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Campbell’s Chris Hazimihalis Now 8-0 After Impressive Win
Campbell’s Chris Hazimihalis ran his professional record to 8-0 after a third round TKO of Eric Ricker. The bout was the Main Event at the Morgantown Events Center on Wednesday night.
Hazimihalis used an effective body attack to knock Toledo’s Ricker down in the second round. Sore ribs are easy targets (below) as Hazimihalis capitalized with another body shot in the third that would end the fight.
Hazimihalis has been training in Detroit with Emanuel Steward since the Summer and reports from his camp are that he will be more active in 2012 with bigger goals and longer fights.
Look for the Campbell native to fight locally at some point next year.
14 Three-Pointers Not Enough As YSU Falls At Penn State
For the second time this season, the Youngstown State men’s basketball team tied the school single-game record with 14 3-pointers made but could not overcome a slow start and a hot-shooting Penn State team in an 82-71 loss to the Nittany Lions on Wednesday evening at the Bryce Jordan Center. The Guins fall to 3-1 while Penn State improves to 5-1 overall.
The Guins connected on 14-of-27 from 3-point range, including going 10-of-15 from behind the arc in the second half. Junior guard Blake Allen led the Guins with 25 points on 9-of-16 shooting from the field and made a career-best seven 3-pointers. Sophomore Kendrick Perry scored 23 points, including 18 points in the second half, and made five 3-pointers. The last time two players scored at least 20 points in the same game was when Vytas Sulskis and Damian Eargle scored 25 and 24 points, respectively, against Malone on Dec. 13, 2010.
Youngstown State, who shot just 31.3 percent in the first half, trailed by 18, 44-26, at the half, but came out firing making six of their first nine shots of the half to cut the deficit down to 12, 53-41, after Allen drilled a 3-pointer with 14:35 to go. Three-pointers by Allen, who scored 17 in the second half, and two free throws by Perry brought the Guins within nine, 58-49, with 11:31 to go.
Penn State quickly boosted its lead back to 14 after a 3-pointer by Jermaine Marshall and a tip-in by Ross Travis at the 9:36 mark. Sophomore Nate Perry converted a four-point play – nailing a 3-pointer and subsequent free throw – to bring the Guins within ten, 68-58. The Penguins would get within nine points two more times on 3-pointers by Allen with 50 seconds left and 18 seconds to go.
Youngstown State will visit Saint Francis (Pa.), Saturday, Nov. 26, at 2 p.m. in Loretto, Pa.
Popo Salinas Impressive In First Round Knockout, Olympics Are The Goal, Sky Is The Limit
Grab a pen and paper and write down the name of Popo Salinas. Fresh off of a P.A.L. National Championship, the 16-year old Youngstown fighter has his sights set on making the United States Boxing Team for the next Olympic Games. The number one-ranked amateur in his weight class nationally, put on a show for the hometown crowd with a first round knockout of Lavell Briggs. In the minute-and-a-half or so that the fight lasted, Salinas showed a little bit of everything – defense, speed, power, and agility.
“It feels wonderful to have my family and some of my friends here to see me win this bout”, said a happy Salinas after the win. “I thank God for this beautiful opportunity. I am hungrier than Mayweather if you can believe it. Just hearing people cheer, hearing my name, and knowing that these people were behind me hyped me up, but I was able to stick to the game plan.”
“I want to focus on the Olympics next year, and then I want to go pro.”
The fight itself was brief. After Salinas entered the ring with George Thorogood’s, ‘Bad To The Bone’, blaring through the venue, the shirt came off and it was go time. Briggs came out swinging, Salinas avoided most of what was thrown at him. After using the jab for about thirty seconds, he went back on the defensive briefly. Salinas then landed a powerful four-punch combination in a neutral corner that put an exclamation point on what his trainer, Jack Loew, has been preaching for three years – this kid is really good.
“I thought he did real good, just like I told everybody he would”, said Loew. “He is an exciting kid, he can punch, and it is time for him to go to the next level, and I think that he is ready for it.”
