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Plenty of fight: Young Glendale boxer a surprise Olympian

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  • Plenty of fight: Young Glendale boxer a surprise Olympian

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    Aug 12 2004

    Plenty of fight

    Young Glendale boxer a surprise Olympian

    By Paul Oberjuerge , Staff Writer

    ATHENS, Greece -- Vanes Martirosyan's enthusiasm is endearing. And
    sometimes endangering.
    The 18-year-old welterweight from Glendale revels in the chance to
    box for his adopted country in the Athens Olympics.

    "It's so exciting," he said Tuesday, a heavyweight smile erupting on
    his boyish face. "When I sit and think about it, sometimes I get
    tears in my eyes. Like, where am I? Is this really true? It's like a
    big dream. Then you wake up, and the coaches are there saying, 'Let's
    go run,' then you go, 'Yeah, this is true. I am here.' "

    "Here" is the Summer Olympics, the apex of the amateur boxing world.
    No wonder Martirosyan is fired up.

    But that youthful exuberance can be a detriment in the ring.

    Martirosyan is most effective, U.S. assistant coach Joe Zanders said,
    when he sticks with the technical, "Russian style" long-distance
    boxing he learned from his father and personal coach, Norik, who
    moved his family to Glendale from Armenia in 1990.

    "What we want him to do is box," Zanders said of the 152-pounder. "We
    don't want him to get into a fight. He gets excited, and he will
    fight; he's got that kind of heart.

    "We have to keep him doing the things he's done so far to get himself
    here."

    That Martirosyan is here at all, preparing to walk in Opening
    Ceremonies on Friday, is a significant upset. He wasn't one of the
    country's well-regarded welterweights when the selection process
    began this year, and his progress through the U.S. Trials surprised
    even him. If not his father or his uncle, Serge, who repeatedly told
    him, "You're the best. You don't know how good you are."

    He began to think maybe his father and uncle were right after he
    defeated fifth-ranked Timothy Bradley in the Western Trials. Then he
    clinched a berth in the Athens Games by defeating second-ranked Andre
    Berto of Haiti in the continental qualifier in Tijuana, Mexico.

    "My confidence kept going up and up," he said. "I was getting better
    and better."

    Martirosyan believes he is "a puzzle" to opponents because he can
    change styles at the drop of a glove.

    He grew up with the Russian style his father learned while boxing in
    the former Soviet Union. "But I can fight American style, and I had a
    Mexican coach (Joe Lopez), so I can fight Mexican style, too," he
    said. "Guys don't know what they're going to get from me."

    Lopez said he was not surprised when Martirosyan qualified for the
    Olympics.

    "He has been training very hard," said Lopez, who until three years
    ago trained Martirosyan out of Glendale. When Lopez was offered a job
    at the Baldwin Park Boxing Club, he accepted, and Martirosyan
    followed.

    "He worked really hard in the gym and I think it is his
    determination," Lopez said. "No matter how much anybody tries to
    discourage him, he believes in himself and he goes for it."

    Louie Escobar is head trainer at the Baldwin Park Boxing Club. He
    said that when Martirosyan first set foot in his gym at age 15, he
    knew he was something special. And not just as a boxer.

    "I could see that he was very, very respectful, a good role model for
    the younger kids," Escobar said. "And I could see that he was very
    talented. Raw, but talented."

    Zanders suggest Martirosyan is best served by the heady,
    at-a-distance Russian style that can help him rack up jab points in
    the electronically-scored Olympic tournament.

    "He fights more like a Russian than anybody who's not a Russian,"
    Zanders said. "Guys who move and punch at the same time. He does that
    extremely well."

    Zanders said Martirosyan was holding his own with 2003 world champion
    Lorenzo Aragon of Cuba after two rounds in a tournament bout here in
    May. Then the excitement factor bushwhacked the Glendale Kid,
    something even Martirosyan concedes.

    "The first two rounds, I was doing good, and the coaches tried to
    calm me down because I get so excited, I'm having so much fun," he
    said. "I just started throwing raw punches. In the third round,
    (Aragon) was running from me, and I was chasing him, but he was
    scoring punches, while he was running."

    Martirosyan lost a decision, but perhaps gained some perspective.

    "He didn't stick with his game," Zanders said. "If he listens to the
    coaches, things will be a lot different. Losing to the Cuban is maybe
    his greatest motivator, to this point. Now he has a better idea of
    what this is about."

    Martirosyan's father tried for 10 years to emigrate to the U.S., and
    the family is so thankful to have joined relatives in Glendale that
    Vanes sees the Olympics as a chance "to thank this country because it
    made room for me and my family. Just to wear these (red, white and
    blue) colors is a thrill for me."

    Martirosyan has become something of a celebrity in Glendale's large
    Armenian community. "They support me a lot," he said. "When I walk
    out of the house they come up and hug me and kiss me and say, 'Go do
    it.' They show me a lot of love."

    According to USA Boxing spokeswoman Julie Goldsticker,
    Armenian-American grocers sometimes refuse to take Norik
    Martirosyan's money, telling him to "go feed his son."

    Vanes Martirosyan will be joined here this week by his father and
    uncle, as well as little brother Vatche and cousin Ilousha. His first
    bout is Sunday.

    A strong Olympics showing often has been a springboard into a
    lucrative professional career. American welterweights who fought in
    the Olympics include Sugar Ray Leonard, Donald Curry, Mark Breland,
    Pernell Whitaker, Fernando Vargas and Oscar De La Hoya. The Golden
    Boy happens to be a favorite of Martirosyan's.

    "The way Oscar won the gold and dedicated it to his mother, that was
    great," Martirosyan said.

    The home-schooled boxer said he will not decide about turning pro
    until after the Olympics. Hr added that his father and uncle will be
    prime movers in that choice.

    "I box; they handle everything else,"he said.

    Martirosyan is not a medal favorite. The top welterweights figure to
    be two-time gold medalist Oleg Saitev of Russia and Cuba's Aragon.
    Then again, Berto was a bronze medalist at the 2003 World
    Championships, and Martirosyan defeated him during his breakthrough
    year.

    Said Zanders: "I think he has a chance to be a real problem for some
    of the better boxers. I would not be surprised at any level he
    achieves."

    Said Martirosyan: "Every day I sit in my room and dream what it would
    be like to win a gold medal," and another monster smile lights up the
    room.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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