Tag Archives: Russell Pelth

PELTZ BOXING: A LIFE-LONG LOVE STORY; J Russell Peltz Celebrates Half Century in Boxing

Philadelphia — Bakeng sa 50 lilemo tse, J Russell Peltz has lived and breathed boxing. Ka October 4, he will celebrate his Golden Anniversary as a Philadelphia promoter with an eight-bout card titledBlood, Sweat & 50 Lilemo tse,” ka 2300 Arena. Since Sept. 30, 1969, he’s been an institution in the city, providing a platform for hundreds, if not thousands of Philadelphia fighters to showcase their talent. He’s promoted over a thousand boxing events and over 40 world title bouts. For half a century, Peltz has ridden the roller coaster of small- and big-time boxing, with stops all over the world.


Peltzlove for boxing has outlived mentors, parents, a sister, a son and a marriage. It’s been the constant throughout the entirety of his adult life, and a refuge from guilt, sadness and loss. It was the cane he used when he couldn’t stand, and the mountain from which he screamed his successes. It has been an enduring passion and a safe, faceless pool where he could pour out an immense amount of love, out loud, and without guilt or fear of judgement.


He has an savant-like ability to recall dates of fights, who was on every card, and what happened in every round. He remembers detailed 40-year-old stories, lintoa, conversations and events like they happened yesterday.


For his 14th birthday, his dad took him to his first fight and it was love at first bell. He knew he was going to be a part of the beautiful brutality of boxing. His mom refused to allow him to go to more fights; she didn’t want him to be part ofthat element.He would lie and say he was out with friends or at parties, then go to the fights. Eventually she relented, and his father took him to more fights. He would abandon a burgeoning sports journalism career and promote his first event on Sept. 30, 1969.


J Russell Peltz grew up in an upper middle-class family, moving from Philadelphia to the wealthy community of Bala Cynwyd on Philadelphia’s Main Line when he entered third grade. Ntate oa hae o, Bernard Peltz, a plumber like his own dad, had expanded Peltz Plumbing to include heating and air-conditioning. By all measurements, his business was successful, catering to both residential repairs and large company and government installations. His father was beloved by his employees.


Peltz had a taste of the plumbing life over two summers in 1963 and ’64 and was decidedly bad at it. It was a disastrous endeavor for teenage Peltz, who was not mechanically inclined. One error resulted in the destruction of several oil paintings belonging to a wealthy client, and a large bill for his father to foot.


His father wasn’t much of a sports fan outside of boxing. Ntate oa hae o, Peltzgrandfather, was an avid fan and worked for Western Union. On fight nights, including during the Jack Dempsey vs. Gene Tunney fight in 1926 ea Philadelphia, he would be ringside, gathering updates and copy and communicating them to the wire services.


As Peltz tells it, ntate oa hae, like many parents of kids who came of age in the 50s and 60s, was not expressive with his emotions. “He was just not the kind of person,” Peltz began, then paused. “Any more than I am, that could show it. My mom was the emotional, loving one.


What shines through when conversing with Peltz, is how much his parents loved each other. In a time where men were not supposed to cry, Peltz’s father, who he described as aman’s man,” took care of his wife while she was sick for years with emphysema. “They were passionately in love,” said Peltz. “Things became rocky later, especially when my mother became sick, but he always loved her.


She was so weak he would have to cut her meat and pre-chew it, so she would be strong enough to chew the rest of it,” remembers Peltz. “He would do those things and you could see that he loved her.


After his mother passed away in 1975, Peltz found a box among her belongings: “When my mom died, I found a box of newspaper clippings of stories about me, some of which I’d never seen before. I knew she loved me.


His father gave him an office to work from, and twice lent him money when Peltz needed a boost to get through a show or a bad year. If Peltz hadn’t been weighed down with remorse, he might have seen these gestures and support of his son’s boxing promoter career, of which he outwardly didn’t approve, as his father’s way of saying I love you.


A rift developed in the family when Peltz married his first wife, a non-Jewish girl, a 1969, against the wishes of his parents. This disagreement would color the remainder of their years together.