Salinas stood by the runway to the ring and thanked everybody for coming. Surrounded by his proud family, this kid makes no bones about it, he is a boxer with a gift, a plethora of promise, and the support staff of a WBC Champion, and he is only 16.
If you did write down that name, put a piece of tape on it, put it on the refrigerator, and wait about a year before he gets a crack at bigger things. Here is a picture (below), courtesy of Ron Stevens, to print and tape to the fridge with the name.
Bob Roth Memorial Boxing Tournament Results
Wednesday night, the amateurs took center stage at St. Lucy’s in Campbell for the Bob Roth Memorial Boxing Tournament. Jack Loew has put a lot of time and effort into the show as a tribute to Roth. The card was very entertaining and featured the emergence of Popo Salinas as maybe the next big thing for Youngstown sports notoriety nationally. In front of a good crowd, there were nine other bouts besides the Salinas Main Event that deserve mention.
In the opening bout, Keith Bebbs of Youngstown squared off against Delorane Gray of Cleveland in a battle of 152-pounders. Gray caught Bebbs in both the first and second rounds with short hooks that floored Bebbs. After a standing eight count later in the second, the fight was stopped and Gray was declared the winner via TKO.
The next fight featured a pair of 175-pound fighters. Laquan Brooks of Youngstown and Josh Fisher, who represented Columbus. Fisher caught Brooks in the second round with a sharp right. Brooks never full recovered and tried to continue, but after a standing eight count, the referee made a good decision and stopped the one-sided fight from continuing. Fisher picks up the win with a second round TKO.
Lavell Headley of Youngstown faced Ron Hicks of Cleveland in a 155-pound contest. Near the end of the first round, Hadley knocked Hicks down, but the bell rang and he did not have time to finish. Hadley again floored Hicks in the second round, this time he did have clock to work with as he unloaded a barrage of offense until the ref stopped the fight.
In surprisingly one of the best technical fights of the night, Carrie Foil, fighting out of Loew’s Southside Boxing Club lost a three round decision to Christy Lacy of Cleveland (above). It was classic cat and mouse boxing as Foil was using good footwork to avoid taking too many punches. Lacy did most of the chasing, and probably landed a few more punches on her way to victory. Foil used a nice jab, especially in the third round, but the more experienced Lacy hit a few combinations to get the nod.
The most entertaining fight of the night was a 152-pound contest between Kewan Griffin of Youngstown and Anthony Blane of Columbus. Both fighters emerged from their corners swinging. Midway through the opening round, a charging Griffin was given a WWE back-body drop (top photo) and Blane had a point deducted. Griffin was the better fighter in the first round. However, in the second round, Griffin landed a couple of haymakers, scored a couple of knockdowns, and left no doubt who the winner was.
Vic Toney representing Youngstown, and Russell Scott of Cleveland had a good fight at 165. Both fighters were pretty technically sound and seemed to have split the first two rounds (that of course through my eyes, and I am not a boxing judge). Toney used a couple of big flurries in the third and final round to pick up the decision.
In other fights, Ali-Abu Gouman of Youngstown lost a decision to Romeo Rodriguez in a 60-pound, battle of young four-footers. Mike Fisher of Columbus fell to AJ Materna via decision in a 180-pound match. Lucian Clinkscale of Youngstown challenged Romeo Hernandez of Cleveland. Hernandez separated himself on his way to a decision victory when he sent Scott to the canvas with a solid body blow that drew an eight count.
Loew saw the show as a tribute to a friend, and a success. “Bob Roth was the type of guy that bugged the hell out of the sports people about boxing. He kept it going. We were good friends, and it is the least I could do for a guy like that. It was a good crowd. People might look around tonight and say that it wasn’t as crowded as the Saxon Club in years past, but here we set up 520 chairs and it was quite full, we could only set 300 chairs up at the Saxon Club.”
American University Hands YSU Women 48-41 Setback
The Youngstown State University Lady Penguins took the floor at home for the first time this season. Playing in their fourth game of the year, and coming in with a 2-1 record (33% of last years win total), the Penguins fell to American University of the Patriot League, 48-41. It was a struggle on offense for the ‘Guins from start to finish.
