Daily Mail

I’m turning haters into believers!

Mail Sport tracks down DEVIN HANEY who’s on the fast track to superstard­om

- By Oliver Holt Chief Sports Writer in Las Vegas

DARKNESS is falling and, on the other side of Interstate 15, which runs through the desert towards Los angeles in one direction and to salt Lake City in the other, the neon of the strip is glowing brightly and a kaleidosco­pe of colours illuminate­s the surface of the sphere, sin City’s stunning new landmark.

On this side of the freeway, just off Dean Martin Drive, there is a small side road where everything feels quiet. Inside one of the nondescrip­t units on an industrial estate, Devin Haney is finishing another gruelling training session as he prepares for the next test of his young life.

Haney is still only 24 but he is on every respected list of the top 10 pound-for-pound fighters in the world. He was a boxing prodigy and wherever he went, his friends said people used to watch him box and say, ‘Who’s that kid?’ The response was always: ‘That’s Devin Haney from Vegas.’

Haney is part of an inspiratio­nal partnershi­p with his father and trainer, Bill, who served time for drugs offences in his youth and then devoted himself to ensuring that Devin did not follow the same path. The family moved from Oakland to Vegas, where Bill set up a boxing gym when he realised Devin had a special talent. ‘My dad has been everything,’ Haney says. ‘I wouldn’t be in this position if it wasn’t for my dad.’

Haney won his s first world title when he was 21. Until he gave one of the belts up recently, he was the undisputed lightweigh­t world champion, the first man to hold all the titles at the weight in the four- belt era. Last May, he defeated the great Vasiliy Lomachenko in a classic fight at the MGM Grand to retain his titles.

now, he faces the next big test as he moves up to light welterweig­ht to fight regis Prograis for the WBC world title on December 9 in san Francisco where he will try to become a two-weight world champion, the latest step towards his goal of becoming recognised as one of the greatest fighters in the history of the sport.

He objects straight away when I mention that his lightweigh­t belts have gone now that he has moved up into the 140lb class. ‘no, no, no, no,’ he says. ‘The belts aren’t gone. I am still champion of the 135lb division. I still hold the WBa, IBF and WBO belts so they’re not gone.

‘One belt is gone but I still have the others. They will be gone. When I decide they’ll be gone, then they’ll be gone but I worked hard to get them so I don’t want to give them up just for fun. eventually they’ll be gone, but right now, I’ve got them.’

Haney is engaging company, thoughtful, assertive, dismissive of rivals, respectful to the greats of the past, a student of the sport and a man supremely confident in his own ability without appearing arrogant. He knows that the fight against Prograis represents the gateway to a new chapter.

He also knows there are plenty of people in the sport who want him to lose. He has been engaged in a simmering war of words with shakur stevenson, the prospect who fought for the WBC lightweigh­t title Haney has vacated at the T-Mobile arena here last night.

Both stevenson and Gervonta Davis, the other standout fighter in the lightweigh­t division have taken to criticisin­g Haney on social media. Others try to goad him about a style that they say may be technicall­y bewitching but which lacks the explosive power possessed by others.

‘Of course, I got haters,’ Haney says as he sits in a spartan changing room at his gym, a row of lockers the only adornment. ‘But just like you got fans, you got haters. That comes with whatever you do. That’s life. not everybody’s going to love you. What can you do about it?

‘I just got to keep doing what I am doing, staying focused. I don’t get too hung up on what they say because they’re always going to say something. I am turning some of the haters into believers and some of the believers into haters so it is what it is.

‘They are going to hate regardless. If I was going in there knocking people out with one punch every fight, they would say I was knocking them out because I couldn’t box. If I was going in and boxing circles around them, they would say I was boxing them because I couldn’t punch.

‘so I’m damned if I do, damned if I don’t. I don’t fight the same way. I beat every fighter differentl­y. Come December 9, the world will see another way with how I pick regis Prograis apart.’

I mention to Haney that stevenson, who rejected an offer to fight Haney because it would have given him 25 per cent of the purse, has been saying Haney parties too much, that he is not as dedicated to the sport and that Haney has sought to avoid fighting him. a slow smile spreads across Haney’s face.

‘kudos to him. I couldn’t care less about what he does or doesn’t do,’ he says. ‘I am focused on me, being the best me I can possibly be. I am in competitio­n with myself right now.

‘stevenson wants to get some attention off my name. That’s the only time that people pay attention to him is when he mentions me. I understand it.

‘I dreamed of being in this position so now that I am here, it is no surprise. My focus is showing my best skills on December 9 and making a statement.

‘I am a challenger again. I have got that hunger and that drive to take it from the champion. I am still young and this is still the beginning for me.

‘I want to be an all-time great in the sport. I want my name to be remembered for ever.’

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 ?? MATCHROOM/ MELINA PIZANO ?? Talk the talk: American boxing prodigy Haney flexes his muscles (main) and (inset) with our man Oliver Holt
MATCHROOM/ MELINA PIZANO Talk the talk: American boxing prodigy Haney flexes his muscles (main) and (inset) with our man Oliver Holt
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