Ka 72 le lilemo li, Peltz looks back over those years and sees a selfish, immature version of himself, who didn’t treat his parents all that well. “I never had a mature relationship with my parents,” Peltz would say more than once. “I have terrible regrets about that.His uncle had told him that his decision to marry his first wife was killing his mother, and Peltz believed him. The guilt is palpable as he describes his mother’s final days.


The bitterness he had felt at his parentsreaction to his marriage and their naggingget a real jobattitude toward his chosen profession put space in between them. After both had passed, pride and resentment quickly gave way to guilt and regret.


Qetellong, it was his sister’s home and then his parentshome he’d go to when his first marriage fell apart. Every day he’d stop in and say hello to his father, who had built him an office over his plumbing company. His family’s foundation, which had been built on silent love and commitment, proved unyielding throughout the years.


It wasn’t long after his mother’s death that he met the woman who would become his current wifea former classmate at Lower Merion High School. Peltz knew from their first date that he would marry Linda Sablosky. All the nagging feelings of doubt he had going into his first marriage were nowhere to be found. For someone who sees himself as unemotional and unexpressive, the enormity of his love and devotion to Linda from that first date until this day is evident. In four hours of interviews, it was when he spoke about Linda that he sounded the most fulfilled and uplifted.


Family is everything to Linda,” said Peltz. “She brought together estranged cousins and other family members and she became very close to my father, calling him every day.


If my mom had met Linda,” he continued, weeping softly, “she would have had a reason to live.


Linda fit effortlessly into his boxing world. She would often attend events, traveling with Peltz. “Linda is the kind of person who can exist in any world, in any atmosphere, and everybody loves her.Peltz said. “It helped me in boxing. People say, ‘How bad can he be? She married him!’


Linda is never idle. She can fill up 24 hours a day. She’s the Queen of the Dollar Store. She can’t stand sitting around doing nothing. If Linda has 400 things to do and I only want to do 200 ba bona ba, she says I’m boring.


The two would have two sons, Matthew and Daniel. Matthew, the oldest, was interested in music and girls. He was a ‘Deadhead,’ the moniker bestowed upon Grateful Dead fans, and traveled with them for a summer. He eventually moved to Israel and became a Rabbi. He married and had four children.


Daniel was the athlete, participating in various sports, including a short amateur boxing career that Peltz hid from Daniel’s mother for a short period of time.


Peltz did his best to never miss a game. “He was always there for me,” said Daniel. “He traveled a lot, but he always made time for my sporting events. He didn’t miss a milestone.


Peltz and his wife lost Matthew to a drug overdose in 2017. He was only 38. The pain in Peltzvoice when he talks about the years they tried to save their son is heart-wrenching. Countless trips to rehab, broken promises and relapses litter the last years of their time together. He loved Matthew as hard and as completely as any parent could have, but the thief that is drug addiction took Matthew away from his parents, his brother and his children.


At his son’s funeral Peltz told the story of a bidding scandal that rocked the plumbing industry in Philadelphia when he was a kid. The story had hit the newspapers, and when he was able to get his hands on the article, he read every word, looking for his dad’s name among those involved, hoping and praying it wasn’t there. His voice cracks again as he retells it. “When I got to the bottom of the story, it listed all those companies involved in the fixand his name wasn’t in there. I felt so proud.of him.


So it’s just that I knew that Bernie Peltz provided a hard day’s work for a fair day’s wage. Thirty years later, I came home from work one day and Linda hands me the phone. Your son wants to talk to you. I said ‘What’s up Matt.He said ‘Dad, how come when the sports writers write about boxing promoters, they always write bad things like they cheat the fighters, they steal their money, they pay off the judges and the referees, they fix the rankingsbut whenever they write about you,” he paused and sniffed heavily as tears fell, “they always write nice things. He finished by saying ‘that’s so cool.I didn’t realize it at the time but as the years went by I realized that my son felt the same way about me that I felt about my dad.


