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By NotiFight

Este martes, se desarrolló la primera jornada de labores de la 29 Convención Anual de la Organización Mundial de Boxeo (OMB), que tiene como escenario el Hotel Caribe Hilton de San Juan, Puerto Rico, con la presencia de delegados de todos los continentes del mundo. Esta jornada se centró en las elecciones del Comité Ejecutivo que presidirá la OMB durante los próximos cuatro años.

El puertorriqueño Francisco “Paco” Valcárcel, fue propuesto nuevamente al cargo de Presidente de la OMB, y su reelección fue unánime, confirmando el liderazgo y capacidad de gestión de este abogado boricua, que ha dirigido con buen suceso los destinos de este organismo a nivel mundial.

“Me llena de alegría, porque en una votación donde todo el mundo tiene derecho a postularse, tuvimos el apoyo de todas estas personas para salir nuevamente electo”, manifestó Valcárcel. “Un proceso donde tuvimos más de 60 países representados y ejerciendo su voto de manera secreta. Estoy muy contento, aunque a veces uno quisiera irse por lo sacrificado que es, las circunstancias y el compromiso no te permiten irte. Estoy satisfecho, ya que la Organización sigue creciendo y seguimos aportando mucho al deporte”.

También fueron electos John Duggan como Primer Vicepresidente, Erno Labega como Segundo Vicepresidente, Genaro “Gino” Rodríguez como Tercer Vicepresidente y Rolando Marcos Hermoso como Cuarto Vicepresidente.

Además, Adolfo “Fito” Flores revalidó como Tesorero y Luis Pérez como Comisionado Internacional. Pérez no estará presente en este cónclave de boxeo, debido a serios problemas de salud con su espalda. Pero continuará en la OMB, siempre trabajando de la mano con Valcárcel.

Mientras, Markus Aslani, Igor Mazurov, Rafael López Santos y John Handleaar fueron electos como Miembros del Comité Ejecutivo.

“Vamos a hacer unos nombramientos nuevos que estamos estudiando en estos momentos y estaremos anunciando durante la Convención”, dijo el Lcdo. Valcárcel. “Va a haber bastantes cambios en la composición del Organismo y en las personas que nos están ayudando en la labor del día a día”.

Markus Aslani tomó la palabra en la jornada matutina y anunció su renuncia como Coordinador del Boxeo Femenino. Propuso a la austríaca Marion Palatin como su sucesora, decisión que fue aceptaba por la Directiva de la OMB.

Erno Labega, quien fue electo como Segundo Vicepresidente, es por primera vez que laborará como directivo de la OMB. Prácticamente, ocupará el puesto de su madre Jacinth Brayn-Labega, quien deja el puesto y fue nombrada como Asesora del Comité Ejecutivo de la OMB.

By: NotiFight

En medio de un gran ambiente de camaradería, el puertorriqueño Francisco “Paco” Valcárcel, presidente de la Organización Mundial de Boxeo (OMB), dio la bienvenida a todos los participantes de la 29 Convención Anual de este organismo, que se desarrolla a partir de este lunes en el Hotel Caribe Hilton de San Juan, Puerto Rico.

La bienvenida tuvo lugar en uno de los salones principales del Hotel Caribe Hilton, un acogedor hotel ubicado a las orillas del Mar Caribe. Valcárcel se mostró contento por la gran participación de promotores, manejadores, jueces, árbitros y toda la familia del boxeo internacional, que estará presente esta semana en la capital de Puerto Rico.

Este martes, a primera hora, se pondrá en marcha la primera jornada de labores de la Convención Anual y en el transcurso de la semana, se espera el arribo del mexicano Saúl “Canelo” Álvarez, quien recibirá el cinturón superwelter de la OMB.

By David Finger

The 29th annual WBO convention kicked off Monday night at the beautiful Caribe Hilton Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The event started off with the 19th annual golf tournament at 6AM at the El Legado Golf Club in Guayama. At 7PM the festivities began as numerous WBO officials from around the world hit the Blue Martini near the Hotel Caribe for the welcome cocktail ceremony.

The 2016 Convention continues tomorrow as the General Assembly of the WBO Executive Committee kick off at 8AM in the San Cristobal room at the Hotel Caribe.

GUAYAMA, PR,- Durante la mañana de hoy, bajo un sol incandescente que azotaba a ‘La Isla del Encanto’, la Organización Mundial de Boxeo (OMB) y su Presidente Lcdo. Francisco ‘Paco’ Valcárcel, celebró el Décimo Noveno Torneo de Golf WBO en El Legado Golf Club de Guayama, Puerto Rico, como parte de las actividades de la Vigésimo Novena Convención Anual de la OMB, la cual se celebra en el Hotel Caribe Hilton hasta el 21 de octubre.

El campo de golf fue separado por el ingeniero Carlos Matos, quien es el propietario del lugar, para que la OMB y sus invitados pudieran celebrar el torneo de manera exclusiva.

Entre los ganadores, el cuatro veces Campeón Mundial, Miguel Cotto, ganó el tercer lugar en la categoría Neto y Carl Moretti, Vicepresidente de Top Rank, ganó ‘El tiro más recto’.

Mientras, en la categoría ‘Gross’, el árbitro Albert Brown ganó el tercer lugar, el juez Rocky Young se llevó el segundo lugar y el promotor alemán, Thomas Schmidt, cargó con el primer puesto y el premio de ‘El tiro más largo’.

Además, el premio de participación fue para el árbitro y juez polaco, Leszek Jankowiac, esto al acumular la puntuación más alta de la competencia.

La actividad contó con un desayuno cortesía de Burger King y un almuerzo que incluyó un exquisito lechón asado, sancocho y sabrosos entremeses puertorriqueños.

En el torneo participaron oficiales de la OMB, promotores, boxeadores y otras personalidades del boxeo a nivel mundial.

Para más información relacionada a la 29na Convención de la OMB, accedan a: www.wboboxing.com/convention

 

WBO Championship Committee

Dear World Champion Fury:

We have received and thank you for the response to the WBO’s September 26, 2016 Certification Request of your Medical Report of September 21, 2016 and the Supplemental Report of September 28, 2016 concerning the conditions described therein. Everyone at the WBO is concerned for your health, well-being, happiness and prospects for a full and complete recovery.

The reports, however, continue to be provisional and conditional. The September 21, 2016 report indicates a report is being prepared which will contain the relevant chronological events and antecedents to your condition. The September 28, 2016 Supplemental report also states that the prognosis is conditioned on the absence of any other psychological issue.

On November 28, 2015, the WBO Heavyweight Championship took place at the Esprit Arena in Dusseldorf, Germany between then Champion Wladimir Klitschko and you that enabled you to become the WBO Heavyweight Champion of the World by unanimous decision.

A rematch was scheduled for July 9th 2016 but never took place due to your training injury on June 24th 2016 that we heard of through the news. Immediately, the WBO requested an Interim Certification of your recovery status from your training injury.

