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Olympian visits Brownsville, Texas

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  • Olympian visits Brownsville, Texas

    Brownsville Herald, TX
    June 25 2004

    Olympian visits Brownsville
    By Criselda Valdez Villarreal
    The Brownsville Herald

    June 25, 2004 - Vanes Martirosyan lives and breathes the adage that
    `winners never quit and quitters never win.'

    Martirosyan - the No. 1-ranked welterweight boxer in the United
    States - traveled to Brownsville on Thursday to visit with
    participants in the 2004 U.S. Junior Olympic National Championship
    games.

    The now Glendale, Calif., resident moved from Armenia to the United
    States when he was 4. Nearly four years later, Martirosyan's father
    Noviq encouraged his active son to ``do something positive and go to
    the gym,'' Martirosyan, now 18, said Thursday at the Jacob Brown
    Auditorium.

    At the urging of his father, Martirosyan put on his first set of
    boxing gloves and learned the sport. Eventually, his older brother
    Vahe and his younger brother Vatche also started boxing.

    When the time came that he wanted to play basketball, the Martirosyan
    patriarch wouldn't let him leave. Perhaps his father saw his second
    born had Olympic potential.

    His father was right.

    In a few weeks, Martirosyan will travel to Athens, Greece for the
    second time this summer to participate in the 2004 Olympics Games as
    part of the boxing team.

    The trip from his home in California to the island is just a plane
    ride over, but the journey to the U.S. Olympic team was a little more
    difficult.

    There are seven Olympic team-qualifying games, according to Julie
    Goldsticker, USA Boxing director of media and public relations.

    The last two were the Everlast U.S. Championships in Colorado and the
    Western trials in Bakersfield, Calif. - and the only two that
    Martirosyan fought in.

    The championships in January ended in disqualification after
    Martirosyan threw a `body shot,' Goldsticker said.

    With only one chance left at the Western trials in early February,
    Martirosyan said his father and Uncle Serg Martirosyan encouraged him
    to have fun. After all, they told him, he had nothing to lose.

    Walking into the trials as a relative unknown and definite underdog,
    Martirosyan's first fight was against the U.S. No. 2-ranked boxer in
    the welterweight division Timothy Bradley.

    `I beat him,' he said quietly.

    After winning the championships, Martirosyan moved on to the Olympic
    Team Trials in Tunica, Miss., just two weeks later. According to
    Goldsticker, the winners are determined by double elimination and the
    winner of a `box-off' - which features the winner of the weight-class
    and the winner of the consolation weight-class - in Cleveland.

    Martirosyan walked into the `box-off' the champion and after winning
    that game, became an Olympian.

    He had just one more trial ahead before being named to the team -
    Gold Rush games in Tijuana, Mexico. To be on the team, Martirosyan
    explained, boxers have to win an international game.

    Andre Berto, formerly ranked first in the United States before
    leaving for his native home in Haiti, proved to be his biggest
    competitor.

    Martirosyan won in a decision match after four rounds.

    `I had to beat him to prove to everyone that I (deserved) to go,' he
    said.

    He knows that had it not been for his father encouraging him to stay
    with boxing, he wouldn't be going to Athens.

    `I'm going for the gold,' he said.

    Martirosyan and two other members of the U.S. Olympic boxing team
    will be at the former Amigoland Mall at 7 p.m. today for the first
    Boxing on the Border fund-raiser for the Foundation for Brownsville
    Sports.

    The fund-raiser will feature auctions, and attendees will have the
    chance to meet the three boxing Olympians.

    To purchase tickets or for more information on the Boxing on the
    Border Fundraiser, call Dr. Rose Gowen's office at 504-6880.
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