(JUNE 1) (COLORADO SPRINGS,
COLO.) – With two 2012 Olympic medalists leading the way, Team
USA earned five gold medals at the 2014 Cheo Aponte tournament
in Saturday night in Caguas, Puerto Rico. London bronze medalist
Marlen Esparza (Houston, Texas) and Olympic champion Claressa
Shields (Flint, Mich.) led the medal haul which included
victories from female lightweight Melissa Parker (Fountain,
Colo.), male light welterweight Abraham Nova (Albany, N.Y.) and
male super heavyweight Cam F. Awesome (Lenexa, Kansas). Awesome
defended his title from last year while welterweight Jose Alday
(Odessa, Texas) won silver for the second straight year. Male
lightweight Genaro Gamez (San Diego, Calif.) claimed silver as
well following a controversial loss in the finals.
2012 Olympic gold medalist Claressa Shields (Flint, Mich.)
competed in her first international bout in the elite division
since her victory at the London Olympics. She faced off with
2011 Pan American Games silver medalist Yenebier Guillen of the
Dominican Republic in the women’s middleweight final round bout.
Shields made a triumphant return to the elite, international
scene with a victory over Guillen to take another gold medal.
Shields’ Olympic teammate and 2012 Olympic bronze medalist
Marlen Esparza (Houston, Texas) opened the Cheo Aponte
tournament with a second round TKO in Friday’s action to set up
a final round match-up with Brazil’s Cleio Costa. The Brazilian
boxer defeated Team USA’s Christina Cruz and Esparza was able to
avenge her teammate’s loss with a unanimous decision win over
Costa in the flyweight final on Saturday.
Defending champion Awesome was clearly comfortable in his Puerto
Rican surroundings and he once again won gold with a win over
Mayor Kieshno of the Bahamas in the super heavyweight
championship bout.
Nova competed in three bouts en route to his light welterweight
match-up with Guatemala’s Walter Duarte in the championship
bout. He closed the tournament in impressive fashion, taking a
second round TKO over Duarte.
Parker took on well-known Puerto Rican lightweight Kiria Tapia
in her championship bout on Saturday night. She wasn’t deterred
by the 2011 Pan American Games champion, winning a unanimous
decision victory over Tapia to take gold.
Gamez also battled a Puerto Rican opponent in his championship
bout, facing Jose Rosario in lightweight action. He dropped a
contested split decision following three rounds of action with
even the Puerto Rican fans sharing their displeasure with the
judges.
Alday claimed silver for the second straight year, falling by
split decision to Puerto Rico’s Niclaus Flaz in the welterweight
finale.
In addition to the medals won on Saturday, female flyweight
Christina Cruz (New York, N.Y.), male flyweight Malik Jackson
(Washington DC) and male light heavyweight Jasper McCargo
(Oakland, Calif.) all claimed bronze medals.
USA Boxing International Teaching Coach Pedro Roque (Colorado
Springs, Colo.), Luis Gamez (San Diego, Calif.) and Jerrick
Jones (Albany, N.Y.) led the U.S. team in Puerto Rico with Dr.
Lucien Parillo (Wallingford, Conn.) joining the squad as the
Team Physician and David Zawacki (Reno, Nev.) serving as the
AIBA official.
Saturday’s U.S. Results
112 lbs/female: Marlen Esparza, Houston, Texas/USA dec. Clelia
Costa, BRA, 3-0
132 lbs/male: Jose Rosario, PUR Genaro Gamez, San Diego,
Calif./USA, 2-1
132 lbs/female: Melissa Parker, Fountain, Colo./USA dec. Kiria
Tapia, PUR, 3-0
141 lbs/male: Abraham Nova, Albany, N.Y./USA won on TKO over
Walter Duarte, GUA, TKO-2
152 lbs/male: Niclaus Flaz, PUR, dec. Jose Alday, Odessa,
Texas/USA , 3-0
165 lbs/female: Claressa Shields, Flint, Mich./USA dec. Yenebier
Guillen, DOM, 3-0
201+ lbs/male: Cam F. Awesome, Lenexa, Kansas/USA dec. Mayor
Kieshno, BAH, 3-0