The rematch was rescheduled for October 29th in Manchester, UK. Notwithstanding, on September 14th, the WBO sent the sanction for the bout. The sanction stated the following provisions:

  1. If the bout is not held due to the fault of the Challenger, the Champion will face the Mandatory Challenger designated by the WBO Championship Committee.
  2. If the bout is not held due to the fault of the Champion, then the title will be heavyweight title will be vacated, in accordance to Section 20 (a) of the WBO Regulations of World Championship Contests that states:

By September 23rd 2016, the bout is again postponed and the WBO finds out through the news, prompting the Committee to request the second Interim Certification on September 26th.

Additionally, the WBO has received the September 29th VADA Drug Testing Report, VADA3769 (D5CO3) containing an adverse analytical finding from a September 22nd test. We ask you to advise if you have requested analysis of the “B” Sample. Also, the WBO received information from the BBB of C that you refused to be tested the week prior to September 22nd.

When you signed the rematch contract, you agreed to the following:

  • 3. VADA Random Testing. The parties agree, deviating from the FRA and POS, VADA random testing (urine and blood, in-competition as well as out-of-competition testing) for the Rematch. For this purpose, K2 and Hennessy/Fury will instruct VADA by separate agreement to conduct the doping controls and the parties are not allowed to unilaterally terminate the agreement with VADA. The Result Management shall be effected by the supervising local commission (BBBofC, BDB or any other local commission having jurisdiction over the Rematch) as well as by the world sanctioning bodies (IBO, WBA, WBO) on the basis of the testing result found by VADA. Therefore, it shall be agreed in writing with the relevant local commission and world sanctioning bodies that the prohibited list of VADA is the binding list and a doping violation found by VADA, after due appeal process and the right of the athlete to defend himself accordingly and subject to the conclusion of such appeal procedures, is to be accepted and to be sanctioned by the local commission and the world sanctioning bodies, regardless of possibly deviating own prohibited lists and rules of the associations. The testing results shall be promptly reported to all organizations involved (and to the BBB of C and BDB as the home associations of the fighters even if they are not directly involved as local commission for the Rematch) as well as to one designated person of each of the fighters’ camps, and the proceeding in respect of the opening (if any) of the b sample shall be disclosed to the parties and thereby completely transparent to the parties. Fury and Klitschko have to sign all necessary declarations of consent towards VADA and the associations to implement such VADA random testing in cooperation with the local commission and world sanctioning bodies (including VADA’s standard forms for whereabouts). The VADA testing shall start on a date to be agreed and no later than 10 September 2016. Fury and Klitschko have to ensure that they are accessible and available for VADA’s doping inspectors at all times and irrespective of their whereabouts, as required by VADA (inter alia, Fury and Klitschko have to let VADA know where exactly they train, phone PAGE 4 OF 6 numbers and where to reach them). In the event that the relevant local commission should insist that the doping control is to be conducted by the national anti-doping agency, the parties agree that they will effect the herein agreed VADA random testing as additional doping testing which shall be accepted by the world associations as set forth herein.

Rule 19 of the WBO Regulations of World Championship Contests provides:

“SECTION 19. FAILURE OF THE CHAMPION TO COMPLY WITH THE TERMS OF A WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP CONTRACT OR THE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP RULES

(a) If a World Champion fails to comply with his contractual obligation to fight in a WBO World Championship bout without justifiable cause, or tests positive for an illegal or any performance enhancing drug after a title bout, or fails to inform the WBO of any medical condition, impairment or any other circumstance which jeopardizes his participation in a WBO World Championship contest, or if a Champion or any of his team members misleads, attempts to mislead, or petitions a Local Boxing Commission to illegally or incorrectly license said Champion, the Committee may recommend to the WBO President and to the Executive Committee that the fighter be stripped of the title and that the title be declared vacant.

(b) However, if the Champion is unable to defend his Championship within the time periods provided in these Rules because he is physically disabled for a justified cause, and said disability has been verified and accepted by the World Championships Committee, the Champion may be granted a reasonable time to recover from the disability and retrain to competitive condition, which shall not in total exceed 180 days. The disability extension will be granted only if the Committee determines, based on competent medical advice, that the Champion is reasonably expected to recover from his disability within the maximum allowable term of the disability extension. The Committee may condition its approval of a disability extension upon the Champion providing interim medical certifications that he is reasonably expected to recover within the term of the disability extension.

(c) A disability extension shall be approved only by the vote of the World Championships Committee. If the Champion’s recover time exceeds the maximum term of the disability extension, or if upon receipt of an interim medical certification the World Championship Committee determines that the Champion is not reasonably likely to recover and be prepared to defend his Championship within the term of the disability extension, the title shall be declared vacant and a Vacant or Interim Championship fight, as the case may be, shall be held for the title pursuant to the provisions of the World Championships Regulations.

(d) The Championship Committee may order an Interim championship bout when the Champion is incapacitated, inactive, or when a Champion is moving out of his division to fight for another championship. In this case the interim Champion must defend his interim title against the Champion, if the Champion who vacated his Title due to disability is medically able and prepared to compete for the Championship within 180 days of the Interim Championship. If an interim Championship is held due to a Champion’s inactivity, the Champion must defend his title against the Interim Champion within 120 days of the interim Championship or the Interim Champion shall become Champion.”

Also, the Regulations of World Championship Contests Section 5 (c) states:

SECTION 5. DEFENSE OF THE TITLE

“ …(c) The WBO World Championship Committee may, in its discretion, vacate a Champion’s title regardless of cause or fault if the Champion fails to defend his title within a nine (9) month period (12 months in the case of the Heavyweight Division). This decision will be final unless appealed to the Complaint and Grievance Committee within ten (10) days of Notification to the Champion as provided for in these Rules. A Champion so stripped of his Title shall be classified using the WBO rating criteria, and he shall be classified in his division or in such other weight division as the Classifications Committee for good cause determines, provided that he has complied with the WBO and ABC rating criteria…”

The general principle of the Regulation states as follows:

“…The World Championship has been established for generations as the highest objective in professional boxing. A World Championship is not the property of any boxer. The Championship is a trust, subject to the conditions defined herein, for the use and benefit of all boxers and boxing fans, who through their contribution of time, effort, risks and resources sustain the existence of the profession. The World Boxing Organization encourages each World Champion and Challenger to be an example of the highest ideals and spirit of sportsmanship. A World Champion is an integral part of the sport of boxing, but he is not greater than the sport of boxing. A World Champion’s sportsmanship shows his respect for the profession he has chosen, including the Champion himself, his opponent, the World Boxing Organization, and, most importantly, boxing fans worldwide…”

According to the Regulations, Section 1(7) (21), the World Championship Committee shall have the following authority:

“…(7) To recommend to the President and the Executive Committee that a Title should be vacated if a Champion fails to comply with the WBO World Championship Rules; and

(21) To vacate a championship title regardless of cause or fault if the Champion has not defended within a nine (9) month period…”

Taking all of the previous under consideration, the WBO Championship Committee decided that you have ten (10) calendar days, final and non–extendable to show cause why your title should not be vacated due to inactivity, breach of contract and performance enhancing drugs and stimulants.

