Gil Clancey interview withZ. Levin touches briefly on Cooney.
ZL: What was it like being at the center of it all? You had to have major butterflies?
GC: No. ...I never ever got that way. I don't know why? (laughing)
ZL: Does it take a certain kind of fighter to handle that kind of pressure?
GC: Oh, definitely. Some guys just can't take anything. Like Gerry (Cooney) when he got stopped by Foreman, he was like hypnotized going into the ring. No business being in there.
ZL: And Cooney didn't take your advice to keep boxing and movingâ€â€
GC: (cutting in) Yeah, just wanted him to keep moving around. And he didn't do it. We had been working for a month, getting him to use his right hand, because he was twice as effective when he did it. The whole God darn first round, he didn't throw a right hand. But he did hurt George with a left hook in that fight. He had something wrong with him...I can't even think of the word now? It's a common thing. I just can't think of the name now. You know what I'm talking about? In an earlier fight, when I didn't have himâ€â€you know, he used to kill his sparring partnersâ€â€so like a week before the fight he went out to Vegas, and I happened to be there: sparring partners were killing him. Guys that he was banging around everyday were banging him around. What the hell is it? ANXIETY ATTACKS!
ZL: Oh, he did?
GC: That's what he used to get, anxiety attacks. Even when I trained him. When I trained him, about one out of every six or seven days, he'd go into the ring...and a complete different person. Anxiety attack. And that's what happened to him, I think, with Foreman. Cause after the first round, he come out in the second round, George couldn't miss him!
ZL: And had he been taken along the right way, maybe these anxiety attacks wouldn't have happened?
GC: Oh, if he had had other opponents at first, a few more fights under his belt, I don't think Larry Holmes or anybody would have been a problem for him.