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Two More Americans Fall in Olympic Boxing

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  • Two More Americans Fall in Olympic Boxing

    Associated Press
    Aug 20 2004

    Two More Americans Fall in Olympic Boxing

    GREG BEACHAM


    ATHENS, Greece - While Rock Allen chased Boris Georgiev around the
    ring in a futile attempt to slow the agile Bulgarian fighter, Allen's
    father shouted from the stands:

    "Stop running and box! Stop running and box!"

    No chance, Dad. The best amateur boxers know just how to move and
    exactly when to pounce - and two Americans who failed to match that
    style are out of the Olympics.

    Allen was pounded 30-10 in his light welterweight bout and
    welterweight Vanes Martirosyan was beaten 20-11 by Cuba's Lorenzo
    Aragon in second-round matches Thursday at Peristeri Olympic Boxing
    Hall.

    Light heavyweight Andre Ward advanced to the quarterfinals with a
    17-9 win over Italy's Clemente Russo, but he soon will have the same
    problems as his teammates. Ward's next fight is against Russia's
    Evgeny Makarenko, a two-time world champion who battered Cuba's Yoan
    Pablo Hernandez moments before Ward's fight.

    The U.S. sent eight fighters into the second round with six victories
    and two byes, but coach Basheer Abdullah knows it will be tough to
    improve on the four medals won by American boxers four years ago in
    Sydney. Americans once dominated Olympic boxing, but scoring changes
    and the lure of professional money have eviscerated the program.

    "We have yet to prove as a team that we can compete against the best
    in the world," Abdullah said. "Those bouts that we won, we were
    supposed to win those bouts. If we could have won against a Cuban or
    a Bulgarian, that would have been a great start to the round for us."

    Lightweight Vicente Escobedo is the only American fighting Friday.
    The Woodland, Calif., native is hoping for a victory over
    Azerbaijan's Rovshan Huseynov to move into the quarterfinals - where
    he would probably face Cuban powerhouse Mario Kindelan.

    In his only fight of the Olympics, Allen fell behind Georgiev early
    and never caught up. Not in the ring, where Georgiev practically ran
    circles around him, or on the scoreboard.

    Allen, a Philadelphia native who will turn pro in a few weeks, knows
    all about the problems with amateur boxing for fighters who share his
    power-based, stand-and-punch style.

    "Olympic-style boxing moves at a much faster pace for those short
    four rounds," Allen said. "In the pros, we've got all kinds of time.
    The best guys at the Olympics are veteran guys, and this is all they
    know. A lot of these guys, you're going to see in 2008 or 2012. I
    have a pro style, and it's hard for me to adapt."

    Ward, an Oakland, Calif., native, was more successful in a sometimes
    plodding victory. After a first-round bye, Ward was eager to get his
    first Olympic action - but he knows his bout against Makarenko easily
    is the biggest test of his six-year winning streak.

    "I saw him walk out. He's big," said Ward, a natural middleweight who
    bulked up several years ago in an effort to avoid fighting his
    cousin. "He's not the first big guy I've fought, though. I've been
    fighting giants my whole life."

    Martirosyan had an entirely different set of problems against Aragon,
    a master of the punching technique that generates the best Olympic
    results. Aragon seemed to score points with any sort of punch, while
    Martirosyan only scored for his best hits.

    Martirosyan, who was born in Armenia, staggered Aragon twice with
    quick shots to the head, but the Cuban piled up enough early points
    to hang on in a fight much closer than the score.

    "He tries to frustrate you with the holding," Martirosyan said. "He
    holds you, pulls you back and makes it look like you're holding, and
    you're not. It frustrates you. I thought I scored more points, and I
    thought I should have won."

    It's a familiar refrain for fighters facing the Cuban team, which is
    given a world of respect by amateur judges. Ditto for the Russians:
    Welterweight Oleg Saitov, a two-time gold medalist, beat Egypt's
    Mohamed Hikal 18-17 Thursday night even though Hikal dominated the
    first three rounds.
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