Carl Frampton claims he has his mojo back ahead of Josh Warrington showdown. Carl Frampton claims he has got his mojo back thanks to trainer Jamie Moore.
Frampton admits he considered quitting before he teamed up with Moore because he had fallen out of love with boxing.
The Belfast fighter has won his three fights under Moore ahead of Saturday’s clash with IBF featherweight king Josh Warrington at Manchester Arena and says he has got his appetite back.
“I thinking now about longevity in my career, which I never did before,” said the two-weight world champ.
“I used to think I want out, crying for the day I could finally say ‘that’s enough, I’m done’.
“It will be a sad day when I have to call it a day, but I’m not thinking about that now.”
Frampton, 31, claims the Manchester-based Moore has taught him to train smarter rather than harder and has cut down on the sparring he did under previous trainer Shane McGuigan to preserve his body.
“I feel I have a different approach to training,” said the Ulsterman. “I’m not as fatigued. I feel I’m training more like an athlete and working more on recovery than ever before.
“I don’t need to spar as much as I used to. You can get your lungs pumping in other ways.
“Sparring is sparring, you’re still getting hit on the head and doing that for 200 rounds can’t be good for you.
“It’s a different approach under Jamie, but it seems to be working.
“I’ll do about 100 rounds of sparring and that’ll be plenty. Before I used to do over 200 and that was a lot of rounds against big men too. I don’t do that now and I feel much better for it.”
Frampton admits he considered quitting before he teamed up with Moore because he had fallen out of love with boxing.
The Belfast fighter has won his three fights under Moore ahead of Saturday’s clash with IBF featherweight king Josh Warrington at Manchester Arena and says he has got his appetite back.
“I thinking now about longevity in my career, which I never did before,” said the two-weight world champ.
“I used to think I want out, crying for the day I could finally say ‘that’s enough, I’m done’.
“It will be a sad day when I have to call it a day, but I’m not thinking about that now.”
Frampton, 31, claims the Manchester-based Moore has taught him to train smarter rather than harder and has cut down on the sparring he did under previous trainer Shane McGuigan to preserve his body.
“I feel I have a different approach to training,” said the Ulsterman. “I’m not as fatigued. I feel I’m training more like an athlete and working more on recovery than ever before.
“I don’t need to spar as much as I used to. You can get your lungs pumping in other ways.
“Sparring is sparring, you’re still getting hit on the head and doing that for 200 rounds can’t be good for you.
“It’s a different approach under Jamie, but it seems to be working.
“I’ll do about 100 rounds of sparring and that’ll be plenty. Before I used to do over 200 and that was a lot of rounds against big men too. I don’t do that now and I feel much better for it.”
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