Archivo de la etiqueta: boxeo
Unbeaten Super Featherweight Xavier Martinez Clashes With Deivi Bassa & Lightweight Contender Ladarius Miller Battles Daulius Prescott In Non-Televised Action This Saturday, At Dignity Health Sports Park In Carson, California.
CARTO CRISTIANO, DARMANI ROCK HEADLINE RAGING BABE'S FEB. 8 “FILADELFIA ESPECIAL” EN FACEBOOK FIGHTNIGHT LIVE
RONALD ELLIS vs. DEANDRE WARE PESOS FINALES, CITAS & FOTOS PARA SHOBOX: LA NUEVA GENERACIÓN MAÑANA EN VIVO EN SHOWTIME®
Super Middleweights Ellis y Ware se enfrentan en el evento principal de ShoBox Doubleheader Live en 10 p.m. ET / PT de Main Street Armory en Rochester
El Salón de la Fama del Boxeo del Estado de Nueva York anuncia clase de 2019
Domingo, Abril 28, La cena de inducción Don King, Jimmy Cannon, Jimmy Carter & Wilfred Benítez encabezar nuevos miembros |
NUEVO YORK (Enero 30, 2019) – Salón de la Fama del Boxeo del Estado de Nueva York (NYSBHOF) tiene anunció su Clase de 24 miembros 2019. La octava inducción anual de NYSBHOF la cena se llevará a caboDomingo por la tarde (12:30-5:30 p.m. Y), Abril 28, a Russo en la Bahía en Howard Beach, Nueva York.
“Estamos emocionados de seguir honrando a los neoyorquinos que ayudaron al boxeo en todo el Empire State.,” NYSBHOF presidente Bob Duffy dijo. “Los miembros de este año hicieron mucho para ayudar al boxeo en Nueva York, si eran combatientes o no participantes. Nuestro objetivo es seguir honrando a los neoyorquinos en el boxeo durante muchos años más.”
Vivo los boxeadores que se dirigen al NYSBHOF incluyen (Nacido en el Bronx) tres veces, dos divisiones campeón mundialWilfred Benítez (53-8-1, 31 KOs), Canastota peso welterDick DiVeronica (44-13-1, 13 KOs), (Hempstead) OMB súper pluma campeón mundial Rogelio Tuur (46-4-1, 30 KOs), (Bronx) 1968 U.S. OlímpicoDavey Vásquez (19-15, 6 KOs), OMB súper mediano retador al título mundialMichael Olajide (27-5, 19 KOs), de Manhattan, y Reinas’ retador al título de peso pesadoMonte Barrett (35-11-2, 20 KOs).
Póstumo los participantes que se incorporan son (Bronx) Tres veces campeón mundial de peso ligero Palanqueta Carretero (84-31-9, 34 KOs), Brooklyn peso welterAl “bummy” Davis (65-10-4, 46 KOs), (Schenectady) mundo campeón de peso welterMarty Servo (47-4-2, 14 KOs), (Bronx) retador al título de peso pesadoRoland LaStarza (57-9, 27 KOs), Brooklyn campeón mundial de peso ligeropaddy DeMarco (75-26-3, 8 KOs) y los pesos ligeros Lower East Side de ManhattanSid Terris (94-13-5, 12 KOs) yFiltrar “El dentista lucha” Cruzar (35-10-4, 22 KOs).
Vivo los no participantes que se dirigen al NYSBHOF son promotores con sede en la ciudad de Nueva YorkDon Rey, juez de FlushingJohn McKaie, deportivo BrooklynSteve Albert, árbitroArthur Mercante, Jr., y entrenador BronxBeto Jackson.
Póstumo las personas que no participan son casamenteros de UticaDewey Fragetta, Corona, Queens árbitroJohnny LoBianco, Garden City árbitroWayne Kelly, deportista FlushingHarry Hill, periodista premiadoPalanqueta Cañón, del Upper East Side de Manhattan, y funcionario de NYSAC / ex NABF presidenteJoe Dwyer, de Brooklyn.
Cada miembro asistente (o descendiente directo de) recibirá un diseño personalizado cinturón que significa su incorporación al NYSBHOF.
La 2019 reclutas fueron seleccionados por los miembros del comité de nominaciones NYSBHOF: Cachondo Gordon, Henry Hascup, Don Majeski, Ron McNair, yNeil Terens.
