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Friday Aug 8, 2008

The team is in turmoil, Borges says. Can Team USA pull together, and bring some medals back from Beijing?

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Team USA, Team Turmoil

By Ron Borges

There will be 284 amateur boxers in Beijing over the next month trying to live a lifelong dream. Eight will be trying to alter a nightmare which has already begun anew even before these Olympic Games have.

      The United States has won only three gold medals in boxing over the past 20 years, a number so miniscule it has been exceeded not only by amateur boxing powers Cuba and Russia but also by Kazakhstan (four) and tied by Thailand. Now a new team of kids averaging barely 20 years old is in China trying to reverse what has been a slow decline in our Olympic fortunes in boxing amidst controversy and a near mutiny against tough-minded head coach Dan Campbell.

      One long-time critic of Campbell’s was Gary Russell, Sr., whose son Gary, Jr. collapsed in his room at the Games after a training run Thursday designed to help him make a 119-pound weight limit he had not reached in six months with the U.S. team in Colorado Springs. Never less than 125 pounds during that time, Russell was one of six U.S. boxers who all but mutinied against Campbell’s strict demands and training methods. Now he’s out of the Games, where boxing competition is set to begin Saturday, and serves as a reminder that once again U.S.A. boxing is more about controversy and collapse than medal count.

      Campbell has been critical of at least six of the team’s nine fighters and blames them for what grew into a near mutiny in June when three of the nine went home from Colorado Springs and failed to return as scheduled. Nineteen year old Luis Yanez was temporarily thrown off the team and labeled a “liar’’ by Campbell during the affair. Ultimately he appealed and he was returned to the team amidst a growing public split between the athletes and Campbell.

      “This is not really a team at this point,’’ said Russell, Sr., his son’s coach and a loud critic of Campbell’s methods. He is one of at least a half dozen personal coaches who have privately trained their fighters in hotel rooms after the regular training sessions were finished in Colorado, pushing back hotel furniture to make enough room to prepare their young fighters without Campbell’s knowledge.

      Campbell’s rejection of input from those coaches, who in many cases had been training the team’s boxers for years, has been another aspect of the problems long plaguing U.S.A. Boxing, which is at the moment on probation by the USOC because of its two decades of medal failures, financial mismanagement and consistent problems with the way it runs the sport.

      Yet despite all the troubles, which loomed once again Friday after Russell collapsed and failed to make weight not long after the 65-year-old Campbell had questioned his work ethic, two young Americans are believed to have a strong chance at a gold medal.

      One, 20-year-old welterweight Demetrius “Boo Boo’’ Andrade, is typical of today’s U.S. amateurs. Unlike the Cuban team and many of the Eastern Europeans, the American team is filled with first-time Olympians who average only 20 years old. Andrade may be the best of them and he has been aided in his medal quest with the banning of his top rival, Erislandy Lara, the Cuban gold medalist thrown off their team after a failed defection attempt.

      The one exception to the American team’s lack of Olympic experience is 24-yerar-old flyweight Rau’shee Warren, who four years ago was the first American boxer eliminated from the Games. Now he’s back after winning bronze at the 2005 world championships and gold last year as the first U.S. Olympic boxer since Davey Armstrong in 1972 and 1976 to compete in two Olympic Games.

      “The timing for going pro wasn’t right,’’ Warren told RING Magazine recently. “My Mom and my coach pushed me to go for another Olympics. Now that I look back it would have been hard being a 17-year-old flyweight. They convinced me to go for another Olympics and they were right.’’

      While that departure from the norm in the U.S. is a good thing what is not is the continued demise of our bigger body fighters. For the first time the United States failed to qualify a fighter in the light heavyweight or super heavyweight divisions, meaning we had competitors in only nine of the 11 classes until Russell was forced to withdraw Thursday night.

      Now that number is down to eight on the eve of the opening of the competition and the absence of Russell will only drive home the point so many of the personal coaches and at least six of our nine fighters kept making that something is wrong with a system that insists the U.S. pick its team a year in advance of the Games and then live together for nearly a year in Colorado Springs while being coached only by Campbell and his staff and living far from home and the familiarity of their individual coaches.

