US & Olympic boxing

Discussion in 'Boxing' started by Tom O'Brien, Aug 28, 2008.

  1. Tom O'Brien

    Tom O'Brien Valued Member

    Wilder’s bronze only US medal in boxing
    By BARRY WILNER, AP Sports Writer
    Aug 22, 5:29 am EDT

    Buzz Up Print
    BEIJING (AP)—Deontay Wilder was the last American standing in Olympic boxing. That also made him the last U.S. fighter to lose in the team’s worst performance ever.

    Wilder goes home with a bronze after being outclassed and outpointed by amateur heavyweight world champion Clemente Russo in the semifinals Friday. It was a classic mismatch in which Russo controlled all the action, never letting Wilder get on track. The 7-1 score was only that close because Russo fought defensively after building a lead he knew the raw Wilder couldn’t cut.

    The lone medal meant the United States equaled its 1948 showing in London— except that medal was a silver by Horace Herring at 147 pounds.

    But Wilder wasn’t crushed by failing to make the gold medal bout, or by failing to get a point against Russo until 8 seconds remained in the fourth and final round.

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    “Guys with my experience don’t do that well against guys like that,” the 22-year-old from Tuscaloosa, Ala., said. “I think it’s a points thing, although I think I scored more than that.

    “That’s life. You have a setback sometimes. You’ve got to live with it.

    “To be here and win a medal is great. I’m not a guy to complain. I’ll get back in the gym to work and get better.”

    That’s something the entire U.S. team needs to do in a big way.

    Coach Dan Campbell would not discuss the weak showing in Beijing, but did explain what happened to Wilder, who has been boxing for less than three years.

    “It was his inexperience, and the guy he’s fighting,” Campbell said. “The guy had a sound game plan, boxes well and uses his legs well. There were some execution things we wanted to do and didn’t.

    “We wanted to take the fight to him and we didn’t.”

    Wilder will take his bronze medal home to 3-year-old daughter Naieya, who has spina bifida. He has a tattoo on his chest with her name that serves as his inspiration and helped carry him farther than any of his teammates.

    And he’s certain his spot on the Olympic team helped bring awareness of his daughter’s condition.

    “A lot of people don’t know what it is,” Wilder said of spina bifida, a birth defect in which the spinal cord develops improperly. “People know the story she has now and my being here made it even more known.”

    Wilder once worked as a beer truck driver and in a restaurant to help pay Naieya’s massive doctor bills. He’s very raw as a fighter, but his size (6-foot-7, 200 pounds) and intelligence make him a good professional prospect. Owning a bronze medal can’t hurt his stock, either.

    But he’s not thinking much about turning pro and plans to return to college for a business degree.

    “I don’t think money makes you happy,” he said. “You’ve got some of the richest people in the world who are miserable.

    “I have goals set for myself, and just for me to go after these goals and be successful is the way to be happy.”

    Asked when he would fight for one of the heavyweight belts in the professional ranks, Wilder smiled widely.

    “There’s no way to see the future. What will happen happens,” he said. “But my work ethic, my big heart, my determination—those are my strengths.”
     

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