(NOV 1) MEMPHIS, TENN. - In
a scenic venue usually reserved the Memphis Symphony Orchestra,
two female boxers won gold at the U.S. Olympic Team Trials for
Women's Boxing on Saturday. Flyweight Virginia Fuchs (Kemah,
Texas) and middleweight Claressa Shields (Flint, Mich.) were
adamant on closing the show on Saturday and the duo did just
that with victories in their respective championship bouts at
the Cannon Center in Memphis, Tenn. Lightweight Jajaira Gonzalez
(Glendora, Calif.) pushed her weight class to a winner takes all
bout on Sunday afternoon with a victory over winners bracket
champion Mikaela Mayer (Los Angeles, Calif.) in the second bout
of the night.
Fuchs accomplished the goal she's
been chasing for the last four years in the flyweight bout,
defeating 2012 Olympic bronze medalist Marlen Esparza (Houston,
Texas) in the championship bout. As Fuchs entered the bout as
the winners bracket champion, the victory sealed the Olympic
Trials for Fuchs. The match-up was the seventh meeting between
the two Houston natives with Esparza winning the first five
bouts and Fuchs taking both contests at the Olympic Trials.
Esparza looked to set the tone in early in the bout as she
fought to make her second straight Olympic Team. Fuchs worked to
control her distance and prevent Esparza from getting in to her
vaunted rhythm. She continued to press the action over the last
round as the all-important bout went in to the final seconds.
After four hard-fought rounds, Fuchs claimed the victory she'd
been dreaming of, winning a 2-1 decision over Esparza.
"I feel amazing, I've been
working for this moment since 2013 and I worked so hard for it.
I know I deserve it so it feels great and I'm so excited. I was
able to keep my space very well and not let her get in her
rhythm," Fuchs said. "I didn't allow her to control the fight
because she likes to control the fight and I was making sure I
was in control of the whole fight and using my jab a whole lot
more."
"When I heard them announce my name, I thought 'the moment has
finally come. I'm going to Rio. I can't believe it, I'm going to
the Olympics.' I'm going to go home and let me body rest, see
what's next and prepare for the continental qualifier."
The lightweight bout featured the
second straight contest between two boxers from the same city.
Lightweight national champion Mayer entered the ring hoping to
end her tournament tonight, but Gonzalez had other plans. The
2014 Youth Olympic champion stepped to Mayer from the opening
bell and refused to allow her any breathing room in the hopes of
pushing the weight class to a winner takes all bout on Sunday.
The 18-year-old accomplished just that with a 3-0 decision over
Mayer in their rematch. The two will face off again at 4 p.m. on
Sunday at the South Hall of the Cook Convention Center with the
winner claiming the final gold medal of the Olympic Trials.
"Starting strong from the very
first round was key. In my last fight, I kind of waited a little
bit because I had to kind of feel her out. This time I just went
straight forward and used my aggressiveness and my punches and
followed up and I think that really helped. I put it in my head
that in this fight, I just have to go nonstop and not let her
breathe. I think my aggression really helped today. I felt
stronger," Gonzalez said. "Tomorrow, I'm going to go harder than
today so tomorrow so should be better than today. I'm going to
kill it from the first round to the end, I have to."
Shields entered her second
Olympic Trials looking to make a statement in the middleweight
division and the Olympic champion certainly left her mark on the
event. She entered championship night off three straight
unanimous decisions and was intent on continuing that streak in
her final match-up with Tika Hemingway (Brackenridge, Pa.). The
two faced off in the finals of the 2012 Olympic Trials as well
and the result was the same in the sequel. Shields won her
fourth unanimous decision of the tournament to take the Olympic
Trials middleweight championship. She is the first American
female boxer to win two straight Olympic Trials titles and is
vying to become the first U.S. boxer male or female to win two
Olympic gold medals.
