Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Olympics: Dad in His Corner: Martirosyan's immigrant father gave him

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Olympics: Dad in His Corner: Martirosyan's immigrant father gave him

    Los Angeles Times
    Aug 18 2004

    Dad's in His Corner
    Vanes Martirosyan's immigrant father gave him a love of boxing and a
    belief in the American dream. Now the son wants to give him a medal.

    By Diane Pucin, Times Staff Writer


    ATHENS - Norik Martirosyan lost a hand in a grenade explosion, so he
    uses his other one when he's smoking cigarettes, one after another.
    It is an old, unhealthy habit and Martirosyan's son, Vanes, has
    begged his father to stop.

    So Martirosyan said, "Vanes, if you win the Western boxing trials and
    qualify for the Olympic trials, I'll stop smoking."

    When Vanes won those trials, Norik said, "Vanes, if you qualify for
    the Olympic team, I'll stop smoking."

    When Vanes won the Olympic trials after the two favorites in his
    weight class were disqualified in controversial circumstances, Norik
    said, "Vanes, if you win a gold medal, I'll quit smoking."

    So here he is, Vanes Martirosyan of Glendale, an 18-year-old
    underdog, son of an Armenian immigrant, in love with the home cooking
    of his mother and the rap music of America and determined to win an
    Olympic gold medal in the 152-pound welterweight class so that his
    father will quit smoking. And for one other reason.

    "For all the time I have been boxing," Vanes said, "my father has
    told me what a lucky boy I am to be growing up in the United States,
    where we have freedoms to do what we want and be what we want. He has
    told me, since I can remember, that there would be no greater honor
    for a sportsman such as me to win a gold medal to honor our country.
    The United States is our country now."

    "Yes," said Norik Martirosyan, his younger brother Serge translating
    Norik's Armenian words. "It would be our gift to the United States.
    >From Vanes and from Norik, our gift."

    Martirosyan will fight 2003 Pan American Games gold medalist Lorenzo
    Aragon of Cuba in the second round today. Martirosyan out-pointed
    Benamar Meskine of Algeria in the first round.

    At the Olympic trials, Andre Berto was disqualified - he later joined
    Haiti's Olympic team - for a flagrant foul that injured his opponent,
    Juan McPherson. Berto and McPherson were considered the two strongest
    fighters in the weight class. Berto had thrown McPherson to the mat
    and sent him to the hospital with a head injury. McPherson appealed
    to reenter the tournament after leaving the hospital but his appeal
    was denied and Martirosyan won the trials.

    Because of his youth and because he didn't beat the top competitors,
    Martirosyan isn't given much chance to win a medal here.

    "But that doesn't matter," Martirosyan said. "Our family has been
    underdogs for a long time and what I have learned from here, so far,
    is that anything can happen if you work hard."

    In 1990, as the Soviet Union was breaking apart. Armenia and
    Azerbaijan, two former republics, were readying for a war rooted in a
    history of religious conflict and Norik Martirosyan was doing what he
    thought was best.

    Martirosyan was foraging in an aging Soviet bomb-making facility,
    looking for repairable weapons, when he picked up a grenade. Before
    he even knew what was in his hand, the thing exploded.

    But out of that accident, a dream was born. Looking for freedom and
    peace, longing for a chance to raise his three sons in a land where
    they could prosper, Martirosyan decided to go to the United States
    with his parents and his brother. They would join other families in
    California and start over.

    Vanes, the middle child, was 4 in 1991, when they left Armenia. Norik
    had been an amateur boxer in the Soviet Union before he had to join
    the Soviet army. Even when he wasn't competing, Norik would hang
    around gyms, watching, learning the craft, memorizing footwork or the
    way to throw a perfect jab.

    When the family arrived in California, Norik went to work in a
    family-run pizza parlor in Eagle Rock. In his free time, he took his
    sons, Vahe, Vanes and Vatche, to the gym every day. Vahe eventually
    gave up boxing for swimming and Vatche turned to soccer. But Vanes,
    the most inexhaustible of the boys, the fiercest competitor and the
    son most tuned to the father's love of boxing and America, stuck with
    boxing.

    "It gave me pride and it was a great outlet for my energy," he said.
    "It was a way to be so close with my father because he was always my
    coach. He had learned boxing under the Soviet and European style and
    then he spent so much time studying at home the American style. In
    his head, my dad put together both styles to teach me the best."

    Early this year, Vanes was ranked only 14th in the country in his
    weight class. Then he went 5-0 at the Western qualifier in
    Bakersfield.

    "My dad stopped smoking for a moment," Vanes said. "But then he
    started again. When I won the Olympic trials, he stopped again - but
    has started up again. I think it's his way to motivate me more for
    the gold medal. He promises, no more cigarettes if I win."

    Norik said he wouldn't smoke anymore, medal or no medal.

    "I believed when I saw my son walking inside the Olympic boxing
    arena," Norik said, "I believed that in the USA, everybody's dream
    can come true. I believed the world is mine now. And my son's. So,
    yes, I will quit smoking."

    'He has told me, since I can remember, that there would be no greater
    honor for a sportsman such as me to win a gold medal to honor our
    country.

    The United States is our country now.'

    Vanes Martirosyan speaking of his father, Norik

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X