Duly notified, in San Juan, Puerto Rico on October 7th 2016

Yours truly,

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Luis Batista-Salas, Esq. Chairman – WBO Championship Committee

 

SAN JUAN, PR (09/26/16)- Preparados para celebrar una semana de puro boxeo del 17 al 21 de octubre en el Hotel Caribe Hilton de San Juan, Puerto Rico, la Organización Mundial de Boxeo (OMB), presidida por el Lcdo. Francisco ‘Paco’ Valcárcel, hizo el anuncio oficial de lo que será la cartelera ‘Noche de Campeones DIRECTV’, la cual se celebrará el martes, 18 de octubre en el mencionado hotel, esto como parte de la Vigésimo Novena Convención Anual de la OMB.

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“Nosotros en la OMB llevamos nuestras convenciones por todo el mundo, pero en esta ocasión decidimos celebrarla en Puerto Rico y traer a todas estas personas de sobre 130 países a disfrutar de nuestra Isla”, indicó el Presidente Fundador y actual Presidente del Comité de Campeonatos Mundiales de la OMB, Lcdo. Luis Batista Salas. “Este es un organismo mundial que sirve al boxeo en todas las esquinas del mundo, siendo la única organización de deporte mundial que tiene su base en Puerto Rico. De esa manera debemos sentirnos orgullosos de tener al principal organismo de boxeo a nivel mundial en Puerto Rico, donde sin duda el boxeo es el deporte rey”.

La Vigésimo Novena Convención Anual de la OMB, presentará como uno de sus platos fuertes la cartelera ‘Noche de Campeones DIRECTV’, la cual contará con un total de seis combates, donde estarán en juego tres correas del organismo.

“Gracias a Javier Bustillo, promotor del evento, y a DIRECTV por unir esfuerzos para que esta cartelera se pueda celebrar en la Convención el día 18 de octubre”, manifestó el Presidente de la OMB, Lcdo. Francisco ‘Paco’ Valcárcel. “Esta será una gran convención, que iniciará el lunes, 17, con el tradicional torneo de golf en el Legado en Guayama, donde Miguel Cotto y Oscar De la Hoya ya confirmaron que estarán jugando con nosotros. El martes, 18, estaremos entregando el campeonato a Saúl ‘Canelo’ Alvarez, quien acaba de coronarse en Dallas ante más de 52,000 fanáticos, esto en la sesión inaugural luego de las elecciones. Ese mismo día, desde las 7:00 de la noche, presentaremos el espectáculo del grupo de árbitros de Las Vegas, ‘The Mighty Sensations’, interpretando éxitos de los 60, que sé será del agrado del público que venga a ver la cartelera. El jueves, 19, tendremos la gala, donde entregaremos los diferentes premios, entre ellos el de Boxeador del Año, en la actividad que será dedicada a todos nuestros ex Campeones Mundiales. Adicional, tendremos unos seminarios muy importantes de la ABC y unas conferencias sobre el daño cerebral, que serán de gran provecho para los oficiales. Será una gran convención y esperamos que así la puedan disfrutar”.

El combate estelar de la cartelera será por la vacante corona Internacional Jr. Ligero de la OMB entre Edgardo ‘Sasso’ López y José ‘Wonder Boy’ López.

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“Para mí es un gran honor poder disputar el Campeonato Internacional de la OMB, que es el organismo de mayor influencia a nivel mundial”, dijo el abogado y CPA, Edgardo ‘Sasso’ López. “Este campeonato ha estado en poder de leyendas del boxeo como Pacquiao, Márquez, Lomachenko, Ward, entre otros. Llevo entrenando hace dos meses para dar lo mejor de mí esa noche. Sé que será un combate bien interesante. Conozco muy bien a ‘Wonder Boy’ y sé que aparte de gustarle las capas y los súper héroes, lo deja todo sobre el cuadrilátero. El martes, 18 de octubre, aunque él piense que tiene súper poderes, mis puños van a ser su ‘kriptonita’ y lo estaré ‘sassonando’ toda la noche”.

En el pleito semiestelar de la noche, la actual Campeona Mundial Femenino de la OMB en el peso pluma, Amanda ‘Real Deal’ Serrano, buscará hacer historia cuando busque coronarse en una cuarta división, esto al disputar el vacante Campeonato Jr. Pluma ante la húngara Alexandra Lazar.

Mientras, el ex Campeón Latino Jr. Gallo, David Quijano, retará al monarca NABO mosca, el filipino Joebert Alvarez.

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La conferencia contó con la presencia de los ex Campeones Mundiales John John Molina y Samuel ‘Torbellino’ Serrano, el actual monarca Jr. Ligero de la FIB José ‘Sniper’ Pedraza, los prospectos Félix Caraballo y Marcos Osorio, los entrenadores Luis Espada, Margaro Cruz, Gerardo Sánchez, Jesús ‘Chuito’ Ayala y José Luis Trabal, los promotores Héctor Soto, Bryan Pérez y Peter Rivera, el árbitro Luis Pabón y el juez Nelson Vázquez.

Adicional a Válcarcel y Batista Salas, por parte de la OMB estuvieron presente el Secretario Ejecutivo Lcdo. José Izquierdo, el Tesorero Adolfo Flores y Presidente del Comité de Quejas y Agravios Alberto Rodríguez.

Los boletos para la cartelera ‘Noche de Campeones DIRECTV’ están a la venta en www.prticket.com.

Para más información, formularios de inscripción y todo lo relacionado a la 29na Convención de la OMB, accedan a: www.wboboxing.com/convention y/o pueden llamar al (787) 765-4781/ (787) 765-4628.

Represented Mexico at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China, boxing as a Bantamweight (54 kg) and at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, Great Britain, boxing as a Bantamweight (56 kg).

WBO-resolution

Uno de los asuntos de mayor importancia a tratarse durante nuestra vigésima novena convención a celebrarse en la ciudad de San Juan, PR son las elecciones, según el artículo 8.1. y 12.1 de la Constitución.

La votación será para las siguientes posiciones:

  • Presidente
  • 1er Vice-Presidente
  • 2º Vice-Presidente
  • 3er Vice-Presidente
  • 4º Vice-Presidente
  • Tesorero
  • Comisionado Int’l
  • (4) Cuatro (4) Miembros al Comité

La votación para las once posiciones claves será el 18 de octubre 2016 entre las diez (10:00) y las doce (12:00) horas.

Favor de someter sus candidatos en o antes del 11 de octubre de 2016 no más tardar de las 4:30 de la tarde, hora del Atlántico.

Los nombramientos al Comité de Elecciones son:

  • Luis Batista Salas, Esq: Presidente Comité de Elecciones

Miembros:

  • István Kovács
  • Richard De Cuir
  • Leon Panoncillo
  • Jorge Molina
  • Legal Counsel:
  • Andrew Horn

Se adjunta a continuación el formulario a utilizarse para sus nombramientos.

Formulario

WBO-elections

During our 29 th Annual Convention to be held in San Juan, PR from October 17 to the 21st, one of the most important matters on the agenda is the election, in accordance to Articles 8.1 and 12.1 of the Constitution.

The positions to be voted upon are the following:

  • President
  • 1 st Vice-President
  • 2 nd Vice-President
  • 3 rd Vice-President
  • 4 th Vice-President
  • Treasurer
  • Int’l Commissioner
  • Executive Committee Members Four

These eleven key positions will be voted upon on October 18th between the hours of 10:00 and 12:00 Noon.

Please submit your candidates by 4:30 pm Atlantic Standard Time on or before October 11th.