"I landed the cleaner and harder
shots through the whole fight so I knew it was unanimous. I knew
it wasn't split even though I spent entirely too much time on
the ropes I feel. She had me on the ropes and she tried to land
a few punches but they weren't clean, solid punches. It was more
of trying to throw me around. She's definitely bigger than me."
Shields said. "Tonight, she did more boxing but I didn't worry
about it because she wasn't landing from the outside. It was
more of a show-me jab but that can also affect the judges so
that's why I started pressuring her more and trying to cut her
off because even though she was jabbing from the outside and she
wasn't landing, you never know what the judges are seeing. They
might think that she is landing and I'm just following her. So
that's why I switched the game plan up and tried to land more
shots. I don't think I landed any right hands in the first round
but I started seeing openings and getting those combinations
off."
Shields compared her win as a seasoned veteran to the victory at
only 17-years-old in 2012.
"The feeling is different (from the 2012 Olympic Trials) because
it was a lot harder when I was 17. I really didn't know how to
handle her being bigger than me and stronger than me even though
I did. I had to dig down deep inside me when I was 17 to finish
every fight with her," Shields said. "The fight on Tuesday with
her was easy and this fight today, I had to go a little bit
more. She had a different game plan, she didn't want to get hit
this time. I started pressuring her, I started landing cleaner
shots. This time, I really feel numb. I can't feel anything
right now. I can't believe I'm a two-time Olympian. It's just
crazy to think about it. I haven't been able to say that before.
It's definitely different. I feel like this time I was a little
bit scared going in to the 2012 Olympics because I'd just had my
first loss. This time I haven't lost in three years and I feel
like there's nothing can't stop this time around."
The three Olympic Trials champions still must qualify
internationally via a continental tournament in March or the
World Championships in May to earn a spot in the 2016 Olympic
Games.
The Men's Trials Qualifier concluded competition on Saturday
with 10 championship bouts. All of the night's male competitors
earned spots in the Olympic Trials for Men's Boxing with their
two top finish in the final qualifying tournament.
Olympic Trials for Women's Boxing Results
112 lbs: Virginia Fuchs, Kemah, Texas, dec Marlen Esparza,
Houston, Texas, 2-1
132 lbs: Jajaira Gonzalez, Glendora, Calif., dec Mikaela Mayer,
Los Angeles, Calif., 3-0
165 lbs: Claressa Shields, Flint, Mich., dec Tika Hemingway,
Brackenridge, Pa., 3-0
*This is Mikaela Mayer's first loss. Championship box-off
between Jajaira Gonzalez and Mikaela Mayer will take place at
4:00 PM on Sunday, November 1 at the Cook Convention Center
South Hall.
Men's Trials Qualifier III Results
108 lbs: Nicholas Scaturicho, Hartsdale, N.Y, dec Rondarrius
Hunter, Atlanta, Ga., 2-1
114 lbs: Eros Correa, San Jose, Calif., dec Khalid Twaiti,
Brooklyn, N.Y., 3-0
123 lbs: Duke Ragan, Cincinnati, Ohio, dec Efren Lopez, Fresno,
Calif., 2-1
132 lbs: Maliek Montgomery, Macon, Ga., dec Bruce Carrington,
Brooklyn, N.Y., 2-1
141 lbs: Abraham Nova, Albany, N.Y., dec Richardson Hitchins,
Brooklyn, N.Y., 2-1
152 lbs: Ferdinand Kerobyan, N. Hollywood, Calif., dec Rashid
Stevens, Gahanna, Ohio, 2-1
165 lbs: Charles Conwell, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, dec Carlos
Monroe, Snellville, Ga., 3-0
178 lbs: Joseph George, Houston, Texas, dec Eric Moon, Marietta,
Ga., 3-0
201 lbs: Brandon Glanton, Atlanta, Ga, won by TKO over Sardius
Simmons, Flint, Mich., and., TKO-3
201+ lbs: Brandon Lynch, Albany, N.Y., dec. Nkosi Solomon,
Brooklyn, N.Y., 3-0