“I had a friend that we were in college with, we used to talk about what are the things we were trying to do to achieve our goals, and I told him that I wouldn’t be able to attend anymore because I had a daughter that was on the way,” Wilder recalled. “I said, ‘I’m going to start boxing.’ He thought it was a great idea because, like I said, I never looked for trouble, but trouble always found me. They always see me knocking on heads, you know, knocking people out even before getting into boxing. So he thought it was a great idea. I ended up joining a gym, a local gym that I had no idea about. I went to the gym, walked in there and met my longtime trainer, Jay Deas, who is my co-manager now. The rest is history.”
Deontay Wilder is ‘back and better,’ and intent on unifying the titles