      This is not the case with our Olympic swimmers, gymnasts or track and field stars nor is it the norm for our competitors in less well known sports. While they may compete together at times, most train on their own with only occasional trips to Colorado Springs, where the U.S.O.C. maintains its headquarters and national training center.

      Yanez left that camp in June to go home for a brief break but did not return until he was threatened with expulsion from the team. He claimed he had stayed behind to care for his sister’s four children while she was in drug rehab. Campbell claimed Yanez was “a liar’’ but lost his authority battle when Yanez won an appeal and was restored to the team under the dark cloud of a potential boycott by at least six members of the boxing team if their captain was not restored to the roster.

      Now, on the eve of the opening competition on Saturday, the U.S. team has lost one of its nine qualifiers, Russell, and his collapse in his room after a training run in the humid and smog-filled air of Beijing seemed a sad symbol of what has now been 20 years of frustration and failures for the U.S. boxing team.

      During the last four Olympiads the U.S. has won only three gold medals and was shutout in 2000 at the Games in Sydney. This year we have two fighters, Warren and Andrade, who are seen as likely medalists and possible gold medalists. But the team is made up of no one older than 23, half of which are teenagers trying to erase what has become two decades of turbulence and disappointment. With Russell’s withdrawal from the Beijing Games less than 48 hours before the Opening Ceremonies, it appears their difficult task just got a bit more daunting.



