First Round Action Concludes at the 2010 National Golden Gloves Tournament of Champions
(COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO.) – Over 50 bouts of first round action took place on Tuesday in Little Rock, Ark., as boxers in the flyweight, lightweight, welterweight, light heavyweight and super heavyweight divisions vied for a spot in the second round. 2008 Olympians Rau’shee Warren (Cincinnati, Ohio) and Raynell Williams (Cleveland, Ohio) both enjoyed opening round victories on day two of Golden Gloves competition at the Statehouse Convention Center.
Boxers in all ten weight divisions will take the ring on Wednesday as they compete for a spot in the quarterfinal round on Thursday.
Tuesday, May 4 Results
114 lbs:
Rau’shee Warren, Cincinnati dec. Steven Ortiz, Pennsylvania
Hector Colon, Florida dec. Tyrone Luckey, New Jersey
Stephon Young, St. Louis dec. Isaac Aguiller, Rocky Mountain
132 lbs:
Ricky Alvarez, Wisconsin dec. Rashidi Ellis, New England
Salvador Ruiz, Toledo dec. Marlon Brown, New York Metro
Eric Altamirano, California dec. Ryan Martin, Knoxville
Raynell Williams, Cleveland dec. Nicholas Jefferson, Nevada
Kevin Rivers Jr., Washington D.C. dec. Tyrone Luckey, New Jersey
Shannen McCray, Kansas City dec. Micah Branch, Tri-State
Enrique Rodriguez, Texas dec. Humberto Tellez, Kansas-Okla
Michael Uemoto, Hawaii dec. Frankie Smith, Jr., Chicago
Raeese Aleem, Michigan dec. Travis Thomas, Iowa
Damon Allen, Pennsylvania dec. Nate Ruin, Upper Midwest
Duran Caferro, Rocky Mountain dec. Luis Berrios, Buffalo
Tommy Logan, Florida dec. Yoel Gonzalez, Colo-New Mex
152 lbs:
Frank Gedeon, Florida dec. Paul Cano, California
Chris Pearson, Wisconsin dec. Richard Gorham, Indiana
Errol Spence, Texas dec. Deandre Harris, Iowa
Shakor Jackson, New Jersey dec. Sonny Jenkins, Cincinnati
Andreas Kamouyerou, Pennsylvania dec. Srdan Lukic, Buffalo
Nicholas Delomba, New England dec. Genaro Mendez, Chicago
Chris Porter Jr., St. Louis dec. Roy Barringer III, Toledo
Leandre White, Detroit dec. Terrance York, Knoxville
Izaak Cardona, Colorado-New Mexico dec. Darnell Parker, Kansas City
Michael Gomez, Rocky Mountain dec. Noel Esqueda, Kansas-Oklahoma
Luis Olivares, Nevada dec. Cletus Seldin, New York Metro
178 lbs
Jerry Odom, Washington D.C. stopped Adam Willlis, Wisconsin, RSC-1
Paul Parker, Toledo stopped Gildardo Garcia, Colo-New Mex, RSC-3
Bo Gibbs, Kansas-Oklahoma dec. Devin Goins, Knoxville
Craig Duncan, Florida stopped Tyler Goodman, Tri-State, RSC-3
Khalib Whitmore, Pennsylvania dec. Daryl Griffin, Buffalo
Christian Thomas, Michigan dec. Daniel Flores, Rocky Mountain
Marcus Browne, New York Metro dec. Zlatko Ledic, California
Paris McCullough, Mid-South dec. David McGordon, Indiana
John Phillips, Hawaii dec. Charly Uriostegui, Texas
Robert Brant, Upper Midwest dec. Nathan Brinkmann, St. Louis
Olijuwan Jones, Kansas City dec. Wesley Washington Jr., Iowa
Landon Johnson, Cincinnati dec. Jason Tucker, Detroit
Armando Pena III, Chicago dec. Lisandro Tupete, New Jersey
201+ lbs
Craig Lewis, Detroit dec. Aaron Green, Upper Midwest
Julian Pollard, New England dec. Angelo Buchanan, Wisconsin
John NoFire, Kansas-Oklahoma dec. John McDermot, Knoxville
Sean Cole, Texas dec. Michael Glasscox, Toledo
Joshua Butler, Florida dec. Chaen Chess, Cincinnati
Aaron Kinch, New Jersey dec. James Barrett, Cleveland
Lenroy Thompson, Kansas City dec. Trevor Bryan Jr., Buffalo
Jordan Maxey, St. Louis stopped Ralph Thomas, Indiana, RSC-1
Dustin Enriquez, California dec. Rydell Gipson, Nevada
Mark Rideout, Pennsylvania stopped Thomas Johnston, Colo-N.Mex, RSC-1
Jerry Forest, Washington D.C. dec. Robert Simms, Michigan
Jelani Foster, Chicago dec. Noa Suiaunoa, Hawaii
USA Boxing, as the national governing body for Olympic-style boxing, is the United States’ member organization of the International Amateur Boxing Association (AIBA) and a member of the United States Olympic Committee (USOC). It is responsible for the selection and management of the United States Olympic Boxing Team, and for the governance and oversight of USA Boxing’s national organization of 38,000 members, 1,400 individual boxing clubs, and 1,600 sanctioned events annually.