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Martirosyan Gets U.S. Boxing's Second Win

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  • Martirosyan Gets U.S. Boxing's Second Win

    Martirosyan Gets U.S. Boxing's Second Win

    By GREG BEACHAM
    .c The Associated Press


    ATHENS, Greece (AP) - Vanes Martirosyan erased any doubts about the
    legitimacy of his spot in Athens, battering Algeria's Benamar Meskine
    in a 45-20 victory in the preliminaries Sunday to earn a second-round
    match with Cuba's Lorenzo Aragon.

    ``I finished like a champion,'' said Martirosyan, an Armenian-born
    18-year-old from Glendale, Calif. ``I could have won another four
    rounds, to tell you the truth. I felt so good out there.''

    Martirosyan showed the power and flair of a contender, dictating the
    fight's pace with a stiff jab and opportunistic combinations. He also
    counterpunched effectively while landing more shots to the head than
    almost any competitor so far at the busy boxing venue, which hosts
    more than 20 fights every day of the preliminaries.

    Middleweight Andre Dirrell got the United States off to a good start
    Saturday with a win in his preliminary bout. Two Americans received
    first-round byes, and five more will fight in the next three days
    before the second round begins Wednesday.

    Tougher fights still loom for a team that's thought to be among the
    weakest in the United States' superb Olympic boxing history, but the
    boxers believe they can improve on their mediocre four-medal haul four
    years ago in Sydney.

    ``We're a great team, we're in great shape and we're going to bring a
    lot of medals home,'' Martirosyan said.

    Martirosyan was one fight from elimination at the U.S. team trials in
    February in Tunica, Miss., but the two top contenders were
    disqualified when Andre Berto threw Juan McPherson to the canvas,
    injuring McPherson's neck. McPherson was medically disqualified, and
    Berto was banned for his actions.

    Though he caught a lucky break, Martirosyan made the most of it by
    earning an Olympic spot in the ensuing qualifying tournaments. Berto,
    from Winter Haven, Fla., made the Olympics anyway on Haiti's team -
    but Martirosyan beat Berto in a subsequent tourney.

    ``A lot of boxing fans and people in our organization were very well
    aware of Vanes,'' U.S. coach Basheer Abdullah said. ``There were a lot
    of predictions that he was going to make this team.

    He was very, very aggressive today. He dictated what was happening in
    the fight.''

    Martirosyan was cheered at Peristeri Olympic Boxing Hall by his
    father, Norik, a former amateur fighter who moved his family to
    California when Vanes was 4; his younger brother, Vatche; his uncle
    and his cousin - and a bunch of fans from Glendale who showed up
    unannounced, waving Armenian and American flags.

    Aragon, whose victory over Greece's Theodoros Kotakos was stopped on
    points in the third round, will be a stiff test for Martirosyan on
    Thursday. The 1996 Olympic featherweight is a two-time world champion
    as a welterweight, and he beat Martirosyan in the Athens Test Event in
    May.

    But Martirosyan was slugging point-for-point with Aragon until the
    fourth round, when Martirosyan says he got overexcited by the prospect
    of an upset.

    ``We're Armenian. We have this thing where we get a little bit out of
    control in the ring,'' Martirosyan said. ``I love this sport so
    much. The coaches have told me to calm down, just think about points
    instead of trying to get the guy out of there.''

    After a slow first minute against Meskine, Martirosyan landed the
    first of many shots to the Algerian's head. Martirosyan then staggered
    him with a beautiful left hand early in the third round.

    That punch effectively ended the fight. Meskine retreated to
    full-scale defense while Martirosyan chased. Martirosyan scored 16
    points in the final round, putting his whole body behind his blows in
    a vain effort to flatten Meskine.

    Perhaps that Armenian instinct hasn't completely been coached out of
    him - and it will serve him well as a professional.

    But first things first: Martirosyan finished third in the Athens Test
    Event, and he isn't keen on keeping that prize.

    ``I brought that bronze medal back so I could take the gold,'' he
    said.



    08/15/04 14:43 EDT
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