Peltz carries the weight of his Linda’s pain in addition to his own at the loss of their son. “All Linda ever wanted was to be a mother. To be there when the kids came home from school,” Peltz recalled. “That’s what made losing Matthew so devastating for her. She questioned her ability as a mother.


If Matthew had had any other mother,” Peltz said, his voice cracking with emotion, “he wouldn’t have made it to even 20.


Peltz finds comfort in his grandchildren. “Pop Pop is very affectionate with the kids,” said Daniel, who has two daughters. “He has six grandchildrenhe loves them and they adore him.


Ho theosa le lilemo, Peltz has brought many boxers into his inner circle, many of them becoming family. Osnel Charles, who fights on October 4, asked Peltz to be the co-best man in his wedding. He spoke at many hall-of-fame inductions, weddings and funerals over the past half century.


He talks about one of his more recent charges, Jason Sosa, with affection. One of the highest points in his long career was witnessing underdog Sosa stop Javier Fortuna to win a world title in 2016 ea Beijing, China.


When that fight was over we walked back to the hotel,” he remembered. “Linda went up to the room because she was tired. I went into a bar in the hotel. One of these really modern neon lit bars. I sat at that empty bar and I felt so on top of the world. People back in the states are just getting the news and here I am in Beijing having a beer by myself and I felt so good. You know why? Mostly because at the time of my career that it happened. To win a world title like that, in a foreign land, coming from behind off the canvas, with no shot to win except by knockoutwith Linda screaming and crying and she jumped up because she loves Jason. It was just like so great. Such a wonderful feeling. One of the highlights of my career. It’s not number one but it’s like 1A.


Number e mong, o ile a phaella, was when his first charge, Bennie Briscoe, knocked out Tony Mundine in Paris in 1974: “That will always be number one. It was an eliminator. We were underdogs. It was my first trip to Europe and it was the biggest fight you could have without it being for the title. It was just such a wonderful night.


His protege, Raging Babe Michelle Rosado, who is promoting “Rata, Sweat & 50 Lilemo tse,” is one of many who see Peltz as a father figure. His seven-year mentorship of Rosado will culminate in his passing the torch to his hardworking mentee. “Leaders build leaders. Because he doesn’t have an ego, and wasn’t inclined to protect his secrets at all costs like so many of his peers, he was able to mentor BAM [Brittany Rogers] and I and teach us the ropes. I’m honored that he trusts me to continue his legacy.Peltz is known to brag about Rosado to his colleagues in the business. When he talks about her, his tone alternates between that of a proud father and professional respect and admiration. They may fight and scream but will always eventually reconcile like family so often does.


Peltz is ready to slow down after his 50th anniversary celebration. The changes to the sport have worn thin his desire to keep going. “It’s not the sport I fell in love with,” o ile a e re. “It’s not like it used to be. Guys just wanted to fight. If guys were within 10 pounds we had a fight.


Ka October 4, he will wind down his matchmaking career with the kind of card that he’s become known for in Philadelphia over the last 50 lilemo tse. Tough, Philly versus Philly toss-up matches. The kind of card that drew him to boxing and kept him there for half a century.


These relationships, the ones that Peltz has with Linda, Daniel and his grandchildren, with Michelle, with Osnel Charles, Bennie Briscoe, Jason Sosa and countless other boxersthese relationships don’t happen by accident. They’re built on respect and on love. Love that isn’t screamed out loud, but is felt by actions. Love that is disguised as feeling proud, or as the weight of guilt and regret. A love that’s equal to or perhaps even more than that of his love for boxing. Boxing will always be the place where Peltz can love out loud, but his legacy will forever be the quiet way he loved those he touched over the past 50 lilemo tse.


#######


Tickets toPeltz Boxing 50th Anniversary Celebrationare priced $50, $70 le $90. They can be purchased online at www.2300arena.com kapa ka bitsa 215-758-2173 and/or 215-765-0922. Mamati a butsweng ka 6:30 pm and first bout is at 7:30 am. Credential applications are due by September 20 and can be requested at ragingbabe.com/credentials. Blood, Sweat & 50 Years is brought to you by Rocco’s Collision and Cricket Wireless.