The appointed Election Committee consists of:

  • Luis Batista Salas, Esq: Elections Committee Chairman

Members:

  • István Kovács
  • Richard De Cuir
  • Leon Panoncillo
  • Jorge Molina
  • Legal Counsel:
  • Andrew Horn

Enclosed please find the form to be used for your nominations.

Form

It’s December 2011, and Sergey Kovalev is sitting on the side of his bed, his lean, 6-foot, 175-pound frame folded over, his palms pressed to his temples. Sleep eludes him. Has for weeks. On Dec. 5, Kovalev, a fast rising light heavyweight, took on Roman Simakov in Ekaterinburg, Russia. He won, scoring a seventh-round knockout. Hours later, Simakov slipped into a coma. Three days later, he was gone. At home, the silence offered Kovalev no solace, just inescapable emptiness for his thoughts to consume him.

His wife, Natalya, lay beside him, her pain matching his. It had been nearly 10 years since she walked into a boxing gym in Chelyabinsk and began a life she never expected. Back then, Natalya hated boxing. Too violent. She was accompanying friends to that gym, that day, when she encountered the cocky teenager with the sly smile. “We met there by accident,” Natalya said. “And then we fell in love.”

Kovalev doesn’t share his feelings much. Not his style. A hardscrabble childhood built a wall between him and the rest of the world. “He was brought up this way, not to show any signs of emotion,” Natalya said. But she knew. She felt him toss and turn on these sleepless nights. She watched him rewatch the fight tape over and over, reliving every concussive blow. And she was by his side when Simakov’s fans declared him a murderer. “It was ‘Kovalev is a killer,’ ” Natalya said. “It was, ‘Something is wrong with his gloves.’ It was ‘He [knew] it was time to stop the fight.’ It was hurtful. How could they say such things?”

Egis Klimas wondered the same. In 2009 Klimas was a businessman moonlighting as a boxing manager. One day, a friend called from Moscow. He was at an amateur tournament and there was a fighter Klimas needed to meet. He gave Klimas a number. Klimas called Kovalev. Offered to manage him. Kovalev resisted. “He wasn’t sure he wanted to turn pro,” Klimas said. Klimas convinced Kovalev to meet him in Kazakhstan – with his gear. With Klimas came Don Turner, the veteran trainer best known for his work with Evander Holyfield. A few minutes into watching Kovalev work, Turner turned to Klimas and said, “Take this guy to my camp. He’s something special.”

Convincing others proved challenging. Promoters weren’t interested. Top Rank said no. Golden Boy, too. The light heavyweight division was barren, and nobody wanted to invest in it. Klimas didn’t care. For two years, Klimas carried Kovalev. He paid for trainers. For sparring partners. For opponents. It was $15,000 here, $20,000 there. Cash, cars, rent – Klimas covered it. He saw a star in Kovalev. He was hell bent on others seeing it, too.

It was Klimas who set up the Simakov fight. In the fall of 2011, Kovalev was coming off a foul-fueled draw against Grover Young. Klimas wanted to make an immediate rematch. No luck. A Russian promoter called. Ruslan Provodnikov was fighting in December in Ekaterinburg. Did Kovalev want to be on the card? Klimas offered the fight to Kovalev. Kovalev quickly accepted.

“He knew of Roman, knew he was a pretty good fighter,” Klimas said. “He thought it would be a great fight. He never thought about what could happen.”

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It’s a seasonably warm April afternoon in southern California when Kovalev arrives at Klimas’ suburban Los Angeles home. Much has changed since 2011. Kovalev is the unified light heavyweight champion, universally regarded as the best 175-pound fighter in the world. Klimas is a successful manager with Kovalev and ex-Olympic star Vasyl Lomachenko headlining a growing stable. With Kovalev is Natalya, a petite brunette with a sharp smile. In her arms is Kovalev’s one-year old son, Aleksandr.

Inside, Kovalev glances around a room nervously. It’s a rare sight. In the ring Kovalev oozes confidence. He has unparalleled power. Since 2011, Kovalev has knocked out 17 of his 18 opponents. Only Bernard Hopkins went the distance. He’s a predator, punishing opponents with a rare ruthlessness. Last year, in a rematch with Jean Pascal, Kovalev admitted to carrying Pascal a few rounds. Enraged by Pascal’s prefight comments, Kovalev wanted to administer the maximum beating before finishing off Pascal.

This Kovalev is different. He appears anxious, the cocky grin replaced by a subdued smile. Perhaps because of why he’s here: To speak at length about Simakov’s death for the first time.

Kovalev has long refused to discuss the fight. Reporters have asked. Often, Kovalev responds with a deep, blank stare. He can compartmentalize what happened with Simakov, friends say. But talk about it? Not happening. “I’m strong with these situations,” Kovalev said. “Where I grew up, I saw a lot of things. Bad things. I’m ready for any situation.”

Indeed. Kovalev was raised in poverty, stuffed in a three-room apartment with his parents and, at various times, two brothers and sister. “Two or three eggs in the refrigerator was a good day,” Klimas said. To this day Kovalev battles high cholesterol, in part due to years of a largely spaghetti and egg diet. Odd jobs provided income. Selling newspapers, washing windows, filling gas tanks as a kid; working loading docks and picking up bodyguard work when he got older.

Fighting was a part of life. “You go into an unknown neighborhood, somebody pushes you, you have to fight back,” Kovalev said. He saw things he wishes he didn’t. As a teenager, Kovalev watched a mob nearly beat a man to death. “I saw a lot of damage to people,” Kovalev said. “I saw a lot of people hurt.”

Still, Kovalev came to like fighting. His favorite actor: Jean-Claude Van Damme. Posters of Van Damme covered the walls of his bedroom. He’s seen No Retreat, No Surrender – Van Damme’s 1986 flop – more times than he can count. Van Damme movies, Kovalev says, inspired him to go out on the street looking for fights.

“Fair fights,” Kovalev says, smiling.

He stumbled into boxing. A friend told him he tried it; called it the best workout he ever had. The next day – Dec. 1, 1994, Kovalev remembers vividly – Kovalev was in the gym. He never looked back.

By December, 2011, star was on the rise. He was unbeaten, trained by noted trainer Abel Sanchez and displaying the kind of power that would soon get a major promoter’s attention. Simakov represented the next step. As an amateur, Kovalev recalled watching Simakov at national tournaments. “He was really strong,” Kovalev said. “He punched hard. I remember watching him and thinking about how I would fight that guy.”

He got his chance. The weigh-in went smoothly. “[Simakov] looked fine,” Sanchez said. “He looked prepared.” Added Kovalev, “I asked him, ‘Are we ready?’ He said he was ready. I said good luck tomorrow, and that was it.”

Simakov was well credentialed. Once beaten, a minor titleholder, Simakov was a Kovalev-caliber prospect. A strong crowd filed into the DIVS Sports Palace expecting a good fight. “It was a good opponent for Sergey,” Sanchez said. “It was a step up opponent. I thought it would be a tough fight.”

It wasn’t. From the first round it was clear Kovalev was superior. “Sergey was hitting him with anything he wanted to hit him with,” Sanchez said. “And he can crack. He has heavy hands. Simakov was taking everything. He was getting hit with solid shots.” Recalled Klimas, “Everything Sergey threw landed. Everything. Even when Roman moved, Sergey would find him.”

