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I remember a conversation I had with world champion trainer Freddie Roach about old world champions refusing to get knocked down by Father Time. We were talking about Ali, Frazier, Marciano, Holyfield, and how their careers wound down. I argued that the great ones should retire while they’re at the peak of their prodigious powers.
Coach Freddie thought otherwise. While he agreed that the old guard should take
care of their health, he told me that champions only stop when they’re done. “Every old
champion always feels like they have that one great fight remaining inside of
them, that they can summon their power for one last time, for one last shot,
and knock the F*&% out of their opponent.”
I never forgot
that conversation.
Asi Taulava, all
6’9”of him, at the tender age of 39, is that big, strong, proud, and stubborn old
champion for the Meralco Bolts. Asi’s been putting in work in the league back
to the days of mobile phones with antenna!!! So to see him in the age of
Instagram and BBM playing balls-to-the-wall basketball despite the ravages of time
is absolutely awesome. He’s swatting shots emphatically, dunking in
transition, rebounding in traffic, pumping his fist, roaring at the crowd,
diving for loose balls, D-ing up imports, and carrying an ecstatic Coach Ryan
Gregorio jumping into his arms. If he sinks a three-point shot in his next game, I'll go nuts. The big
man is still swinging.
You could feel
Asi’s passion everytime he yelled at his teammates to get in defensive
position, or his determination whenever he hauled down precious boards, and
especially his rage whenever he threw down a ferocious baseline dunk. I can
only imagine the work and focus it requires for Asi to summon the strength and
smarts to wrestle with the league’s young guns in the paint on a near-nightly
basis. But imagine how good it must feel for The Ageless Rock to know that he
still has enough left. Enough mojo to summon the power that made him one of
the most dominant big men in the league, just enough to gather all his
power for one more ride, one more knockout blow. All his strength. All his
power. Everything he’s got.
As tears rolled
down his face, after he got on all fours on the Coliseum floor, the old, stubborn champion Paul Asi Taulava
smiled that big toothy grin. Father Time, you can chill for a while longer. The big man’s fire still
burns. He’s still up on his feet, gloves up, ready to throw down in Chinatown.
He may not be destroying teams for 50 points and 20 rebounds, but Asi is still
Asi. The Godfather. The Big Man on campus. The Rock. The same blonde bomber who
can still invigorate his team with a thunderous dunk or his tenacious defense
around the rim. The same big goof who would sacrifice his body for extra
possessions and still have the energy to do 90s commercial impressions reminding us fans “Don’t forget the kanin!” whenever we eat at Kenny Rogers.
As he runs back
to the Bolts’ locker room, Asi sprints like he’s just ballin’ back in 1999. The
big man rides his second wind. His heart’s on fire, and you can bet those old
muscles in his body are as well. But he’s happy to feel young. Just like the old
kings of the ring, Asi must be thinking to himself; “This is a 12-round fight, ladies
and gentlemen. I got a lot more.” JV
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