TOP NORTH CAROLINA TALENT TO HEADLINE THURSDAY NIGHT FIGHTS IN DURHAM

Tickets are on sale now for the October 19th karete ya, which features tough, local match-ups

DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINAAugust 25, 2017Raging Babe and Hall of Fame Matchmaker Russell Pelth have assembled what could be the best card North Carolina has seen this year. Neng “Raging Babe” Michelle Rosado first stepped foot into North Carolina, she did so with intent and purpose. North Carolina has, for too long, been seen as a place where fighters can go pad their records. Rosado was committed to changing that, and the newly minted Promoter plans on delivering on that commitment when she presents Labone Bosiu ho loana ka ka October 19th ka Durham Armory.

The main event is a local match-up, thick with bad blood. MarkoThe Bull City Bully” Bailey (5-0, 3KO) faces off against Charlotte’s StevieThe AnswerMassey (4-1, 4KO). in a six-round bout that has been brewing since both fighters were in the amateur ranks. The behind-closed-doors trash talk that both fighters have partaken in over the past few years has spilled over onto social media, and will now culminate in North Carolina State Championship bout onOctober 19th. “He runs his mouth too much,” said Bailey of his opponent. “This is personal. I want to beat the sout of him. I have waited a long time to get my hands on this guy, and I’m going to break him down over six rounds. I’m going to make him look bad.This is Bailey’s first six round bout, and he enters camp with the words of Undisputed Super Lightweight Champion Terence Crawford in his mind. “I spent some time with Bud last weekend. He told me that even when you’re struggling, and times get hard, you gotta fight through it no matter what. Ha ho na mabaka.” Bailey is training three hours from home with his head coach Don Turner. “It’s not easy work, training hours each day on a farm with only work, rest and corn.Said Rosado of Bailey’s camp. Bailey isn’t deterred. “You gotta fight through adversity. That’s what makes champions. That’s what shows what you’re made of,” said the young fighter.

Massey plans on letting his fists do the talking. “I don’t back down from nobody,” said Massey of the match-up. “We should have fought in the amateurs, but it didn’t happen, and now it’s time.The 24-year old featherweight is moving up in weight to fight Bailey, and Bailey is moving down. They are meeting in the middle at 132 liponto. Massey is coming off his first loss, a tough unanimous decision to Reggie Barnett Jr. Many fighters would take an easier touch after a loss, but that’s not the way Massey is built. “The loss gave me that hunger back. He better strap up because October 19th, I’m coming.

It is the kind of matchup that Rosado and Peltz like best. “Listen, Michelle is a go- getter, she’s aggressive,” said Peltz. “She buys into the local match-ups theory. There’s nothing wrong with boxing that good fights won’t help. Michelle understands that. You have to make competitive fights. If you can make them at the local level without TV, it’s only going to help boxing in the long run. We’re trying change culture in NC. Anytime you get two local kids to fight each other in the 21st century, it’s a big deal.

A ho sebdisana ka sehloohong ketsahalo, two undefeated, local Durham fighters step up to face each other in a six round bout at Junior Middleweight. Joseph Jackson (8-0, 6KO) mapatlelong tima khahlanong le MonrecoKing ReekGoldston (5-0-1, 3KO), with both fighters putting their ‘O’ le mola. It will be Goldston’s first bout in over a year, after having scored a majority draw with Virginia’s Robert Sweeney in May 2016. The bout will be Jackson’s fourth this year. He is coming off a knockout win over Darryol Humphrey last Saturday, August 19th.

E boetse e e kareteng e, Carlos Olmeda (2-0, 2KO) faces a very tough opponent in New York brawler Vinnie Denierio (1-2, 1KO). It isn’t the first time the 5’10Southpaw Denierio has fought in the Bull City. He faced Marko Bailey there in April, before rematching him in June in Philadelphia. Both bouts earned standing ovations from the crowd. Olmeda isn’t the type to back down, despite being the smaller of the two fighters, plans to give the New Yorker all he can handle.