In the third round, Kovalev started to wonder: How much more of this could Simakov take? He could feel the punches; less than 10 minutes into the fight, and his hands ached from the force of them.

“I just remember thinking, ‘Why [Roman] do you need this? Stop the fight,’ ” Kovalev said. “I knew how hard I was hitting him. I felt it in my fists. I felt pain.”

Today, Kovalev is a complete fighter. Then, he was a headhunter. Every shot was aimed above the neck. Midway through the fight – around the fourth or fifth round, Klimas recalls – Kovalev looked over at his manager and said, “Egis, everything I’m throwing, it’s landing. I don’t know how much this guy can take. Is anybody going to stop it?”

“But he can’t stop it,” Klimas said, “He’s a fighter.”

Sanchez saw it. After the fifth, Sanchez told Kovalev to start going to the body. “If this was going to continue, we had to keep practicing what we worked on.” Kovalev agreed. The problem: Simakov was still fighting to win. “He came out in the sixth round and tried to take Sergey’s head off,” Sanchez said. “Sergey had to fight back.”

And he did, dropping Simakov and burying him under an avalanche of headshots. After the sixth, Sanchez glanced at the referee. “I motioned to the referee to stop the fight,” Sanchez said. “He was hitting him so hard. I remember the thuds. The hard thuds.”

It ended in seventh. Less than a minute in, Simakov’s legs buckled. A few seconds later, a soft hook put him down. He struggled to his feet, but needed the ropes to hold him up. Then, he collapsed. “I’ve seen people go down like that before,” Sanchez said. “It’s scary. Your first thought is, ‘I hope nothing’s wrong.’ ”

Simakov lost consciousness. A makeshift stretcher carried him out of the ring. Kovalev headed back to his locker room. An official came and told Klimas: Something was seriously wrong. “I went right to where he was,” Klimas said. “I saw Roman. He was turning blue. He looked terrible.”

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Klimas raced back to Kovalev’s dressing room, where a post-fight celebration was in full swing. Klimas told Kovalev what had happened. Kovalev was stunned. The two raced back to the area Simakov was being treated. But he had already been taken away. “I tried to remember the fight,” Kovalev said. “There wasn’t one punch that [caused] this. It was total punches. I was just punching. There was nothing special. I was doing my job.”

The next few days were a blur. Klimas flew to Moscow. Kovalev returned to Chelyabinsk. Klimas stayed in contact with Simakov’s trainer. Kovalev had a friend at the local hospital who kept him updated on Simakov’s condition. He prayed for Simakov. With Natalya, Kovalev went to church and lit candles, desperately hoping for Simakov to recover. Said Klimas, “Every hour, we were checking in.”

Three days after the fight, Simakov was dead. Complications from brain injuries. Klimas got the call in the early morning. “As soon as I heard [the trainer’s] voice, I knew it was a disaster,” Klimas said. He called Kovalev. No answer. He called again. Still nothing. Eventually he got through. When he heard Kovalev’s voice, it was clear he already knew.

“It was impossible to talk,” Klimas said. “We were both crying into the phone. It was 20 minutes, just crying. Endless, endless crying.”

Said Kovalev, “I don’t remember anything. I was lost.”

Processing what happened was impossible. Klimas surmised that Simakov was in bad shape before the fight. Sanchez did, too. The beating Kovalev put on him was just the last one he could take. “I remembered going to his training room to watch his trainer wrap his hands,” Klimas said. “What I noticed, he was kind of pale. He didn’t have a human color. At the time, I hadn’t thought much of that. But I believe he had some kind of previous problems.”

Kovalev, Klimas said, wanted to call Simakov’s family. Klimas recommended against it. Instead, he called. Eventually, he got through to Simakov’s father. According to Klimas, it didn’t go well.

“His father went ballistic,” Klimas said. “He said, ‘You guys are killers.’ He said, ‘You’re murderers.’ He said, ‘You took my son away.’ He didn’t want to hear from me or about us. He said, ‘Don’t call me. I don’t want to hear from you.’ Then he hung up the phone.

“I told Sergey not to contact them. Because Sergey was ready to jump on a plane and go there. He was thinking about going to the funeral. I told him not to think about doing that. Don’t even think about it.”

Death is a tragic part of boxing. It’s uncommon, but far too common for anyone’s liking. “Death under the Spotlight: The Manuel Velazquez Boxing Fatality Collection” documents 2,036 boxer deaths, dating back to 1725. Lives end. Others are changed forever. Emile Griffith was haunted for decades after he killed Benny Paret. Ray Mancini was never the same after Duk Koo Kim succumbed to injuries incurred in their fight.

In the weeks after Simakov’s death, Kovalev retreated from the world. “He went into a shell,” Natalya said. “He’s the kind of person that keeps everything inside. But he couldn’t sleep. He went into himself. It changed him.”

Said Kovalev, “I really was lost. I was lost for about a month. I got a lot of calls of support, from my parents, from friends, from my wife. But that whole month, I don’t remember. I was lost in my mind.”

He was trapped – and the public reaction only made it worse. Natalya recalls television commentators calling Kovalev a killer. She read articles that suggested Kovalev may have loaded his gloves. There were suggestions that Kovalev knew Simakov was in trouble, and pressed forward anyway. “Even now, talking about it, I get goose bumps,” Natalya said. “It was painful and unpleasant for everybody.”

Simakov’s family continued to hold Kovalev responsible. “His father went to the police,” Klimas said. “They opened a case. Then they opened another. They pulled Sergey into the investigation. We gave them everything. We gave them the gloves. We delivered what they asked us to. But the father never gave up. He was trying and trying to [get] Sergey. I’m telling you, every time Sergey is in Russia, the police call him. They interview him. They ask him about why the fight wasn’t stopped. They ask if he saw Roman was collapsing. This is still happening. I talked to an investigator about eight months ago.”

Through it all boxing was the furthest thing from Kovalev’s mind. And if he had other means to provide for his family, he might have walked away from it. His wife hated boxing. His parents did, too. But boxing was how Kovalev made a living. And he had to make a living. “I had just this small apartment, nothing more,” Kovalev said. “I had been boxing since I was 11, and I had nothing.”

Added Natalya, “He had an obligation to his family, his loved ones. He is the only breadwinner in his family. If it’s not boxing, then what else? He doesn’t know how to sell. He’s not a businessman. He is a boxer. He must continue what he started. It doesn’t matter what happened in his life. He had to pull together and act. It doesn’t matter if I want it or if someone else wants it or doesn’t want it. He has his goal and must accomplish it.”

Seven months after Simakov’s death, Kovalev was back in the ring. His first test: A rematch with Darnell Boone, a power puncher who put Kovalev on the canvas in their first meeting. Klimas had no idea how Kovalev would look. “Would he be the same Sergey?” Klimas said. “I just didn’t know.”

He was. Kovalev stopped Boone in the second round. Three months later, he knocked out Lionel Thompson. In 2013 he demolished Nathan Cleverly to win a world title. He picked up two more with a thorough defeat of Hopkins a year later.

