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Mighty mite Ali adds to Iraq's Olympic triumphs with boxing win

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  • Mighty mite Ali adds to Iraq's Olympic triumphs with boxing win

    Mighty mite Ali adds to Iraq's Olympic triumphs with boxing win

    By GREG BEACHAM
    .c The Associated Press


    ATHENS, Greece (AP) - For just one evening, Najah Ali felt 10 feet
    tall and unbeatable.

    Iraq's only Olympic boxer added another triumph to his war-torn
    nation's unexpected success at the Olympic on Wednesday, beating North
    Korea's Kwak Hyok Ju 21-7 to advance to the second round in the light
    flyweight bracket.

    Ali, the games' smallest fighter at 1.5 meters (4-foot-11) and 48 kg
    (106 pounds), outslugged his taller opponent from the start, peppering
    the Korean with jabs and combinations. With his nation's flag on his
    chest and his American coach's chosen slogan - ``Iraq Is Back'' -
    across his back, Ali punched, feinted and danced across the ring for
    four impressive rounds.

    When it was over, Ali pumped his fist over his head and jumped for joy
    while a handful of flag-waving Iraq fans screamed and chanted his
    name. Just reaching the Olympics was a triumph - but winning was
    unimaginably better.

    ``It's a victory for Iraq and for Iraqis all over the world,'' said
    Ali, who looks much younger than his 24 years. ``I'm a symbol for a
    lot of people looking for a good life. I'm a symbol for freedom.''

    Ali's victory arrived on the heels of the Iraqi soccer team's wins
    over Portugal and Costa Rica. The Olympics already have been
    improbably successful for a nation that was banned from competition
    last year by the IOC.

    After the fight, Ali received several kisses from Maurice ``Termite''
    Watkins, a Texan who went to Iraq last year to provide pest control
    for the U.S. Army - and wound up coaching 21 Iraqi fighters. Termite
    and his mighty mite pursued their dream from the Philippines to
    Michigan's Upper Peninsula - and for four rounds in Athens, everything
    came together.

    ``I felt as good as a man can feel,'' Watkins said. ``Whether he wins
    another fight or not, he's a winner now in the Olympics.''

    Ehad Hussain, the Iraqi press attache, was unsure of his nation's
    total number of Olympic boxing victories, but Iraq has never medaled.

    ``How can I express my feelings?'' Hussain said. ``It's a wonderful
    thing for the people of Iraq. Just a wonderful thing.''

    The Iraqi boxing program largely was ignored when Uday Hussein ran the
    nation's sports programs - and that might have been a lucky break for
    the boxers. Ali has seen the torture and abuse of athletes, mostly
    soccer players, who didn't live up to Hussein's standards.

    Ali, a college graduate who was working in a furniture factory before
    joining the team, was introduced to boxing by his father, a former
    Iraqi champion.

    ``I'm sure he's jumping now in front of the screen,'' Ali said. ``In
    Iraq, everyone is jumping.''

    Ali spent six weeks training with the U.S. team in Colorado earlier
    this year, also making stops in Houston and Marquette, Mich., with his
    colorful coach. Watkins is a raconteur and a boaster, a former
    used-car salesman and lightweight boxer who took time out from
    dispatching black flies and snakes to rebuild Iraq's national team.

    After training in a bombed-out Baghdad gym, Watkins led his team
    around Asia in several failed attempts to qualify any fighters for the
    games. When asked to choose one boxer for the IOC's special invitation
    to Athens, he selected Ali.

    The fighter carried the flag in the opening ceremonies, leading Iraq's
    delegation of six individual athletes and the soccer team.

    Watkins was joined in Ali's corner by U.S. head coach Basheer
    Abdullah, who agreed to help out Watkins in Ali's corner after getting
    to know the Iraqi fighter during training.

    The coaches knew Ali caught an enormous break drawing Kwak as his
    first-round opponent. The Korean gave perhaps the most awkward
    performance of any fighter at the games, completely unable to contend
    with the diminutive dynamo ducking and dodging in front of him.

    ``I don't want to say anybody is easy in the Olympics, but we thanked
    God we had that type of draw to get him some confidence,'' Abdullah
    said.

    After the Olympics, Watkins believes Ali will turn pro, perhaps also
    returning to Houston to work on a master's degree in computer science.

    But first, there's the matter of another Olympic fight Saturday
    against Armenia's Aleksan Nalbandyan. Ali will be a heavy underdog -
    but he has faced bigger challenges.

    ``If he's right, he can beat anybody,'' Watkins said. ``He's that
    good.''

    08/19/04 02:01 EDT

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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