Todas Los boxeadores debían estar inactivos durante al menos tres años para ser elegibles para Inducción NYSBHOF, y todos los miembros deben haber residido en el estado de Nueva York durante un parte significativa de sus carreras de boxeo o durante el mejor momento de su respectiva carrera.
NYSBHOF
CLASE de 2012: Carmen Basilio, Mike McCallum, Mike Tyson, Jake LaMotta, Riddick Bowe, Carlos Ortiz, Vito Antuofermo, Emile Griffith, “Azúcar” Ray Robinson, Gene Tunney, Benny Leonard, A Tony Canzoneri, Harold Lederman, Steve Acunto, Palanqueta Glenn, Gil Clancy, Ray Arcel, Nat Fleischer, Bill Gallo y Arthur Mercante, Sr.
CLASE de 2013: Jack Dempsey, Johnny Dundee, De Sandy Saddler, Maxie Rosenbloom, Joey Archer, Iran Barkley, Mark Breland, Bobby Cassidy, Doug Jones, Júnior Jones, James “Amigo” McGirt, Eddie Mustafa Muhammad, Bob Arum, Shelly Finkel, Tony Graziano, Larry Merchant, Teddy Brenner, Mike Jacobs, Tex Rickard y Don Dunphy.
CLASE DE 2014: Floyd Patterson, Tracy Harris Patterson, Billy Backus, Kevin Kelley, Juan LaPorte, Gerry Cooney, Mustafa Hamsho, Howard Davis, Jr., Lou Ambers, Jack Britton, Terry McGovern, Teddy Atlas, Lou DiBella, Steve Farhood, Gene Moore, Ángel Próspero, Whitey Bimstein, Cus D'Amato, William Muldoon y Tom O'Rourke.
CLASE DE 2015: Borracho Mamby, Joey Giamba, Johnny Persol, Harold Weston, Lonnie Bradley, Paul Berlenbach, Billy Graham, Frankie Genaro, Bob Miller, Tommy Ryan, Palanqueta Slattery, Bob Duffy, Mike Katz, Tommy Gallagher, Bruce Silverglade, Charley Goldman, Jimmy Johnston, Cedric Kushner, Harry Markson, Damon Runyon y Al Weill.
CLASE DE 2016: Aaron Davis, Charles Murray, Vilomar Fernandez, Edwin Viruet, Héctor “Macho” Camacho, Rocky Graziano, Rocky Kansas, Joe Lynch, Joe Miceli, Ed Brophy, Joe DeGuardia, Randy Gordon, Dennis Rappaport, Howie Albert, Freddie marrón, Howard Cosell, Ruby Goldstein y Jimmy Jacobs.
CLASE DE 2017: Gaspar Ortega, Renaldo “señor.” Snipes, Doug Dewitt, “El Bronx Bombardeo” Alex Ramos, Dick Tiger, José Torres, “Sin par” Jack Dempsey, Don Majeski, Ron Katz, Stan Hoffman, Bobby Bartels, Hank Kaplan, Alabama Gavin, Arthur Donovan y Dan Parker.
CLASE DE 2018: Lou “Chico miel” Del Valle, Jake Rodríguez, Terrence Alli, “Bebé” Joe Mesi, Kid Chocolate, James J. “Gentleman Jim” Corbett, Jack McAuliffe, Billy Costello, Melio Bettina Ralph “Tigre” Jones, Charley Norkus, David Anderson, Pete Brodsky, Goldman hierba, Bobby Goodman, Melvina Lathan, Ron Scott Stevens, Johnnie Addie, Johnny Bos, Murray Goodman, Bert Randolph azúcar y Sam Taub.
Entradas tienen un precio de $125.00 por adulto y $60.00 para los niños (bajo 16) e incluir un brunch completo y una hora de cóctel a la entrada, a partir de 12:30 p.m. Y, como así como la cena (costilla, pescado o aves de corral) y un bar abierto durante todo el día. Los boletos están disponibles para la compra poniéndose en contacto con el presidente NYSBHOF Bob Duffy 516.313.2304 odepcomish@aol.com. Anuncios para el programa NYSBHOF están disponibles, que van desde $80.00 a $200.00, poniéndose en contacto con Duffy. Ir en línea awww.Ring8ny.com para información adicional sobre el Salón de la Fama del Boxeo del Estado de Nueva York.
