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  • U.S. Olympic boxer fought here last year

    Alexandria Town Talk, LA
    July 11 2004

    TOMPKINS: U.S. Olympic boxer fought here last year
    Bob Tompkins / Staff Reporter/Columnist


    USA Boxing officials weren't kidding last year when they said there
    might be a future Olympian in the Under-19 National Championship
    Boxing Tournament that was held last August in Alexandria.

    There was.

    Vanes Matriroysan, a native Armenian and resident of Glendale, Calif.
    who lost the 152-pound title bout to Nick Casal of Niagra Falls,
    N.Y., here last August, is one of nine members on the U.S. Boxing
    Team that will compete next month in Athens.

    Curiously, after Casal won the title by beating Martirosyan, he said,
    "It was the most competitive fight I've had this year. He definitely
    belonged in the finals. He's a good fighter."

    Martiroysyan, 18, was ranked just 14th in his weight class in
    January, but he won 11 fights in six weeks and took advantage of
    slips by boxers with bigger reputations to make the U.S. Olympic
    team.

    A semifinalist at this year's U.S. Championships in Colorado Springs,
    Colo., Martirosyan then beat five foes in five days to win the
    Western Trials, which got him to the Olympic Trials. After America's
    top two welterweights were disqualified, Martirosyan advanced to the
    Trials final and beat Corey Jones, 18-4. He then outpointed Austin
    Trout at the Box-Offs to make the U.S. team and won the Americas
    qualifier in Tijuana, Mexico.

    Vicente Escobedo, another member of the U.S. team, didn't box here
    last August, but Anthony Vasquez of Snyder, Texas, who was runner-up
    in the 132-pound finals in the Under-19 Championships here, pulled
    the upset of the U.S. Championships last March by defeating Escobedo.
    The U.S. National Champion in '03, Escobedo, 22, won the Western
    Trials to get back on track to making the Olympic team.

    Eric Parthen, the executive director of USA Boxing, expressed
    disappointment last week that Alexandria is no longer trying to build
    a USA Boxing Southern training center, as it hoped to do a year ago
    before state and federal grants for such a project were rejected.

    "We're certainly disappointed that hasn't become a reality," Parthen
    said, "yet Central Louisiana is still being mentioned as a possible
    site in the future, so it's not dead yet."

    Officials from USA Boxing spoke highly of this community, the
    hospitality and news coverage during their experience here last
    summer, when Alexandria hosted the U.S. Junior Olympics and the
    International Invitational Boxing Tournament in addition to the
    Under-19 National Championships.

    After all those positives, it's a shame the bitter aftertaste lingers
    with Louisiana College's logical legal bout with Houston's Galena
    Park Boxing Academy and Youth Center for not paying a $78,000 bill
    for food and lodging for the boxers during the first two events.

    Galena Park director Kenny Weldon said many times to local officials
    that while his group could bring the events to town, it could not
    afford to finance them. The England Authority last summer voted to
    provide "up to $30,000" to help with the financing of the U.S. Junior
    Olympics (facility rentals, lodging, etc.) and the City of
    Alexandria, according to Councilman Myron Lawson, agreed to
    contribute $35,000 as a general sponsorship for the first two events.
    Those events, incidentally, never would have taken place here without
    LC's help.

    We can't wait to see how this gets resolved, and LC, understandably,
    wants the waiting to end.
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