James, who operates out of World Class Boxing Gym in Dallas, has built a reputation guiding elite champions, including Errol Spence Jr. and Jermell Charlo. For Norman Jr., the move represents a clear attempt to reset after the first major setback of his career.
Reaction to the pairing has been mixed. While James’ résumé is unquestioned, some observers remain doubtful about how much change a new trainer alone can produce. Similar skepticism followed other fighters who briefly worked with James, including Ryan Garcia, where expectations outpaced results.
Norman Jr.’s loss to Haney centered less on technical shortcomings than on how the fight unfolded after adversity struck. He was dropped early and never fully reasserted himself. From that point forward, he appeared reluctant to engage, prioritizing survival over risk as the rounds passed.
That hesitation under fire is the real problem facing Norman Jr. as he begins this new chapter of his career. James can correct positioning, tighten fundamentals, and improve structure, but he cannot provide self belief. The willingness to step back into danger has to come from the fighter.
Whether this partnership succeeds will depend less on the gym change than on Norman Jr.’s response to pressure. If he remains cautious when the stakes rise, the results may look familiar regardless of who is holding the pads.
The trainer has changed. The questions around Norman Jr.’s ceiling have not.


















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