ACERCA DE ANILLO 8: Formado en 1954 por un ex-boxeador profesional, Jack Grebelsky, Anillo 8 se convirtió en el octava subsidiaria de lo que entonces se conocía como los Boxeadores Veteranos Nacionales Asociación – por lo tanto, ANILLO8 – y hoy el el lema de la organización permanece: Los boxeadores Ayudar Boxers.
ANILLO 8 está totalmente comprometido a apoyar a las personas menos afortunadas en el boxeo comunidad que puede necesitar ayuda para pagar el alquiler, gastos médicos, o lo que sea justificable necesidad. Vaya en línea parawww.Ring8ny.com para más información sobre RING 8, el grupo más grande de su tipo en los Estados Unidos Estados con más de 350 miembros. La cuota anual de membresía es sólo $30.00 y cada miembro tiene derecho a una cena buffet en RING 8 reuniones mensuales, excepto julio y agosto. Todos los boxeadores activos, aficionados y profesionales, son derecho a un anillo de cortesía 8 membresía anual. Los huéspedes del Anillo 8 miembros son bienvenidos a un costo de solo $7.00 por persona. r
Three-Division, Four-Time World Champion Abner Mares Sustains Injury; Forced To Withdraw From Match Against WBA Super Featherweight World Champion Gervonta Davis – Davis Now Set To Take on Former World Champion Hugo Ruiz in SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING Main Event Saturday, Febrero 9
LOS ANGELES (Enero 30, 2019) -Three-division, four-time champion Abner Mares has been forced to pull out of the WBA Super Featherweight title match against two-time super featherweight champion Gervonta Davis on Saturday, Febrero 9 after suffering an injury while training.
Davis will now defend against former world championHugo Ruizin the main event of SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING, con la cobertura a partir de las 10 p.m. ET / 7 pm. PT from Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California and presented by Premier Boxing Champions.
Ruiz is an all-action brawler who previously picked up a world title at super bantamweight in 2015 and most recently defeated Alberto Guevara in January on the Pacquiao vs. Broner PPV event in a featherweight fight. Ruiz, que posee 18 first round knockouts, floored Guevara in the opening minute and cruised to a near-shutout decision victory.
He had originally been slotted for an interim title shot against Jhack Tepora in January before Tepora missed weight, but will now have his chance to fight for a belt against one of the most-feared punchers at 130-pounds on February 9. The 30-year-old from Sinaloa, Mexico stands at five feet, nine inches tall, nearly four inches taller than Davis, and has won three straight fights leading up to this fight.
“I trained for three months to fight a southpaw when I fought in January,” dijo Ruiz. “When the opponent changed, it was hard to adjust in 24 horas. After the fight I immediately went back to the gym, because you never know what’s going to happen in boxing. Estoy 100 percent ready to knockout Gervonta Davis.”
“Hugo Ruiz has another opportunity to fight for a world title because he’s demonstrated that he’s devoted to boxing and his career,” Said Sampson Lewkowicz, Ruiz’s Promoter. “He went right back to the gym after his last fight. He’s ready for another great opportunity to be a world champion and he’s going to take advantage of that opportunity.”
Mares injured his right elbow during sparring at the Robert Garcia Boxing Gym in Riverside, California. Mares said he had experienced soreness in his elbow following the past two fights, but nothing that had ever given him nor his team concern.
“I’m not going to sugarcoat this. I’m disappointed and devastated that I’ve injured my right elbow in sparring,” Mares said. “This is something that I haven’t had happen to me during my career and the feeling is just horrible. I will be going to see my doctor about this and am prepared to follow whatever recommendations and rehab that gets me back into the ring. Estoy Sano, not afraid of doing the work and I will be back. This is a temporary setback. Don’t count me out.”
“Boxing is a sport of brains, passion and physical punishment,” dichos Mares’ trainer Robert Garcia. “When you’re in the ring sparring with talented, top-class sparring partners, the chances of injuries are very high. That was the situation in this case. He was sparring top young fighters and he injured his elbow. He cannot fight like that, especially in a fight against Davis.”
Madres, who has engaged in numerous memorable fights throughout his storied career, was seeking to move up in weight and looking to capture his fifth world title in a fourth weight class.
The event is promoted by Mayweather Promotions, Promociones TGB y Sampson Boxing.
Para más información visitarwww.SHO.com/Sports y www.premierboxingchampions.com seguir en Twitter @ShowtimeBoxing, SHOSports, @PremierBoxing @MayweatherPromo, @TGBPromotions y @Swanson_Comm o convertirse en un fan en Facebook en www.Facebook.com/SHOSports, www.Facebook.com/PremierBoxingChampions y Facebook.com/MayweatherPromotions. ڪ�ɑP?
