Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Miracle Man’ Jacobs feels ‘destined’ against Alvarez

- By Sam Gordon Las Vegas Review-journal

Daniel Jacobs didn’t dare dream of a middleweig­ht unificatio­n title fight in

Las Vegas against Saul “Canelo” Alvarez. Not from his mother’s couch in Brooklyn, New York, with legs that wouldn’t work, fists that couldn’t fight and a form of bone cancer that could have killed him.

But here he is.

The IBF champion, one of the world’s best boxers and, most important, a survivor.

“All of that is behind me,” he said. “I feel like this is my time. I feel like this is destined for me.”

Jacobs, known affectiona­tely as the “Miracle Man,” was diagnosed in May 2011 with osteosarco­ma, a rare cancer that manifested in a tumor wrapped around his spine. Forget boxing. He couldn’t even walk and was forced to move for a period back to his native New York, where he often doubted a return to

the ring.

But his faith didn’t fracture, and after radiation and surgery to remove the tumor, he returned to boxing in October 2012. On Saturday at T-mobile Arena, his journey continues when he fights Alvarez for the WBA, WBC and IBF titles.

Make no mistake, though, it’s the second-most important fight of his life.

He beat cancer. Good luck topping that.

“His will to not be defeated by that makes him stronger for any fight that he’s in,” said former six-division champion Oscar De La Hoya, Alvarez’s promoter. “Especially this one.”

Jacobs, 32, grew up in Brownsvill­e — the neighborho­od in Brooklyn that produced heavyweigh­t Mike Tyson, his idol as a child — and began boxing in elementary school to mitigate bullying. He posted a 137-7 amateur record, turned profession­al in 2007 and began his career with 20 straight victories before losing to Dmitry Pirog via knockout in 2010.

But Jacobs rebounded with two victories and was on the track toward stardom. Until he started feeling pain in his legs in 2011.

Pain that led to his diagnosis. “It was really hard to maneuver and walk and do all of these different things,” Jacobs said. “Times where I used to cry. Times where I used to just even doubt if I could even walk right again. I always just wanted to get back into boxing and see how far I could take it.”

Jacobs endured dozens of rigorous radiation treatments and grew stronger and stronger while defying his diagnosis. He walked before he ran. He ran before he boxed. And he boxed brilliantl­y before winning the IBF championsh­ip in October.

“With Daniel Jacobs, you have a message of complete hope for anybody who is suffering,” said Jacobs’ promoter, Eddie Hearn of Matchroom Boxing. “This young man is inspiratio­nal.”

Jacobs (35-2, 29 knockouts) thinks he’s at the peak of his profession­al powers — steeled mentally by the doldrums of his disease and physically by the fighters he has faced. He’s cool, calm and collected, confident in who he is and what he can become.

After all, he’s the “Miracle Man.”

Now, he hopes to be the unified middleweig­ht champion, too.

“I never thought that I would fight for a world championsh­ip and fight the biggest names in boxing,” Jacobs said. “This is the greatest opportunit­y that I could ever have, let alone dream about. I’m looking forward to taking advantage of it.”

Contact reporter Sam Gordon at sgordon@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Bysamgordo­n on Twitter.

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