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Fighter is Glendale's badge of honor

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  • Fighter is Glendale's badge of honor

    Glendale News Press
    LATimes.com
    Aug 19 2004

    Fighter is Glendale's badge of honor

    Vanes Martirosyan is the most prominent success story from local
    boxing program that is due for a comeback in September.

    By Josh Kleinbaum, News-Press


    GLENDALE - When Vanes Martirosyan went to Rosemont Middle School, he
    had a tendency to be disruptive. An energetic boy and an aspiring
    boxer, the Armenian-born kid would lose his focus, leading to
    trouble.

    Once, his guidance counselor at Rosemont wanted to suspend him.
    Instead, Officer Ron Williams, who ran Glendale's Police Athletic
    League youth boxing program, made a deal with the counselor: If Vanes
    slacks off, Williams will suspend him from boxing.

    "I suspended him two times," Williams said. "Each time, he came back
    with more dedication and determination, and his schooling improved."

    Now, Martirosyan is an 18-year-old welterweight fighter representing
    the United States in the Olympics. Today, he will fight Cuba's
    Lorenzo Aragon, a two-time world champion.

    Martirosyan should be the poster boy for the Police Department's
    boxing program, which has produced several successful professionals
    but no other Olympians. He joined the program at 7, a few months shy
    of the minimum age requirement - Williams made an exception for him.
    He quickly became one of the program's best boxers. By 14,
    Martirosyan outgrew the program, and Williams recommended another
    gym, where he could get sponsorship to travel to the top tournaments.

    The poster boy image has one problem. For now, the Police
    Department's boxing program, designed to give discipline and
    direction to troubled youth, is in hibernation.

    The program lost its venue last year, when Roosevelt Middle School
    underwent major renovations. Then, facing budget cuts, the department
    reassigned Williams from the Police Activities League to regular
    patrol.

    "Some of the kids who are looking to have a way to get rid of their
    frustrations and get their discipline, this is a good venue for
    them," Mayor Bob Yousefian said. "They come in and punch the bags.
    This is a way to take aggravation out on a bag rather than a person.
    It's keeping a lot of at-risk youth out of jails, and it's generating
    less headaches for the police department."

    Sgt. Ron Insalaco said the program will be back in September at
    Wilson Middle School, with a civilian and a sworn officer running the
    program. Williams will not be involved, Insalaco said.

    Martirosyan is the program's most high-profile success story, but
    he's not the only one. William Abelyan, a featherweight, has a 23-5
    record. William Adamyan, a light welterweight, has a 9-1 record.
    Ernie Zavala, a light welterweight with an 18-3 record, trains with
    Freddie Roach, Mike Tyson's trainer.

    Just as important, Williams said, are the people who joined the
    program and never had success in the sport.

    "Even if a kid can't box or had no athletic ability, when he or she
    put on that [Police Athletic League] shirt, there was a sense of
    pride," Williams said. "It's difficult to weigh the program's
    success, but from the comments I get today, it's clear that it's a
    valuable asset to the department and the city."

    Martirosyan's success is a little easier to measure. Entering the
    Olympic qualifying tournament, he was ranked the No. 14 amateur
    welterweight, and he shocked most boxing experts by grabbing the
    welterweight Olympic spot. After he dominated Algeria's Benamar
    Meskine, 45-20, in his opening fight Sunday, NBC's Olympic website
    called him "America's Longest Shot." If he beats Aragon today, that
    long shot may have a golden shot.

    "I'm positive he's going to win a gold medal," Williams said. "You
    heard it here first. Positive."
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