UNDEFEATED SUPER MIDDLEWEIGHT RONALD ELLIS MIRA PARA OBTENER DEPORTES DE NUEVA INGLATERRA CON UN GRAN COMIENZO EN EL EVENTO PRINCIPAL DE SHOBOX: LA NUEVA GENERACIÓN ESTE VIERNES, Febrero 1 VIVIR EN SHOWTIME
2019 International Women’s Boxing Hall of Fame (IWBHF) Inductees Announced
Source/IWBHF Press Release
/Bernie McCoy
Enero 27, 2019 PORTLAND, Oregón – (Enero 27, 2019) WBAN is proud to announce the International Women’s Boxing Hall of Fame (IWBHF), Clase de 2019.
This sixth annual induction represents a record breaking number of honorees in the history of this signal institution which has recognized and honored those individuals who have, over the history of the sport of Women’s Boxing, contributed to, advocated for and brought esteem and distinction to the sport in and out of the ring.
Included in this year’s class are seven former boxers: Terri Cruz, Melissa Fiorentino, Lisa Holewyne, Carina Moreno, Bridgett Riley, Wendy Rodriquez y Martha Salazar. The Non-Boxer category includes David Ávila, Stephen Blea y Blanca Gutierrez. Pat Emerick and Patricia [Arenoso] Martinez-Pino are recipients in the Pioneer Female Boxer and the Posthumous categories, respectivamente.
FORMER BOXERS
Terri Cruz compiled a 17-7-2 registro, over a nine-year career (1999-2008), highlighted by winning the IFBA bantamweight crown over highly regarded Heather Percival in 2005. Cruz’s love of and dedication to the sport brought her out of retirement in 2009 to challenge top ranked Alesia Graf for WIBA Flyweight title, losing a close decision and again in 2011 for another bout with unbeaten Susie Ramadan.
Melissa Fiorentino, a 5’1″ dynamo, imbued with the appropriate sobriquet “Furia”, put up a sterling 17-2 record over a seven-year (2001-08) career during which she stepped in with the top ranked fighters in the featherweight class, including wins over Belinda Laracuente, Esther Schouten, Jaime Clampitt and Cindy Serrano. She capped her career, en enero, 2008, winning the IWBF super featherweight title.
Lisa Holewyne fought to a 25-17-2 record over almost eight years (1998-2006) como boxeador profesional. A common boxing dictum states, “you are what your record is” and Holewyne is exactly that. Coming to the ring after a four year stint as a pentathlete at the University of Texas, Holewyne quickly established herself as an “anyone/anywhere” lightweight boxer, fighting Sumya Anani twice (when very few ranked fighters would come within a couple of time zones of that matchup), unbeaten Mary Jo Sanders twice, splitting two fights with the formidable Sunshine Fettkether to mention only some of the top opposition Holewyne sought out during a career that should serve as a signpost for any boxer seeking to do the sport the right way.
Carina Moreno was a standout in the flyweight ranks, lucha, over her ten year career (2003-13), 203 rounds while compiling glittering 23-6 record against the best boxers in this competitive weight class. In addition to wins over Eileen Olszewski, Yessica Bopp and Holly Dunaway, she held the WBC and WIBA minimumweight titles for several years. She finished her career still competing against the best in her class, winning the WBA flyweight title against Susi Kentikian in Germany in December ’12, before losing a close decision to Kentikian seven months later in the same country.
Bridgett Riley fought in the ring, for nine years (1994-03), compilar una 15-3 registro, exactly how she lived life, in perpetual motion. “Busy fighter” might be an understatement, since from the opening bell, Riley had one gear, full speed ahead. She held the IFBA bantamweight title beating Yvonne Trevino over ten rounds in February ’98 and, in possibly her most remembered bout, Riley KO’d Englishwoman, Alicia Lahsen, in June ’98, after surviving an early knockdown. It was her first defense of the IFBA title. Among Riley’s other pursuits in her active life range from martial arts champion to movie stunt person.
