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  • Gym's Already A Hit

    GYM'S ALREADY A HIT

    The Daily Citizen
    >From Staff Reports
    Jun 28, 2011

    North Georgia Hayastan MMA Academy hasn't been around very long, but
    owners Scott White and Leonardo Lechuga already have a few points of
    pride for the Dalton gym.

    One of the biggest highlights so far was delivered Saturday night by
    Dustin Dyer when he won the heavyweight title at X Series Fighting
    Championship's "Crossroads" event in Knoxville, Tenn.

    Dyer's technical knockout of hometown fighter Isaac Fine in the third
    round secured a belt he'll defend in October, giving both him and the
    Dalton gym's members something to look forward to in the coming months.

    "Right now, it's actually just a dream come true," said the 24-year-old
    Dyer, who is now 3-0 in mixed martial arts bouts.

    "I didn't see in my third fight actually winning a belt. I saw myself
    winning a belt, but not this early into it. Honestly, it kind of
    hasn't hit home yet."

    The gym, located at 805 South Hamilton St. (across from Bry-Man's Plaza
    South), opened only a couple months ago when White, the facility's
    head instructor, and Lechuga, who had been studying under White at
    other locations for a year, found a place to settle down.

    "For the fact that our gym has not been open that long, (Dyer) did
    very well," Lechuga said. "He's a fast learner and a really hard
    worker. He's got drive that's out of this world.

    He stays focused and he stays in the gym, training hard."

    But Dyer was joined Saturday night in Knoxville by two other fighters
    who work out at North Georgia Hayastan as they made their MMA debuts
    while fighting in X Series' Rising Fight League competition.

    David Miles, 20, who like Dyer is from Chatsworth and a former Murray
    County High wrestler, won by technical knockout in the first round of
    a 135-pound bout against Dustin Wilson of Maryville, Tenn.; 19-year-old
    Jake Hall lost to Knoxville's Andrew Herrington in the 185-pound class.

    "It's great," White said of the fighters' opportunity to compete. "I've
    had them for a little while now, since we've been in a couple other
    locations, and now we've got a spot where we can grow and we're very
    visible in the community.

    ... I'm glad that they're doing as well as they are. They put in the
    hard work and everything, so I'm glad to see them benefiting."

    Dyer, who playfully toted around his belt Monday evening at the gym
    - he was simply hanging out during a mandatory rest day required by
    White - said he had worn it into work that morning at Signs Graphics
    Printing, eager to prove wrong any "doubters" from when his interest
    in MMA emerged.

    After his high school football and wrestling days ended, Dyer said he
    gained weight, at one point getting up to 320 pounds, but eventually
    missed the competition wrestling had provided. A year ago Monday,
    he stepped into the ring for the first time by competing in a Tough
    Man competition, which he won.

    He made his MMA debut in January, winning at the Battle of Rome,
    then won his second fight a few weeks later in Chattanooga. He later
    made contact with promoters who helped put together Saturday's fight,
    a highlight for the personal journey he's undergone over the past
    few months.

    "That's the satisfaction of it, too. I'm actually in better shape
    than I was in wrestling or football," said Dyer, who now weighs in
    at 255. "It's awesome."

    Miles said he started studying kickboxing when he didn't wrestle
    his junior year at Murray County High. He was getting into trouble
    for fighting at school, and believes combat sports helped him find
    an acceptable outlet for that aggression. A year and a half ago,
    he started training and competing in grappling, while also learning
    other fighting forms.

    Now a student at the University of West Georgia, Miles trains most of
    the year at Defkon 1 in Villa Rica. But having trained under White
    in the past, he's been thankful for the opportunity to work out at
    North Georgia Hayastan during his break from school. Saturday's fight
    gave him a chance to help add weight to the gym's representation in
    Knoxville, and he was also happy plenty of his friends and family
    got to see him win his MMA debut.

    And because it was a No. 1 contender fight, Miles is now in position
    to fight for a title himself.

    "We had 50 to 60 people there watching," Miles said of the support
    for the North Georgia Hayastan trio. "Leading up to the fight, I was
    worried about doing good and winning for them and putting a show on
    for them. It finally hit me that they were there to watch me fight,
    and it didn't matter to them whether I won or lost. So then I was
    just really excited to get in there."

    While Hall lost against his 34-year-old opponent after taking a square
    punch to the head early, White said he fought well overall and should
    be able to apply the lessons learned from the bout. That's something
    Hall, who has had success in grappling tournaments, is eager to do.

    "Just some things I need to work on," said Hall, who works as a
    trainer under White. "Not letting the buildup of the fight get to
    me. My head movement - I'm going to get with a boxing coach.

    I've got a buddy of mine that's a world champion in boxing, so I'm
    going to work with him some."

    Dyer, Hall and Miles all plan to compete at Chattanooga Extreme Fight
    Night VII on July 16 in East Ridge, Tenn., and Dyer is also looking
    forward to his Oct. 22 title defense in Knoxville.

    "They say you're not a champion until you make your first defense,"
    Dyer said. "And that's how I look at it.

    I've still got a lot to improve."

    While the Dalton facility they now train at hasn't been open long,
    several of the fighters - including the three who competed Saturday
    night - from North Georgia Hayastan have been working out together
    for a while at other gyms.

    White, a former Catoosa County deputy, has a wide variety of martial
    arts experience as a student and instructor dating back to the late
    1990s, although his focus for MMA students at this gym is on the
    Hayastan hybrid fighting style developed by Gokor Chivichyan and Gene
    LeBell. White is a certified instructor for the system, having studied
    under Chivichyan, a native of Armenia who now operates a school in
    Los Angeles.

    "Since I got hooked up with him around 2002 or 2003, that's really
    been my main focus since then," White said. "We do a little bit of
    everything, though."

    Although White and Lechuga are aiming to start daytime classes in
    the future, the gym is currently open Monday through Thursday nights.

    They offer instruction in jiu-jitsu, Muay Thai kickboxing, Sambo,
    Judo, wrestling, as well as self-defense, and group and personal
    instruction is available.

    Lechuga said that while some gym members are training to compete
    in combat sports, others are simply looking to feel more secure or
    find a different way to keep active and in shape. And instruction is
    available for a wide range of ages - before older students took the
    mat on Monday, a kids class was finishing up.

    The gym offers discounts for students, families, public service
    members (law enforcement, fire department and EMS) and military,
    and currently offers a one-time one-week free pass.

    For information on the gym, contact White at (706) 271-8278 or Lechuga
    at (630) 301-1743.

    © 2011 The Associated Press.

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