The remainder of the card is stacked with some of North Carolina’s most promising talent. Undefeated Junior Middleweight Donnie Marshall (5-0, 4KO) makes an appearance on the card, alongside Super Middleweight prospect Blake “The KO King” Mansfield (4-1-1, 2KO) , and Raleigh Heavyweight Nate Williams (1-0, 1KO). E boetse e e kareteng e, Hasim Rahman, Refresh. makes his North Carolina debut. The heavyweight is following in his father’s footsteps, and has earned two wins, both by knockout, since his April debut.

The fight card fulfills Rosado’s promise to the fans of North Carolina. “These fighters are not messing around,” ho boletse Rosado. “It’s refreshing to work with guys that want to fight.Rosado noted that, to the fighterscredit, the aforementioned match-ups were an easy sell. “They wanted to come and fight for the fans. No outlandish press tours, no pay-per-view, no circus acts, no embarrassing match-ups. Just real boxers fighting real fights, Durham style.

Labone Night Fights is sponsored by Corona Extra. Tickets are on sale now ($75, 50, 40), and available at RagingBabe.com kapa ka bitsa 919-584-4849.

RAGING BABE PRESENTS THURSDAY NIGHT FIGHTS AT THE ARMORY: THE RETURN

Rosado returns to finish what she started in the Bull City
BAKENG SA haufi Release

DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINAAugust 15, 2017 -This time last year, “Raging Babe” Michelle Rosado touched down in Raleigh for the first time, determined to help a local boxing promoter make his mark in North Carolina. Rosado and her company, Raging Babe, did just that, and have now emerged as North Carolina’s newest boxing promoter. Ka October 19th, Raging Babe promotes its own event at the Durham Armory, aptly named The Return. The card will feature some of the best young talent from across North Carolina in competitive fights, matched by Hall of Fame Matchmaker and mentor to Rosado, Russell Pelth.

With a combined 50+ years of experience in the rough and tumble world of boxing, Rosado and Peltz brought a well-tested formula to Wilson in their first North Carolina endeavor in February. The sell-out event was followed up by the debut of Labone Night Fights in Durham. Throwing a boxing event on aLabone night was a hard sell for Rosado. “I had to really work on the promoter to get them to give Labone Night Fights a shot. Durham is a fight town. I knew that if we threw a solid, quality card, with good fights, that fans would come out on a Labone bosiu, and they did.When planning The Return, Rosado opted to bring back Labone Bosiu ho loana ka, and return to the Durham Armory.

After two wildly successful events, followed by a dramatic falling out with the now defunct promotional company, Rosado was reluctant to return to the Tar Heel State. She realized, leha ho le joalo, after so many months of putting her sweat and passion into boxing in North Carolina, she owed to herself and the gyms, fighters and fans she met there to return, and fulfill the commitments she made to them to deliver quality fights, while treating the fighters ethically and with respect.

It took a while to get to know the personalities, the gyms, the fighters and their stories,” ho boletse Rosado. “For a long time, North Carolina was a place that managers and promoters brought their fighters to rack up wins. The fighters here deserve so much more than that, as do the fans. I made it a point to let everyone I met in North Carolina know that we were here to work on changing that.

In planning The Return, Rosado has felt that she could fully put her passions and ideas to work for North Carolina boxing. “I’m excited for the opportunity to do it my way,” ho boletse Rosado, who has put on events in Phoenix, Tucson, Philadelphia and Danbury, Connecticut. “I’m happy to work with any fighter that wants to step up and fight. There are no easy touches on my cards. We want to pack the venue and give fans a night to remember. Russell is putting together a phenomenal fight card. The main and co-main events are going to have people so excitedI get goosebumps thinking about it. These guys are really stepping up to give the fans some of the best fights Durham has seen in a while. I wasn’t even sure we could put these fights together, and all of these fighters signed on the dotted line with no hesitation. They are daring to be great, and putting their undefeated records on the line, and I can’t wait to formally announce what we’ve been working on these last few weeks.

Rosado is also planning to work with the fighters to help the community in and around Durham. “I want to bring positivity to Durham, and to North Carolina boxing. These guys are given a stage to showcase their talent, and we want to use that platform to give back to the community in any way we can.