Wendy Rodríguez is another of the West Coast fighters who brought the female bantamweight division to the attention of the boxing public. Along with her co-2019 IWBHF inductee, Carina Moreno, Rodriquez set a standard of competitive excellence in the ring that raised the public perception and appreciation of the division. Rodríguez, in her seven year (1999-08) career put up an exemplary 19-4-3. Early on, (Octubre. 2000) she fought an 8 round draw with Margaret Sidoroff and in her penultimate bout, she stepped in with Regina Halmich, (Regina was inducted into the Inaugural Class of the IWBHF in 2014) . Rodriquez finished her career on a high note, revenging an earlier loss to Holly Dunaway in the process of winning the vacant IBA minimum weight crown.
Martha Salazar competed as a professional boxer for 15 (2001-16) año, lucha 18 times and winning 13 of those bouts. It is an unfortunate reflection of the dearth of competition at the female heavyweight level. But for those athletes who posses persistence, combined with a don’t quit attitude, con, lo más importante, ring talent, the top rung of this division is attainable. Martha Salazar has those qualities in world class supply. Salazar won the WIBF heavyweight title via TKO over Pamela London in November ’04 and finished her career winning the WBC crown in a November ’14 by decision over Tanzee Daniel, before relinquishing the title via a close decision to Alejandra Jimenez in the final bout of her career in March of 2018.
NON-BOXERS
David Ávila is a prominent and widely followed West Coast boxing writer. His linage to the sport comes from his father who fought a number of times at the Olympic Auditorium in the 1950s. Avila began his journalism career as a writer for the LA Times in the 1990s and is currently working for the Riverside (TAL COMO) Press Enterprise and La Prensa newspapers. Pero, incuestionablemente, it is Avila’s longtime support for and advocacy of the sport of Women’s boxing and it’s athletes that has earned him this well deserved IWBHF honor.
Stephen Blea, Blea’s reputation as a boxing official has been well documented and has led him to be ranked among the finest in the sport. But it is his myriad additional contributions to the benefit to the sport and it’s athletes that makes Blea singular in the sport. He has been a coach at USA Boxing along with providing his referring and judging skill to that organization. He has coached boxing at the Denver Police department. He has managed WBC Cares for the state of Colorado and overlaid those efforts with a long time, full throated support of the sport of Women’s boxing whenever the opportunity arises.
Blanca Gutierrez is proof positive that the promotion of the sport of boxing begins with whole-hearted empathy, and few promoters in the sport of Women’s boxing can match the personal connection and caring that Gutierrez brings to the sport and it’s athletes. Her father, Javier, was a professional boxer in Mexico and and Gutierrez’s interest and love for the sport came early and fervent. She is the driving force behind Beautiful Brawlers, a West Coast promotional powerhouse, that continues as a prime force behind the recent resurgence in the sport of female boxing.
David Avila and Stephen Blea are the second and third males to be inducted into the IWBHF.
PIONEER FEMALE BOXER
Pat Emerick reduces her outlook on the sport of boxing to it’s most basic, “put one foot in front of the other and be prepared.” If only getting a chance to climb through the ropes was that easy for a female in the middle of the previous century. It wasn’t. Emerick’s opportunities were essentially limited to her hometown, South Bend, EN, donde, at 5’4″, 123libra, after losing her first bout, she reeled off 18 victorias consecutivas, highlighted by a TKO win over Jo Ann Hagan in November ’54 before 4,000 fans in Council Bluffs, IA., winning the Ladies World Boxing Association Championship. Emerick becomes the second oldest living IWBHF Pioneer Boxer inductee, born five months after Year 1 honoree Barbara Buttrick.
POSTHUMOUS 2019 INDUCTEE
Patricia “Arenoso” Martinez-Pino, who passed away in September of last year, was a longtime leading advocate for the sport of Women’s boxing in this country. She worked tirelessly within the sport, with the AIBA to open up opportunities for females as referees and judges and served with U S Boxing as President (Hispanic), as well as terms as Vice President and Secretary. Her untiring efforts in support of and improving conditions and opportunities for women in the sport will be well remembered and sorely missed and are best described by her co-inductee, Stephen Blea, “Sandy broke down barriers and achieved accolades no woman had achieved in this sport.”
As previously noted, la 2019 IWBHF Class of Inductees is the largest, and quite possibly, the most diverse, in the six year history of the Hall, conceived and formulated in 2014 by Sue Fox, founder and publisher of Women’s Boxing Archive Network (AMB). Fox envisioned the Hall as a needed addition to the boxing community, a way of honoring those, dentro y fuera del anillo de, upon whose athleticism, support and advocacy for the sport of Women’s Boxing continues to stand on and progress.
An induction ceremony for the 2019 inductee class is being discussed and details will be announced forthcoming.