Cuba will take over boxing soon...

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  • Cuauhtémoc1520
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    #1

    Cuba will take over boxing soon...

    HAVANA, Cuba (CNN) -- Sharp jabs and crushing body blows echo across a boxing gym in downtown Havana.


    A fighter takes a breather between rounds at Havana's "Kid Chocolate" Boxing Hall.

    1 of 3 Teenage fighters pummel each other in the sweltering Caribbean heat inside Kid Chocolate, the famous Cuban boxing hall named after its pre-revolution world champion.

    "I've always wanted to box since I was little," boxer Jose Antonio Dominguez said, breathing heavily after winning a come-from-behind stunner in a series of regional bouts.

    A veteran at age 16, Dominguez -- like many Cuban youths -- has trained since he was 10.

    "I wanted to be an Olympic champ, and that's still what I want," he said. "I'm not going to stop until I get there."

    Cuba has earned 32 gold medals in Olympic competition since 1972, second only to the United States. But it withdrew from the 2007 World Championships in Chicago, Illinois, over fears of defections that developed after two of its fighters deserted during the 2007 Pan-American Games in Brazil.

    After a two-year absence, the boxing powerhouse is getting ready to step back into the ring at the World Championships in Milan, Italy. Watch aspiring young fighter in Havana's boxing halls »

    On Wednesday, Cuban boxers joined over 70 fighters from 13 countries in competition. They vied in the preliminaries of the American Elite Championships being held this week in Mexico City, Mexico, according to an International Boxing Association (AIBA) statement.

    "By all counts, the Cubans have gotten off to a good start," AIBA spokesman Richard Baker told CNN, noting three wins that Cuban Olympic medallists Yankiel Leon Alarcon, Roniel Iglesias Sotolongo and Emilio Correa Bayeux racked up in their first day of preliminaries.

    With the United States choosing not to participate, many analysts see the bouts as a testing ground for Milan in September.

    Following a disappointing performance at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, China, where Cuba left without a single gold medal, the island nation has focused on developing new talent.

    "It's a rebuilding phase," Baker said, adding that many of Cuba's world champions have recently left amateur boxing to pursue greener pastures.

    Million-dollar contracts have lured away Cuban athletes for years, drawing top baseball prospects like Orlando "El Duque" Hernandez and Jose Contreras away from the promise of state salaries at home.

    Two-time Olympic boxing champion Guillermo Rigondeaux -- the latest in a string of defectors -- is now winning professional bouts in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    Despite defections, Team Cuba still managed to earn twice as many Olympic medals as its closest opponent in Beijing, bringing home four silver medals and four bronze.

    The next closet competitor was China, led by lightweight phenomenon Zou Shiming, with four medals in total.

    What makes Cuban boxers so good:

    The small Caribbean nation of just over 11 million people has raked in more World Championship gold medals than both the United States and Russia.

    "Cubans have the whole package," Showtime commentator Nick Charles told CNN. "They have the aggression ... the technique ... the athleticism."

    Banned in 1962, professional boxing gave way to amateur competition in Cuba that has routinely produced world champions.

    "It's a very rigorous process," Charles added. "It really started many years ago, after the Soviets were there in the '60s to implement the sound technical foundation that these fighters needed."

    The apparent rigor of that system and keen eye for young talent keep Cuban trainers like Emilio Rodriguez prowling school yards for the next top prospects.


    Some analysts say it may take more to produce world champions, though.

    "A boxer is a mischievous person," Rodriguez added. "When a mother says, 'He's a bad kid' -- that's who's going to make a good boxer
    ."


    You think Puerto Rico has good boxers, wait until Fidel Castro dies and the influx of Cuban boxers come into the U.S happens........
  • Talisayen
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    #2
    Originally posted by cuauhtemoc1496
    ."


    You think Puerto Rico has good boxers, wait until Fidel Castro dies and the influx of Cuban boxers come into the U.S happens........
    Cubans are the real powerhouse in boxing. If I'm not mistaken they gathered the most gold medals in the olympics.

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    • brick wall
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      #3
      remains to be seen...pro boxing is different from amateurs.

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      • Cuauhtémoc1520
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        #4
        Originally posted by BraggartKilla
        Cubans are the real powerhouse in boxing. If I'm not mistaken they gathered the most gold medals in the olympics.
        Originally posted by brick wall
        remains to be seen...pro boxing is different from amateurs.
        I'm talking pro's and there's no reason to think these guys won't be great pro's either. They come from the same stock as Puertoricans, Dominicans etc.

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        • VirusTI
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          #5
          Nah...
          Russians are better than cubans, look at what happened when Chagaev went up against the Cuban legend Savon....
          And chagaev is not amazing, though chagaev is very good, underrated win for klitschko

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          • PRPOWERPUNCHES
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            #6
            Originally posted by cuauhtemoc1496
            ."


            You think Puerto Rico has good boxers, wait until Fidel Castro dies and the influx of Cuban boxers come into the U.S happens........
            I disagree, comparing Puerto Rico's boxing with Cuba is like comparing apples with oranges!

            Puerto Rican fighters have been trained for over a 100 years using professional boxing techniques. Cuba has been traning fighters using
            amateur and olympic techniques. Big difference, I love our chances
            against any fighter coming out of Cuba. I like Gamboa..

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            • VirusTI
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              #7
              Also remember, russian only recently started to come over here to the u.s. and already they brought with them an ATG in Kostya and a Dominating HW in Klitschko. Give it a couple of years and Korobov will be next plus the Ukrainian from the olympics.

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              • Cuauhtémoc1520
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                #8
                Originally posted by VirusTI
                Nah...
                Russians are better than cubans, look at what happened when Chagaev went up against the Cuban legend Savon....
                And chagaev is not amazing, though chagaev is very good, underrated win for klitschko
                No way Russians are better than Cubans. Cubans have dominated the amatuer ranks and the only reason we haven't seen them in the pro's is because they aren't allowed to fight there.

                Once Fidel dies and the borders are opened up even more, we will see a period where Cubans will dominate boxing for a while........watch.

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                • Cuauhtémoc1520
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                  #9
                  Originally posted by PRPOWERPUNCHES
                  I disagree, comparing Puerto Rico's boxing with Cuba is like comparing apples with oranges!

                  Puerto Rican fighters have been trained for over a 100 years using professional boxing techniques. Cuba has been traning fighters using
                  amateur and olympic techniques. Big difference, I love our chances
                  against any fighter coming out of Cuba. I like Gamboa..
                  Boxing is boxing and these guy won't take long to adapt to the pro style. What Cuba has is a boxingassembly line waiting to come into the pro's. Plus, Cuba is bigger and more populated than PR and we will see tons of fighters come into the pro ranks.

                  Just in recent years we have seen a lot of Cubans come into the pro ranks and those are just guys that have defected. Imagine what happens when Fidel dies?

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                  • VirusTI
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                    #10
                    Dude, the russians just enter pro boxing and they are already top contenders and dominating is some instances.

                    Look to Kostya(ATG), Klitschko(Dominating), Chagaev(Beat Cuban Legend in AM)

                    I am not saying that Cuabns are bad, or that they cant beat russians; They can. But, to say that they will come over and dominate is not true.

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