not, to win. After the Steelers' team doctor was recently embroiled in the HGH scandal, I wonder how far desperation to compete with the Pats has driven the Jet organization to win at all costs, like their hero, Pryor. What if a Jet player is unwilling to go to the lengths Pryor went to win? Is that acceptable with the Jet' hierarchy? What if a trainer is unwilling to "mix a bottle" to give Jet players a "kick"? Is that acceptable? These are tricky, twisted messages sent by Mangini, and in an era of performance enhancing controversy, IMO the Jet organization's fascination with that fight demands scrutiny.
So what message did Mangini, a boxing buff who knew the controversial nature of that fight, really send to his players by making Pryor the team mascot and showing them Pryor/Arguello I as motivation? On the surface, Mangini can claim he was merely showing an example of a staggered champion shaking off adversity with heart and grit, rising from the ashes to claim victory. But IMO Mangini also showed that fight to illustrate that the Jet coaching staff and players have a pact to do whatever is necessary, illegal or not, to win. After the Steelers' team doctor was recently embroiled in the HGH scandal, I wonder how far desperation to compete with the Pats has driven the Jet organization to win at all costs, like their hero, Pryor. What if a Jet player is unwilling to go to the lengths Pryor went to win? Is that acceptable with the Jet' hierarchy? What if a trainer is unwilling to "mix a bottle" to give Jet players a "kick"? Is that acceptable? These are tricky, twisted messages sent by Mangini, and in an era of performance enhancing controversy, IMO the Jet organization's fascination with that fight demands scrutiny.
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