On July 11, Kovalev will fight in Russia for the first time since he fought Simakov. This is why he’s finally willing to talk about the tragedy. He won’t be far from DIVS Sports Palace; he will be in it, defending his titles against Isaac Chilemba in the same venue. The idea was Kovalev’s. “I don’t worry about this at all,” Kovalev said. “I already forgot the situation. I’m ready to face the future.”

Kovalev believes Simakov’s family still lives in the area. He says he doesn’t know if they will be at the fight. He says he would want to see them if he could. And what would he say?

“I don’t know,” Kovalev says, his voice trailing off. “I won’t [ask] them to come to the arena, because it’s not a good memory. I’m not going to do that. But I’d like to see them. I don’t know what I can say to them. Just hello, and I’m sorry.”

Kovalev’s voice chokes as he speaks, the emotion of reliving the moment finally overwhelming him. He knows he isn’t to blame for Simakov’s death. But it’s an understanding that offers little relief. For Kovalev, the best way to honor Simakov is to win for him – and hope he is out there, somewhere, witnessing it.

“I have to continue, to fight for me and him, together,” Kovalev said. “I think he’s seeing me. Maybe he is. Maybe he’s looking down on me. I don’t know. But I will try to be the best in boxing. For both of us.”

En un ambiente familiar y repleto de emociones, la Organización Mundial de Boxeo (OMB) y su Presidente Lcdo. Francisco ‘Paco’ Valcárcel, en unión al ex Campeón Mundial de las 130 libras Samuel ‘Torbellino’ Serrano, reunieron a más de una decena de campeones y ex campeones mundiales en una gran fiesta de boxeo boricua.

“Samuel (Serrano) ha sido un gran colaborador para la OMB”, dijo Valcárcel. “El se ha dado a la tarea de reunir, aquí en su residencia en Arecibo, a campeones, ex campeones, jóvenes boxeadores, entrenadores, manejadores y personalidades del mundo del boxeo para compartir un rato en familia. De esta manera nos vemos, sabemos qué están haciendo y cómo están. Así podemos colaborar con los que más necesitan y convocar a esos que nos pueden ayudar para echar para adelante a los jóvenes, ya que ellos mismos son los que pueden dirigirse a estos y aconsejarlos a ser personas de bien”.

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Serrano, quien se convirtió en Campeón Mundial por primera vez en octubre de 1976, ha convertido en tradición la “Fiesta de los Campeones”, celebrándola una vez al año en su casa ubicada frente al mar en Arecibo, Puerto Rico.

“A veces cuando uno es campeón tiene mucha gloria y muchos amigos, pero luego esos amigos desaparecen y todo cambia”, manifestó ‘El Torbellino’. “Un día decidí hacer esta reunión para que todos los muchachos pudiéramos compartir y se ha convertido en una tradición de más de 10 años. Ahora con la ayuda que nos está brindando la OMB y ‘Paco’ Valcárcel, podemos hacer un poco más. Aquí venimos a cantar, bailar, jugar dominó, comer buena comida, hacer mil historias y revivir gratos momentos. Es bonito volver a ver a estos amigos con los que he compartido la pasión del boxeo”.

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Adicional a Valcárcel y Serrano, estuvieron presente en la fiesta los ex Campeones Mundiales Wilfred ‘El Radar’ Benítez, Angel ‘Cholo’ Espada, Juan Laporte, Alfredo ‘El Salsero’ Escalera, Orlando Fernández, Sammy Fuentes, Angel ‘La Avispa’ Chacón, Josué ‘Dickie’ Camacho, Alex ‘El Nene’ Sánchez, John John Molina, el actual Campeón Mundial (AMB) de las 130 libras Jason ‘Canito’ Sosa, el Campeón Latino Jr. Ligero de la OMB Félix ‘El Diamante’ Verdejo y el tres veces contendor al título mundial Wilfredo Rivera.

Los entrenadores Ricky Márquez, Félix Pagán Pintor, Orlando Piñero, Margaro Cruz y Jesús Ortiz, los jueces Luis Ruiz y Gerry Martínez, los árbitros José Hiram Rivera y Ramón Peña, al igual que el Presidente del Comité de Clasificaciones de la OMB, Luis Pérez y otros amigos del deporte estuvieron compartiendo en la actividad.

The action “My first boxing gloves” for young boxers in Germany continues.

Even during the winter months some boxing clubs were equipped in a joint action of initiatorDominic Boesel, the WBO Intercontinental champion and WBO #1 at light heavyweight, and SES Boxing with TopTen gloves. Glowing eyes of children and young people from the youth sections of SV Lindenweiler, the Ha-Neu BSG boxes (SKC TABEA Halle) and the BC Döbeln were, of thanks and so this particular conveying action for boxing continues.

Now children and youth were yesterday in Leipzig Sportschule International surprised with the first own gloves boxing TopTen / Budoland. The joy was huge andDominic Boesel had his fun with the boys and girls aged 6 to 14 years.

Dominic Boesel: “If you are very successful in sport, you have to look back to your sporting roots. For me a good boxing innovative training was the best starting point under good conditions. I am very grateful to this day and with our action, I would like to give something back and so also pay today’s youth for a good athletic position at least once before the first own boxing gloves. Even in the first handovers the shining eyes and the gratitude of the boys and girls have touched me. Today in the Sportschule International here in Leipzig it was similar emotional. Sometimes it is as easy to make something happened for the boxing scene of the future!”

by Christof Hawerkamp

Photo credit Thomas Purwin / Team SESboesel_handschu_aktion2 Boesel_Handschuh_aktion1 Boesel_Handschuh_aktion3 tp_boxen05 tp_boxen07

WBO-purse-bid-cancelled

  • To: All Bona Fide Promoters
  • From: Luis Batista Salas, Esq.
  • Date: June 7, 2016
  • Re: Purse Bid Cancelled

WBO Junior Heavyweight purse bid Krzystof Glowacki vs. Oleksandr Usyk as the parties have reached an agreement, please be advised the purse bid scheduled for June 9th 2016 at the Affinia Hotel in Manhattan, New York City has been cancelled.

Via Email Only

  • Lou Dibella (Dibella Entertainment)
  • Frank Warren (Frank Warren Promotions)

Re: Negotiations for the WBO Middleweight Elimination Bout Avtandil Khurtsidze vs. Tommy Langford

Gentlemen:

Please be advised the parties have fifteen (15) days to negotiate an agreement for the WBO Middleweight Elimination Bout between Avtandil Khurtsidze and Tommy Langford, classified #1 and #2 respectively in the WBO Ratings. If an accord is not reached within the time frame, a Purse Bid will be ordered.

The minimum acceptable bid for the Middleweight division is $200,000.00 (Two Hundred Thousand Dollars).

Any one of the parties involved may call for a Purse Bid at any time during the negotiation process.

Yours truly,

firma-luis-batista

C/c Francisco Valcarcel, Esq.

 

La Organización Mundial de Boxeo (OMB) y su Presidente, Lcdo. Francisco ‘Paco’ Valcárcel, hicieron entrega de equipo de entrenamiento a los integrantes de la Selección de Boxeo Aficionado de Puerto Rico, quienes buscarán su boleto a los Juegos Olímpicos Río 2016, esto como parte de su exitoso programa mundial ‘WBO Kids Drug Free’.