“It is early in the year and the offense we run takes time”, said Coach Bob Boldon. “Nobody is more frustrated than me. The only thing we didn’t miss was a half court shot. If you are going to compete and win games against good teams, you have to shoot better.”
In the first half, American raced out to an eleven point lead with seven minutes to play. Youngstown State cut the lead back to five points by intermission and trailed 25-20. Brandi Brown, the Horizon League Preseason Player of The Year, and Devan Matkin each scored six for the Penguins in the opening stanza.
In the second half, the Penguins reeled off the first five points to make the score 26-25. The home team surged ahead at the 13:11 mark of the second half, taking a 28-27 lead, their first since it was 2-0 a minute into the game. Tieara Jones got an offensive rebound and battled through three Eagles to get the lead for the Penguins. At the 10:31 mark, Monica Touvelle hit a three to open a two-point lead for YSU.
The Penguins really struggled on offense, shooting 27.8% from the floor, 18.5% from three, and 50% from the line.
“Defensively, we are getting a little better each game. Offensively, we seem to be getting worse each game”, noted Boldon. “We were swapping four players at a time because we are out of shape. I do like our depth, it gives us the freedom to make more moves, and we will continue to play a lot of people.
With YSU trailing 36-35 and 5:44 left in the game, Heidi Schlegel was fouled on a steal but missed both of the free throws. To that point in the game, the ‘Guins were just 2-8 from the charity stripe. Brown hit a shot with 3:40 left in the game to give the Penguins a one point lead. Lisa Strack went to the line for American and hit both ends of the one-and-one to put the Eagles back in front by a point.
Dobbs connected for three to stretch the Eagles lead to 41-37 with 2:16 left in the contest. Kenya Middlebrooks got to the line and hit a pair of free throws to cut the Eagles lead to two at 41-39 with 1:34 remaining. Arron Zimmerman then hit a three-pointer to hoist American into a five point lead with 1:14 left to go.
Brown finished the game with 14 points, one short of the 1,000 point career mark, and 9 rebounds for the Penguins (2-2). Matkin and Middlebrooks finished with six points each. The Penguins committed 21 turnovers in the loss.
Dobbs gathered 14 points for the Eagles. Stephanie Anya gathered 10 rebounds. The Eagles had 25 turnovers, but the Penguins only scored 15 points off of those chances.
The Penguins head west to compete in a holiday tournament, which Boldon addressed with mixed emotions. “It is nice in the sense that Brandi and Macey will get a chance to play in front of their families. Obviously, I would rather spend the holidays with my family at home, but it is nice to allow their families to see them play.”
Dannie Williams Wins Tune-Up Fight, Set For HBO In January
Dannie Williams got a taste of media exposure a couple of months ago fighting on ESPN’s Friday Night Fights. Since then Williams has been busy getting ready for his first appearance on HBO Boxing, set for January. Over the last couple of months, Williams has not only been busy training, but also recently signed a deal with Lou DiBella. The deal with DiBella will hoist Williams to a higher level, perhaps the highest, in his quest for greater national recognition.
Friday in St. Charles, Missori, Williams scored a second round TKO over John Willoughby with a devastating second round knockout. With the win, Williams improved to 19-1 with 15 KO’s and is sneaking up the lightweight rankings, now recognized as the ninth best in the weight class by Boxrec.com.
Jack Loew talked briefly about the win Friday. “Dannie looked really good. The fight served as a tune-up for the HBO bout scheduled for early next year. I think the guy he beat, Willoughby, injured his leg while falling to the canvas when he got knocked out. Dannie is ready for what is next.”
Loew has had a hectic week. He was with Williams in Missouri Friday, flew home to be in the corner of Juan Salinas and Marco Hall at the Lights Out Promotions card at St. Lucy’s on Saturday, and has the Bob Roth Amateur Show on Wednesday night to prepare for.
Coach Boldon And Brandi Brown Speak On Being Predicted To Finish Last
Last season, the Youngstown State women lost one senior, Boki Dimitrov. Not downplaying her accomplishments by any means, but the Lady Penguins retained most of their productive core, and then some. Last season, Brandi Brown became the first player in Horizon League history to lead the league in scoring and be kept off of the All-Conference First Team. Two years ago, the Horizon League gave Yar Shayok of Detroit the Horizon League Newcomer of The Year hardware despite Brown having better statistics.
