Light Drizzle
52°
Morris, IL
Light Drizzle|Forecast »

Pro punchers marvel at Tillman’s skill

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(MCT) — CHICAGO — Even the guys who make their living landing punches on moving targets are impressed with Charles Tillman’s ability to consistently get his fist on a football.

The veteran cornerback is the NFL’s master of the punch-out after forcing four fumbles during the Bears’ 51-20 dismantling of the Titans on Sunday in Nashville, Tenn. Tillman raised his number of knockouts this season to a career-high seven and with his pugilistic abilities has forced 36 fumbles in his career.

“He’s got a good right hand,” said light heavyweight boxer Andrzej Fonfara. “He’d make a good boxer. If he punched somebody in the chin with that punch he’d be knocking out guys.”

The ability to land the punches directly on a football during the maelstrom of a play is what has drawn the admiration of combatants who ply their trade in the boxing ring — or the mixed martial arts octagon.

“You can train for that until you’re blue in the face, but it’s something that you’re either good at or you’re not,” said local MMA fighter Mike Bodziach, who played college football at Youngstown State in the late ’90s. “There are a lot of MMA fighters who train that way and still aren’t that accurate with their strikes. That’s kind of a God-given talent.

“It’s extremely impressive just because he’s got that awareness to do it,” added Bodziach, the head MMA coach at Emerald Smoke training facility in Chicago. “You see a lot of guys go for the strip, but just the fact he sees that there and punches it, his instinct and awareness is probably second to none.”

Shawn “The Savage” Jordan knows a little something about fighting, carrying a 13-4 record in the heavyweight division of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. He also knows football, having been a fullback on LSU’s national championship teams in ‘03 and ‘07.

“It’s a gift to have that hand-to-eye coordination, to follow a ball that is going that fast and coming from a different place and distance each time,” said Jordan, who was a teammate of the Bears’ Craig Steltz at LSU. “To relate it to fighting, we are hitting moving targets all the time. He’s running downfield, his body is doing one thing, and his eyes are doing another and then he has to react. The fact he can react the same way every time is pretty impressive.

Previous Page|1||

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all