“Es una pena que estos muchachos, quienes sacan la cara por Puerto Rico, no reciban el respaldo que deberían recibir de los que se supone los ayuden en Puerto Rico”, mencionó el Lcdo. Valcárcel. “José Luis Vellón y la Federación de Boxeo Aficionado de Puerto Rico trabajan con nosotros para poder brindarle todo lo que necesiten. Hay que trabajar con estos jóvenes, porque de aquí saldrán los próximos campeones mundiales. Es un compromiso genuino que hemos hecho con la Federación, para que estos muchachos estén bien preparados y representados allá en Azerbaiyán”.

Los boxeadores boricuas Yankiel Rivera (49kg), Carlos Caraballo (56kg), Anthony Chacón (56kg), José Rosario (60kg), Danielito Zorrilla (64kg) y José Román (69kg) participarán del 14 al 26 de junio en el Clasificatorio Mundial Pre-Olímpico, el cual se celebrará en Azerbaiyán y donde la misión será conseguir el tan anhelado boleto a los Juegos Olímpicos Río 2016.

“Estamos súper agradecidos con este gesto tan bonito por parte de la OMB”, indicó José Rosario. “En estos momentos tan difíciles que está pasando Puerto Rico, la OMB está diciendo presente por el boxeo. Este es un equipo que nos hacía falta y ahora nos sentimos más motivados para lograr nuestra meta. Estamos entrenando duro para este clasificatorio, donde el nivel será bastante fuerte, pero nosotros estamos en ese nivel y vamos a lograr el boleto a Río 2016”.

Mientras, el espigado José ‘Cheito’ Román dijo que “estoy muy agradecido con la OMB por brindarnos este equipo. Gracias a Dios, tenemos otra oportunidad de llegar a los Juegos Olímpicos de Río. Ahora vamos con más experiencia y mejor preparados. Solo queda esperar que llegue el día y subir al cuadrilátero a representar a Puerto Rico en el nombre de Dios”.

Cada uno de los jóvenes boxeadores recibieron un bulto de la OMB con sudadera de entrenamiento personalizada, guantes, careta protectora, copa protectora, vendaje, boquilla, entre otros artículos de boxeo.

Adicional a Valcárcel, por parte de la OMB estuvieron presente el Secretario Ejecutivo Lcdo. José Izquierdo, el Presidente del Comité de Clasificaciones Luis Pérez, el Presidente del Comité de Quejas y Agravios Alberto Rodríguez y el Tesorero Adolfo Flores.

FLORIDA, PR (05/19/16)- La Organización Mundial de Boxeo (OMB) y su Presidente, Lcdo. Francisco ‘Paco’ Valcárcel, visitaron en la tarde de hoy la Carlos Beltrán Baseball Academy, donde hicieron un donativo de $50,000 para ser entregados en 10 becas académicas, de $5,000 cada una, a estudiantes procedentes de familias de bajos recursos.

“Es una ayuda que le estamos dando a la Academia de Carlos Beltrán, como parte de un compromiso que hicimos con él”, indicó Valcárcel. “Más de la mitad de los estudiantes de esta academia están por debajo del índice de pobreza y vienen de escuelas públicas. A veces tienen el talento y capacidad intelectual para completar la escuela superior y no tienen la oportunidad. Es una ayuda para que estos muchachos puedan terminar con éxito el cuarto año y así logren una oportunidad de obtener una beca para estudiar en alguna universidad fuera de Puerto Rico y/o ser seleccionados por algún equipo de Grandes Ligas. Esto con el fin de poder superarse y tener esa oportunidad en la vida de mejorarse con ser humano”.

La actividad que contó con la presencia de decenas de estudiantes, tuvo como orador principal al ex Súper Campeón de dos divisiones (105 y 108 libras) de la OMB, Iván ‘Iron Boy’ Calderón.

“El compromiso y la labor que Francisco ‘Paco’ Valcárcel y la Organización Mundial de Boxeo está realizando con la juventud, realmente es admirable”, manifestó Calderón, quien compartió su experiencia de superación con los jóvenes. “Es importante que estos estudiantes entiendan que la preparación académica es lo que le garantiza ser alguien de provecho en el futuro. Con mucha dedicación y disciplina, es cuestión de seguir estudiando para lograr completar una carrera y continuar luchando para llegar a cumplir sus sueños en el deporte”.

Carlos Beltrán Baseball Academy está ubicada en el municipio de Florida, Puerto Rico, ofreciendo servicio a un centenar de jóvenes en los grados de décimo, undécimo y duodécimo.

La Directora Académica, Nilda Serrano, dijo que “nosotros nos preocupamos porque los estudiantes tengan un buen desempeño deportivo en un fino balance con un buen desempeño académico. Hoy agradecemos a la OMB por este donativo que es bien significativo para estos jóvenes, ya que son estudiantes que necesitan esta ayuda para sufragar los gastos de su educación. Llevamos cuatro años con este proyecto y contamos con ocho estudiantes que han sido contratados por equipos de Grandes Ligas y más del 80% han sido recibidos en universidades reconocidas. Estamos muy contentos porque el resultado lo estamos viendo”.

El contendor mundial McWilliams Arroyo, el promotor Peter Rivera y el manejador Margaro Cruz compartieron en la actividad.

Adicional a Valcárcel, por parte de la OMB estuvieron presente el Secretario Ejecutivo Lcdo. José Izquierdo, el Presidente del Comité de Clasificaciones Luis Pérez y el Tesorero Adolfo Flores.

La Organización Mundial de Boxeo (OMB) y su Presidente, Lcdo. Francisco ‘Paco’ Valcárcel, hicieron entrega oficial del Campeonato Mundial Juvenil pluma al barranquiteño, Christopher ‘Pitufo’ Díaz, esto en una concurrida y emotiva ceremonia celebrada en la Plaza de Recreo del municipio de Barranquitas, Puerto Rico.

“Hoy le estamos entregando el cinturón Mundial Juvenil de las 126 libras a Christopher ‘Pitufo’ Díaz, quien lo ganó de manera espectacular”, manifestó Valcárcel. “Es un reconocimiento muy merecido, colocándolo entre los primeros 10 del mundo en ruta a disputar el campeonato mundial. Ahora, el compromiso que él tiene es honrar este campeonato, trabajando con la juventud y siendo un ejemplo a seguir aquí en Barranquitas y todo Puerto Rico. De esa manera todos ganamos”.

Díaz se coronó como Campeón Mundial Juvenil pluma de la OMB el pasado 16 de abril en el Coliseo Roberto Clemente de San Juan, Puerto Rico, esto al derrotar por decisión unánime a Ray Ximénez.

“Esto es algo muy bonito, que gracias al trabajo que hemos realizado en el cuadrilátero ha dado frutos”, dijo el púgil que cuenta con récord de 16 victorias sin derrotas y 10 de estas por nocáut. “Estoy muy agradecido con la OMB por esta oportunidad. Ahora mi meta es seguir trabajando fuerte para inspirar y motivar a los jóvenes que vienen subiendo. Nada es imposible si trabajas fuerte para lograrlo”.