Fast forward to November, 2011. Brown has been named the conference preseason Player of The Year. In some sports, when an official blows a call, they sometimes give the team that feels cheated a makeup call, or a call favorable to chide the whining. Two problems with all of that. One. Brown and Boldon have not whined about any of it. Two. Brown deserves the recognition, it was the league voting failures of the past that make me nervous about what they base these choices on.
In another brainy move, the voters picked this year’s Penguins team to finish tenth (out of ten) in the preseason league poll. So now we have the best player – who didn’t make the first team last season, playing for the predicted worst team despite the torrid run at season’s end in February. Who votes? Can I get a name? A number? Anything?
“Obviously, they think that she [Brown] is the best player in the conference,” said Coach Boldon. “Either they think that I can’t coach or that her teammates can’t play. It will take care of itself in January and February, we have to keep working to get better today. We played two scrimmages and shot well, Brandi was not the top scorer in either of them. She is not selfish, she understands the game, and wants the team to succeed. Others can score just because Brandi is on the floor.”
“This team has higher aspirations than last years team”, noted Boldon. “We know we still have a ways to go before we can get to the goals we have set for this year. We are going to try to win every game we play. Last season, we played that way toward the end of the year. Before that, we got content by a win here or there.”
Brown was more politically correct with her answers to these questions.
“It is disappointing to see that they predicted we would finish last”, said Brown. “It just fuels us and gives us motivation to work harder. Last year we won six games, we know what it takes to win now. There is nothing other than winning that we want. Moral victories do not show in the standings. I believe in my teammates and know that we all want to win.”
“Regardless of whatever accolades people decide to give me, the team comes first. It is nice and I am humbled to be picked by the conference, but make no mistake about it, this team wants to win games.”
Youngstown’s Durrell Richardson Has Successful Return To Ring After 25 Month Layoff
Durrell Richardson had been out of boxing for 25 months. He was working at the Olive Garden when something got him thinking about a return to the sport of boxing. Although it took over two years, he notched a win to go to 13-3. The win did not come easy against Michael Walker, a cagy veteran who fought Kelly Pavlik in amateur tournaments years ago.
It took Richardson about half of the first round to lose the ring rust. He stunned Walker in both the second and third rounds en rout to a four round unanimous decision. The judges scored the fight 40-36, 39-37, and 39-37.
“The hardest thing for me was keeping my weight down”, said Richardson. “Even with the weight loss, I felt good tonight. My jab was working for me and he never really hurt me. Give him [Walker] credit, he came to fight, and I am glad it was like that.”
Under the watchful eye of Sam Calderone, Richardson says he will stay active and is looking for more.
Jake Giuriceo Wins Unanimous Decision, Crowned UBO All America Champion
Jake Giuriceo came into his Universal Boxing Organization Championship Fight against Bryne Green in top shape. When the ten round fight ended, Giuriceo was still fresh and full of energy. The Bull has the conditioning regimen of a champion, now he has a belt to go with it. In a unanimous decision, Giuriceo garnered his first piece of hardware and can now be referred to as a champion in boxing circles.
“I knew we had to go ten rounds tonight,”said Giuriceo. “Frankie [Duarte] told me ‘you have ten rounds to work this kid‘. I came on stronger and stronger with each round. I felt like my left hand was going to work tonight. It is amazing to be a champion, I don’t know where I would be. I can’t thank God enough for the people he has put in my life, the way he has orchestrated my team, it is really amazing.”
The Welterweight bout started off with a typical first round of two fighters trying to dictate the pace. Both Giuriceo and Green established they could jab. In the second and third round, it almost seemed like a contest of who could control the pace. Green was effectively counterpunching Giuriceo, but The Bull was throwing, and landing, jabs with good accuracy in piling up at least two of the first three rounds.