Radam G:  Wow! Fightwriter Ron B -- P4P the top gun around -- I'm totally perplexed. There has always been pure hell on the USA boxing teams. There are so many secrets that make U.S. amateur boxing pathetic. There is a long history of team members' coaches complaining about the national ones, and wanting to train their own boxers or sons. I guess this problem will never go away. A hard research will be astounding to you. Ask the Spinks brothers about the efforts to keep them off the team in 1976. Ask Michael Dokes about the under-hand dealing that kept him off the team in 1976. Ask Howard Davies how he almost didn't make the team because of politics and his unspoken-about religion. Ask Pernell Whitaker about efforts against him in 1984. Ask Michael Tyson about the smooth operations that kept him off the team in 1984. Ask Chris Byrd about the politics of 1988. Gosh! I could go on forever. Yanez was very lucky. Being from Texas, it was no way that Prez Bush was going to let that kid get railroad. But ask the guys who have been kicked off the U.S. Olympic Boxing Teams throughout the years. Well, time for me to enjoy the Games and stay off this darn computer. Holla!
Friday Aug 8, 2008
Radam G :  One last point. Gary Russell Jr and Senior should be ashamed of themselves. The O Team was what it was. Gary Jr had plenty of time to make weight, but he just punked out, because of his war with Campbell. STUPID! Campbell was not fighting in the Games, Russell Jr was. As an elite American amateur boxer, he knows the systems, how it works and the long line of guys during well in the Games despite the dislike of an the team coach. This Fat-azz Junior coulda, shoulda and woulda made the weight and fought in the Games, if his father would have just left the kid alone. Life is not always fair or the way that a person want it to be. SHAME ON Russell Sr. Nobody is acting stupid on the Pinoy Olympic Team! Holla!
Friday Aug 8, 2008
ben oconnor:  unbelievable some of the stories you never really here of here in england about the u.s.a team. we have our own russell jr on the gb team, frankie gavin!! he was a hot gold medal favourite and has been gearing for these olympics for 3 or more years now and then wednesday comes and he cant make 9st 6!!!!!? does anyone else think this weight issue is a smokescreen?????
Saturday Aug 9, 2008
Nikk:  Mike Tyson missed out in 1984 before Henry Tilman handed him his a$$ - Twice. At thatjuncture, Tyson wasn't the force of nature that he would become. He was quite mediocre and timid as an amateur, and certainly not even close to the level of an olympian hero.
Saturday Aug 9, 2008
jc:  Dear mr. Radam G, who the hell do you think youare? Unless you are or have been a boxer on any level please shut up! I'm a level 2 USA amateur boxing coach for Region 3 , specifically here in Miami,Fl. I have taken my boxers to over 30 national and countless regional competitions ,one these boxers happens to be my son who decided to leave the sport to pursue a career in law enforcement. But to the point, my sons second ever match was against Gary Russell jr, in Agusta , Georgia during the 2000 Silver Gloves Regional in which my son lost to him, after which theyve become lifelong friend and have great respect for each other, as in following tournaments they had the honor to represent region 3 together and both win in their respective weight classes. Gary is a superbly gifted ,honest, respectful and hardworking young man who got all the aforementioned traits from a strong dedicated family nucleus headed by his father. Mr. Radam G, unless you have had to care for 25 plus athletes with varying ages in a out of town competition in which you not only have the boxers YOU trained but those of youre association with their distinct eating and training habits then i truly believe you are in no position to criticize. Gary has one of the most self demanding workots out there his conditioning is A1 ,but all that goes to crap when you have a governing body as we do with USA Boxing who still refuses to recognize the importance of these young kids personal coaches in their day to day lives athletic, academic and emotional, and then add on a despot and dictator like Head Coach Campell who refuses to bend. What did you really expect ? You want these athletes to act like adults but youre missing the point THEY ARE STILL KIDS AND WILL MAKE MISTAKES. What happened to Gary happens on a daily basis to amateur boxers around the country it's unfortunate and you have no right to demonize them or their trainers. LETS KEEP THE EYE ON THE GOLD "GO TEAM USA"
Saturday Aug 9, 2008
ICEMAN:  I have known since I was a member of a USA (vs the USSR) training camp back in the 1980-'s, and then as a coach in the 1990's, that the Team USA methods of training are RIDICULOUS...for one thing there is way too much emphasis put on just hard all out training and, 2, they call it a team but in REALITY boxing is the most individual sport out there and the boxers need to be trained as individuals, NOT as a team. Many of these guys have larger than necessary egos and it shows when they wont take input from the personal coaches.
Monday Aug 11, 2008
Anonymous user:  Actuaslly, NIKK, Tyson was a very good amateur who defeated -and in many cases stopped- some of the top amateurs out there, even internationally. He KO'd several national champions in fact an actually won several national titles himself including TWO JO titles, an under-19, a National Golden Gloves title and two Ohio State Fair crowns. ICE
Monday Aug 11, 2008
Radam G:  Also, by being in the U.S. Armed Forces, hard training never affected me. This is why it was always best to get well-trained military athletes, instead of lazy, hardheaded, hotheaded civilians -- if they were not elite. These punks would always would diss the national team coaches. Holla!
Monday Aug 11, 2008
Radam G :  My bad! I use to be in the U.S. Armed Forces. Those days are over. I gotta get back the events. Too bad that Russell Jr punked out. A Pinoy, Chinoy, Espanoloy or Araboy would have kicked his butt. Go all my Kanos, who made weight and are proud to be representing the U.S.A. Go to all the warriors representin' their homelands. Holla!
Monday Aug 11, 2008
Anonymous user:  The reason that the USA have won only three medals in the last twenty years is because the pro promoters are picking them off even before the come to national prominance - pro boxing keeps taking but gives nothing back. For instance, soccers world governing body FIFA has made it a legal obligation for clubs to hand back a tiny percentage of of the massive transfers fess to the schoolboy clubs where the players learned their trade - the onus is on the clubs to prove they were registered with them at schoolboy level, At least this sees some of the money being ploughed back into the devolepment of the game. But not with pro boxing, it takes what it can get from the amateur scene and gives zilch back - and then they complain that there is no talent coming through. No wonder there isn't, amateur clubs are surviving on shoe string budgets and goodwill, while some of the sports former stars and their promoters are raking in the money. Unless they start giving money back, then there will be no pro boxing, because these kids have to learn the trade somewhere and the only people providing them with "schooling" are the amateurs.
Friday Aug 15, 2008

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