Mientras, el Alcalde de Barranquitas, Francisco López, expresó que “por los pasados 20 años he venido viendo el desarrollo de Christopher. Siempre ha tenido un deseo de superarse y lo está logrando. Se ha convertido en un modelo para la juventud de Barranquitas. Hoy es un día histórico, el comienzo de muchos triunfos que nos dará este gran campeón”.

La actividad contó con la presencia de los ex Campeones Mundiales Angel ‘Cholo’ Espada, Alex ‘El Nene’ Sánchez, Iván Calderón y Juan Manuel ‘Juanma’ López, el Campeón Latino ligero de la OMB Félix ‘El Diamante’ Verdejo, los contendores Jesús Rojas, McWilliams Arroyo, Víctor Fonseca y Víctor Bisbal, los prospectos Alberto Machado, Alberto Mercado, Angel Acosta y Jean Carlos Torres, los aficionados Diomar Figueroa, Jonathan Sánchez, Justin Peñaranda, Luis González, Héctor Padilla, Fernando Irizarry, Bryan Alicea y William Guzmán, los entrenadores Ricky Márquez, Margaro Cruz, Alberto Mercado Sr., José García, Jesús Ortiz y Angel Rosario, el promotor Peter Rivera, los jueces César Ramos, Luis Ruiz y Hernando Steidel, los árbitros Roberto Ramírez Sr., Roberto Ramírez Jr., Ramón Peña y José Hiram Rivera.

Adicional a Valcárcel, por parte de la OMB estuvieron presente el Presidente del Comité de Clasificaciones Luis Pérez, el Tesorero Adolfo Flores, el Presidente del Comité de Quejas y Agravios Alberto Rodríguez y el Asesor Manuel Marrero Hueca.

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SAN JUAN, PR (05/10/16)- La Organización Mundial de Boxeo (OMB) y su exitoso programa mundial “WBO Kids Drug Free” llegaron esta mañana al Centro Vocacional Especial Eugenio María de Hostos de Puerto Nuevo en San Juan, Puerto Rico, donde se llevo un mensaje motivacional de superación para las decenas de jóvenes y maestros que participaron de la actividad.

“La misión de nosotros en la Organización Mundial de Boxeo es llevar ese mensaje de que la educación es la única decisión de vida con efecto imperecedero”, manifestó el Secretario Ejecutivo de la OMB, Lcdo. José Izquierdo. “Si nosotros podemos inculcar que estos jóvenes se continúen preparando, así serán ciudadanos de bien y alejados de las drogas”.

El Centro Vocacional Especial Eugenio María de Hostos atiende a jóvenes con necesidades especiales entre las edades de 16 a 21 años de edad, siendo la única escuela vocacional en San Juan que está diseñada exclusivamente para esta población.

“En esta escuela trabajamos estudiantes con necesidades especiales, con el propósito de prepararlos para que tengan un oficio y salgan listos para el mundo laboral”, dijo el Director Escolar, José Boria. “Es muy emocionante tener a la OMB junto a sus campeones para que le puedan hablar a estos estudiantes. Hay que entender que el deporte es una parte fundamental en el desarrollo del individuo. Con el deporte evitamos el ocio y nos ayuda a estar alejados de violencia, drogas y otras cosas negativas. Sé que esta experiencia quedará guardada en la vida de cada uno de los aquí presentes”.

La actividad tuvo como oradores principales al ex Campeón Mundial Jr. Gallo de la OMB, José ‘Carita’ López y al ex doble Campeón Mundial de la OMB (jr. pluma y pluma), Juan Manuel ‘Juanma’ López.

“La perseverancia y la dedicación han sido piezas claves en mi vida”, indicó ‘Carita’, quien luego de cinco intentos fallidos, el 28 de marzo de 2009 conquistó la corona mundial. “Ese es el mensaje que yo quiero llevar junto a la OMB. Nunca podemos dejar a un lado nuestros sueños y no podemos permitir que nadie nos quite el deseo. Si tenemos el talento para lograr algo, hay que seguir intentando hasta lograrlo. Es mi testimonio y lo compartiré cada vez que pueda”.

Entretanto, ‘Juanma’ dijo que “nosotros somos ejemplo para estos jóvenes. Ellos necesitan un poco de apoyo extra, y aquí estamos nosotros para decirle que no se rindan y sigan luchando. No importa los obstáculos que tengamos en la vida, hay que seguir por el camino del bien para lograr convertirnos en campeones de la vida”.

Los estudiantes recibieron obsequios por parte de la OMB, mientras conversaron y se tomaron fotos con los ex campeones mundiales.

Bob Spagnola Austin

Trout Manager

Dear Bob: On February 29th 2016, WBO’s Legal Counsel, Andrew W. Horn, forwarded a letter from Austin Trout’s Legal Counsel, David Lutz complaining that, “Indeed, Mr. Trout defeated the current no. 1 contender, Miguel Cotto, by a wide margin. The current no. 2 contender, Michel Soro, is basically a complete unknown whose only victory of which I believe anyone is aware is over Glenn Tapia, who is only known as the individual who was beaten to a pulp by James Kirkland.”

Pursuant to this, the Ratings Committee granted Austin Trout’s Legal Counsel’s request by classifying Mr. Trout as #1 contender on the WBO March Ratings that were sent to the Association of Boxing Commissions and posted on our website at www.wboxing.com. The Explanations read as follows: “Austin Trout (30-2) – USA – Moved to number one position as per Mr. Trout’s legal representative, David Lutz, Esq., request on letter dated February 29, 2016 and, winning over Miguel Cotto on Dec. 1, 2012 and Michel Soro’s been inactive since June 20, 2015. The Ratings Committee granted his lawyer’s request to move Mr. Trout as a number one in the ratings. KO’ed Joey Hernandez (24-3-1) in the sixth round on Sep. 8, 2016.”

On March 21st 2016, a negotiation letter was sent from the WBO Championship Committee to Austin Trout’s representatives stating that, “the parties have 30 days to negotiate an agreement for the WBO Jr. Middleweight Championship bout between Liam Smith and Austin Trout.”

By April 5th 2016, we began receiving letters advising us that the parties were not reaching any agreement and by April 11th, Liam Smith’s representatives stated that, “It is clear from the dialogue that Austin Trout has no real interest in making this fight.” Finally, through an article dated April 13th on PremierBoxing.com we found out that Mr. Trout was fighting against Jermall Charlo on May 21st . On April 25th, another article on BoxingScene.com with the title ‘Photos: Austin Trout Grinds Hard For Jermall Charlo Title Shot’ appeared. Unbeknownst to us, Mr. Trout had already negotiated this bout while his party pretended to negotiate for the Liam Smith bout on June 4th in the UK.

Due to this, on April 22, 2016, a letter was sent to Austin Trout’s representatives giving them forty-eight (48) hours to inform the WBO of the veracity of the articles. Furthermore, it said that if in the stipulated time frame an answer is not received, the WBO would assume that Mr. Trout is not interested in fighting for the WBO title and that he was in fact fighting Jermall Charlo on the 21st of May.

No answer has been received since. Taking this into consideration, the matter is being referred to the WBO Championship Committee and Ratings Committee so that they proceed in accordance to the WBO World Championship Contests and to the WBO Ratings Criteria for a determination.

Cordially,

paco-firma

Francisco Valcarcel, Esq.

WBO President