The complete fight card will be announced August 24th, and tickets for The Return go on sale that morning. Tickets can be purchased through the fighters or at ragingbabe.com.

E 'ngoe ea li-coughting tse monate, Wba Super Feeatherweight Champion Javier Fortuna, Ho etsa ts'ireletso ea bobeli khahlano le ka thata-punch sosa in Beijing China, KA LABOHLANO, JUNE 24

 

Ka Labohlano, June 24, Toibu ea bo-18 000 Beijing Gym ea Gyijing Beijing, China, e 'ngoe ea li-coughting tse monate, Javier “The Abejon” Leruo (29-0-1, 21 Kos) e tla etsa tšireletso ea bobeli ea li-cba tsa hae tsa wba lefatšeng #8 Phehella Jason SoSA (18-1-4, 14 Kos). Ntoa e ka bang teng pakeng tsa li-slugger tse peli e tla bonoa ke bamameli ba batlang 100 Milione ea China Chinese Via CCCTV5 Channel Live Broadcast.
Fortuna vs. SoSA o phatlalalitsoe ka molao sebokeng sa khatiso haholo kajeno e le oa pele letoto letotong le sa khaotseng la liketsahalo tsa boemo bo holimo le selemo sa Mr. Modsoson ea ka le Monghali. Liu Gang of Max Power Ad Propetion “MPP” le sampson lewkowicz of sampson.
26-Selemo-kholo-Old Fortuna, ea La Romana, Dominican Republic, e bile e le pokello ea litebele ho tloha mehleng ea hae e le matsatsi a hae e le moemeli ea khabisitsoeng ea neng a nkile karolo ea patsi ea masapo a batho ba hloatseng ea Semerika ea Junion. 2003. E nkoa e le 'ngoe ea bahlabani ba khahlisang haholo papaling, Fortuna o hapile sehlooho sa hae sa hajoale ka qeto e sa lumellaneng ea Bryan Vasquez ka Mots'eanong 2015. O ile a sireletsa ka katleho ka la selemong se fetileng le tko 10 Ho feta Carlos Ivan Velsquez. Fortuna e hapile change e 'ngoe ea Wba FAMIM ka ho otla Hyland ka December ka December 2012. Boroa bo matla le bona bo boetse bo tsebahala ka ho nyenyefatsa phetisetso ea ho hlakoloa ho feta bahanyetsi ba matla ho kenyelletsa Yuandle Evandle evans (WHO 1) le miguel zamudio (KO 1). Fortuna o khothalletsoa ke sehlopha sa Sampson.
28-Selemo sa Selemo sa Selemo, ea Camden, New Jersey, ke ea ho ikhohomosa ea Puerto Riccency. O ile a fumana sehlooho sa hae se ile sa thunya 'me a tšoara mahlo a lefatše ka December selemong se fetileng ka ho loantšana le e' ngoe ea lipapali tsa papali, Ntlo ea batho ba babeli ba lefatše Nicholas “Axe Man” Walters of Jamaica. Ntoa e ne e le thelevisiti ho HBO boxing kamora lefifi. Pulcher e matla, Sosa o ne a palame sebaka sa ntoa sa ntoa a 13 pele a tobana le li-wallters. Sosa o boetse o tsejoa ka setaele sa hae se mabifi le sa tšepe. O bitsitsoe serobele se setle ka ho fetisisa ho tsoa ka camden ho tloha ka camden e ne e le 'mampoli oa lefatše oa pele “Camden BuzzSaw” Muhammad qawi. Sosa e khothalletsoa ke litema tsa peltz.
Mona ke eng, Barupeluoa le Baetjeo ba Bona ba ile ba re:
Javier Fortuna
Ke ikutloa ke e khōlō. Ke motlotlo ho loana China.
Ke mohale o matla ebile o lula a nahana ka moo. Leha ho le joalo, Ke utloa eka ke na le talenta e ngata ebile e na le bokhoni bo eketsehileng. Le nna ke na le matla a matla a matla.
Ke emetse monyetla ona. Ke lebelletse ntoa ena bakeng sa sehlopha sa ka le naha ea ka.
Ke loanne le ho ba le matlotlo pele 'me ke ba leboea ho fihlela matla a bona a qala ho hana mme ka nako eo ke sithabetsoa ke bona.
Ke leboha lerato lohle leo ke tsoang ho metsoalle, Lefatšeng ka bophara. Ke ka lebaka leo ke teang ka thata: ho fumana libapali le ho ipolella pele.
Jason Sosa
Ho ka monyetla o moholo. Sena ke seo litoro tsohle tse sa lebelloang tsa: ho loanela sehlooho sa lefats'e.
Ho latela hore na ke mofuta ofe oa ntoa ea Ntoa ea Batla. Ke tla ba moo ho loanang ka bohlale le ho bona feela hore na o batla ho tlisa mofuta ofe. Re ka ea ntoeng, kapa re ka khona ho lekana. Ho ho eena.
