Written by Damian McCann (former Secretary of Belfast Kronk Gym, Ireland)
Legendary boxing icon, Emanuel Steward’s memorial service took place today at the Greater Grace Temple, Detroit. Family, friends and members the boxing fraternity including Thomas Hearns, Hilmer Kenty, Wladimir Klitschko, Roy Jones Jr. Lennox Lewis, Andy Lee, Evander Holyfield, Sugar Leonard and Michael Moorer arrived to pay tribute and their last farewell to Emanuel. Around the world boxing fans will pause to remember not only a boxing superstar but also a prince amongst men.
During his lifetime, Emanuel amassed a vast wealth of experience and knowledge of the sweet science. He had many roles in the sport as a commentator, manager and promoter, but it will be as a trainer that he will be most remembered in the history of boxing.
As an amateur star, he compiled a distinguished record of 97 fights with only 3 losses, including winning the 1963 National Golden Gloves Bantamweight Championship in Chicago. He was inducted into both the World Boxing Hall of Fame in Los Angeles and the International Hall of Fame in New York in 1996 in recognition of his achievements and contribution to boxing.
But he also leaves a legacy as one of the most respected and loved people in the sport; boxing fans around the world loved him and he loved them. No matter how busy or grueling a schedule he had he always had time for a handshake, a photograph and a conversation.
His warm smile and personable manner endeared him to the hearts of everyone he met touching all their lives. He was always down to earth, in good form and full of generosity, he lived to give and that is what made him the people’s champion.
Emanuel had been at the center of the boxing landscape for over 40 years, his labor of love seen him develop the Kronk Gym in Detroit, one of the most successful boxing stables imaginable.
In the early 1970s, from a small boxing gym in the basement of the Kronk Recreational Center in the south-west side of Detroit, Emanuel began training kids from the City’s impoverished neighborhoods. The center and gym was named after a hard working local Polish politician called John F. Kronk.
During the last 4 decades, the Detroit gym has been a cultivating ground for boxers of every age, weight, gender and nationality, from legendary world champions to young amateur prospects.
By the mid ’70 onwards, the young Kronk boxers were unstoppable winning titles galore at local, regional and national levels of the sport. He transformed the neighborhood-boxing club into a world famous boxing gym, training thousands of amateur kids including the development of 2 Olympic gold medalists in 1984, Frank Tate and Steve McCrory.
In 1977, Thomas Hearns and Hilmer Kenty were the first Kronk fighters to turn professional and Emanuel served as both their trainer and manager. Kenty was his first world champion in 1980 when he captured the WBA lightweight crown.
Thomas ‘The Hitman’ Hearns went on to be one of his most successful fighter winning 6 world titles at different weights over a 23-year boxing career. During the 1980s Hearns enthralled boxing fans around the world under Emanuel’s guidance with historic and classic encounters against Roberto Benitez, Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler and Roberto Duran.
During his renowned career Emanuel set a world record training over 40 world champions including Wladamir Klitschko, Miguel Cotto, Jermain Taylor, Lennox Lewis, Mark Breland, Jimmy Paul, Michael Moorer, Julio Cesar Chavez, Oscar De La Hoya, Evander Holyfield, Mike McCallum, Gerald McClellan, Aaron Pryor and Leon Spinks.
Over the last 10 years, he had forged a close relationship and special friendship with world heavyweight champion, Wladimir Klitschko and Irish world title contender Andy Lee.
He traveled extensively across the US and Europe as a true ambassador for the sport, but he loved to get home to Detroit. The city was his spiritual home and he liked nothing better than go to the Kronk Gym to see his amateur stars. He once revealed that he may work in Las Vegas and mix with the boxing elite at the weekends, but it was the kids from the disadvantaged neighborhoods company he enjoyed most and that it was them that kept his feet on the ground in life.
Like Joe Louis, Sugar Ray Robinson, Eddie Futch before him, Steward is one of the City’s finest sons.
The famous American writer Mark Twain once wrote, ‘No man is a failure who has friends’. Emanuel had friends in every corner of the world; he lived a full and successful life doing something he loved and was passionate about. He made his mark and will be remembered with affection by all as a dear friend, a wonderful human being and one of the greatest trainers that ever lived.
The boy from the cornfields of West Virginia can rest in peace knowing that he always did his best, and in one lifetime touched the lives of so many boxers and people. Farewell Emanuel, you will always be in hearts.