In the middle rounds, Giuriceo started working the body and using uppercuts to stop Green from covering up his face with both gloves. As the fight progressed, it became obvious that Giuriceo was not tiring, not in the least. To start the fourth round, I would estimate that Giuriceo threw at least 30 punches in the first minute. Constant motion and deception mixed in between every punch.
The ninth and tenth rounds were new territory in Giuriceo’s career. Stamina will never be a problem for The Bull. As this fight went on, somehow his energy level seemed to continue rising with each passing round. The tenth round was Giuriceo’s best of the fight. A fair estimation was about a 3:1 ratio of punches thrown in favor of Giuriceo.
After the fight, Giuriceo was handed the belt that his 14 wins have earned him. The jubilant, newly crowned champion was ecstatic and did a little in-ring announcing of his future plans.
“I am going to take some time off and marry my fiance, Jackie Mazias. We are going to get married on May 20, and I am going to be a very happy man. There are rumors that I might be on an ESPN show early next year, but I don’t like to spread rumors.”
Giuriceo told me after the fight that his wedding reception would be at St. Lucy’s, the same venue that this fight took place in. The wedding itself will take place at Giuriceo’s church, Metro Assembly.
“I might wear the belt to the wedding.”
“I talked in the locker room before the fight about the sparring I had in California”, said Giuriceo. “I worked with Ponce de Leon, John John Molina, and many other great fighters. There was no way I was going to come here tonight and lose to this kid. I was hoping for an easier night, couldn’t finish maybe the way I wanted to. I felt excellent during every round, I felt like I won every round. I even think the scoring was a little off, except for the one judge who had me losing only one round.”
The official scoring for the fight was 99-91, 96-94, and 97-93, all for Jake Giuriceo.
“I feel like I landed some great shots tonight. I can hear the noises as I punch, the grunts and groans. I just have to learn to be more accurate. My opponent tonight was tough, he just upset an undefeated fighter in his very last fight. He came here to win this belt tonight. If I had to grade my performance, I would say I get a B+, the only reason it isn’t an ‘A’ is because I thought I could have stayed closer to him longer, making it more of a Giuriceo type fight. I let him off a little and I shouldn’t have.”
Joe Corvino, the multi-tasking leader, has something in Giuriceo that few find. A pure marketability that this sport needs right now. The handlers, Giuriceo, and Corvino will all be sure to strike while the iron is hot. Keith Burnside and Duarte will continue to physically shape him. His bride-to-be will help keep his emotions in check. God will continue to be the battery that propels him.
For Jake Giuriceo, UBO Champion, the iron has never been hotter.
Youngstown’s Juan Salinas Gets First Pro Win
Jack Loew was mystified when Juan Salinas lost his first professional fight at the Covelli Centre in August. Loew did not make excuses knowing that an 18-year old kid might have growing pains going from the ranks of amateur to pro. Saturday, Salinas, now 1-1, erased all doubts against David Burns in knockout fashion.
“Last fight, I was too anxious and too excited”, said Salinas. “This time I was a little more patient and studied my opponent. I saw openings and took them, I would hit him in the body and later was using an uppercut after the body shots. This bout will give me some experience, I’m still getting used to fighting without headgear on.”
Seconds, and I mean, just a few seconds, after the bell rang to start the fight, Salinas floored Burns with a left hook. The rest of the first round, Burns was off-balance and wildly chasing Salinas around. Salinas got some good rights off and scored several big shots by the end of the round.
“The kid is only 18 and still has a lot to learn”, remarked Loew. “He made a young fighter’s mistake in the second when he abandoned boxing and just started slugging. As a heavyweight, you become free game when you do that, one punch can end the fight at anytime.”
In the second round, Salinas took a couple of shots early and all boxing was thrown out the window. The two winless fighters threw all they had at each other, no jabs, all haymakers in what shaped into a war. By the end of the second round, Jack Loew’s fighter was woozy, but Burns was gassed as well.
In the third round, the fighters slowed a little and the ref gave Burns a standing eight count about two minutes into a round of straight punishment from Salinas. The fight was stopped less than thirty seconds later, 2:18 into the round, and Salians evened his pro record at 1-1 with a win.