O mabifi. E hlaha e nyane. Monna e mong feela.
Ha ke hlile ha ke mo etsetse mosebetsi o mongata ho eena. Ntho e ngoe le e ngoe eo ke e etsang e sebetsa, Kahoo ha ke lokise letho le sa robeheng.
Ke thabile ebile ke tšohile ho loants'a China. Ke lekhetlo la ka la pele ho naha. Ke sitoa ho emela ho ea moo 'me kea tseba hore e tla ba ketsahalo e ntle.
Monghali. Min du modomon
Re thabela ho ba le kamano le sebapali sa machabeng le ho phahamisa sampson lewkowicz ho tlisa mabokose a sehlopha sa lefatše.
Javier Fortuna o na le seo ho se hlokang hore e be naleli Chaena. Eena le mohanyetsi oa hae ea tšoanelehang ba tla lumelloa ka matsoho a bulehileng ka batho ba rona.
Monghali. Liu gang
Ketsahalo ena e tla ba kholo naheng ea China. Khamphani ea rona, MPP, o thabetse ho sebetsa le Sampson Lewkowicz le ho tseba ho loana le batho haholo.
China ke naha e nang le litebele. Mabokose ke a bahale ho batho. Bahoebi ka bobeli ba tla phekoloa joalo ka batho ba tummeng le ntoa ba tla shejoa ke limilione le limilione tsa batho.
Sampson lewkowicz
Ke thabetse ho thusa ho beha ketsahalong ena naheng e ntle ea China 'me ke lebelletse ts'ebelisano e telele le e atlehileng e nang le Mr. Modsoson ea ka le Monghali. Liu Gang of MPP.
Re na le merero ea ho hlahisa li-fighters tse ngata tse ntle tsa lefatše ka li-gererific tse ntle joalo ka ena.
Javier Fortuna o tla tobana le bahlabali ba batlang e le 'muso o mongata kamoo a nang le eona, 'me o tla tlameha ho ba molemong oa ho fumana tlhōlo e' ngoe.
Russell Pelth
E tla ba ntoa e kholo le Sosa e lebelletse ho hapa sehlooho sa lefats'e.
Sosa o ile a lula a le mong 'me a loanela ho palama le e' ngoe ea lilakane tse holimo tsa Junior Junior lefatšeng, Nicholas Walters, 'me e ile ea matlafatsa boemo ba hae ba boitšepo le ho feta.
Fortuna le Sosa ke boholo bo lekanang, Kahoo ke nahana hore ho lokile. Sosa o boetse o hlasimolohile haholo ka letsoho le leng le leng le letle le letšehali, Tevin Farmer. Ke batšoaruoa. Tevin ke eona e qaqisa hantle, boholo bo bohlale, eseng setaele se bohlale, tsa lehlohonolo.
Hector Bermudez (Mokoetlisi oa Fortuna)
Ke nahana hore e tla ba Ntoa e Khabane ea Fortuna ho bonts'a litalenta tsa hae tsa kantle ho naha.
Sosa ke mohanyetsi e motle eo re tla tlameha ho ikoetlisa ka thata le ho tsepamisa maikutlo. E ke ke ea ba bonolo empa Fortuna o ntse o ikoetlisa 'me e lokela ho ba ntoa e kholo.
Sosa ke ntoa ea khatello le setlama se seholo se nang le letsoho le letšehali. O kobehile 'me o lahlela meputso.
Me, joalo ka mokoetlisi, Ke se ke nkile sosa ka thoko. O robala haholo. Ka sebele o mabifi 'me o na le khoele e kholo.
Raul Rivas
E tla ba ntoa e khahlisang.
Fortuna o na le talenta haholo, Empa ke lumela hore ena ke nako e ntle ea Jason ho nka ntoa ena. O loanne khanyetso e ntle.
Fortuna ke bahlabani ba tlang ho loana, Mme re tla lwa, Kahoo ke lumela hore e tla ba ntoa e thabisang haholo, Ka bashanyana ba babeli ba etsang seo ba se etsang hamolemo ka har'a moo.
Ke lumela hore re na le mohlabani ea betere le o matla, Kahoo ke rata menyetla ea rona.
Ha ke so ka ka ba China, ha ho na Jason. Re lebelletse boiphihlelo ba boiphihlelo joalo ka sehlopha; ho ba naheng e fapaneng le ho ba le ho hong ho fapaneng. Kea tseba hore baahi ba China ba rata litebele, le ho loantšana. Re lebelletse show e ntle.
Hoo e ka bang Sampson Boxing
Ka mor'a hore a atleha haholo li matha e le matchmaker le moeletsi, Sampson Lewkowicz switched ba le isa papatso lehlakoreng la papali ea litebele ka January 2008.
Sampson Boxing e eketsehile ho o mong oa ka ho fetisisa lefatseng ee tumileng papatso difeme, emelang ba bangata ba lefatse molemo ka ho fetisisa bahlabani ho fetisisa le le tsepisa bacha hlolisanang.

Sampson Boxing o na le papatso balekane ba hohle North le Amerika Boroa, Afrika, Asia, New Zealand, Australia, Europe le Amerika Bohareng le Sampson Boxing moodle moodle moodle ba 'nile ba televised tse joalo Premiere marangrang e le HBO, Nako Ea Lipontšo, ESPN, VS. le machaba tse 'maloa marangrang.

Prize Promotions Tabs Russell Peltz and BrittanyBamRogers for Matchmaking Duties

Danbury, CT (April 16, 2015)- At the beginning of April, newly licensed Connecticut boxing promoter A.J. Galante introduced his company, Prise ho phahamiswa. Galante spoke of his goal of bringingOld Schoolboxing to Connecticut.

To prove he is serious about his vision, Galante has turned his matchmaking over to Hall of Fame Philadelphia promoter, Russell Pelth along with one of the sports youngest and most promising promoters and matchmakers, Brittany “BAM

Rogers.

Russell is the definition of Old School matchmaking, he’s one of the last out there, so it was a no brainer for me to reach out to him, and I am honored that he is willing to work with me.” Galante o ile a re, “His resume speaks for itself, I am extremely confident that working together, we will put on spectacular showsGalante was also extremely excited to work with BrittanyBAM” Rogers, who works in conjunction with Russell Peltz,

I’m often referred to as one of the youngest boxing people on the business side of things, but BAM is actually younger than me, and has been in the sport longer than me. I have a lot of respect for her and have been learning a lot through working with her.

Ultimately Galante said what cemented his choice on his matchmakers, was a trip to Philladelphia in October, to attend a show promoted by both Peltz and Rogers, “When you think Philly boxing, you think gritty and exciting, and you can’t think Philadelphia boxing without Russell Peltz and Brittany Rogers, and I am looking forward to bringing those types of shows and that environment here to Connecticut.It won’t be long for Galante to fulfill his promise, as his first show Danbury Fight Night, will take place onKa 'na bo30 ka Danbury Arena, in his hometown of Danbury, CT.

The card is currently taking shape, and will be announced soon. Tickets ka rekoa ho etela www.prizepromotions.netPricing: $100,$75, $50 & $25