Olympic Boxing results: Errol Spence Advances after a United States Protest - Rau’shee Warren’s Journey Ends - London 2012
By Media Report (Aug 4, 2012) Doghouse Boxing
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Errol Spence Advances to Quarterfinal Action Following a United States Protest
While Rau’shee Warren’s
Olympic Journey Ends
(LONDON, ENGLAND) – The 2012 U.S. Olympic Boxing
Team appeared to face an end to their medal run on the men’s side with apparent
losses by flyweight Rau’shee Warren (Cincinnati,
Ohio) and welterweight Errol Spence (Desoto,
Texas) on Friday. Yet following a protest by the United States, Spence’s
decision was overturned and he will advance to the quarterfinal round. Warren, who
made history before throwing a punch in London by becoming the first three-time
U.S. Olympic boxer, lost a one-point decision to France’s Nordine Oubaali in his London opener.
The
25-year-old Warren lost his opening first bout at both the 2004 and 2008
Olympic Games and he stepped into the ring looking for his first-ever Olympic
win in London, but it wasn’t meant to be for the decorated amateur boxer.
Warren took the early lead in the bout, boxing his way to a 9-6 lead after the
first round. Yet Oubaali began to come back in the second, pulling the bout to
within one after the second round. Warren, who lost both contacts during the
bout, tried to hold on to his tenuous lead in the third, but he wasn’t able to
do so and Oubaali won a 19-18 final decision. The loss ends an outstanding
amateur career for Warren, who owns every piece of Olympic-style boxing
hardware other than an Olympic medal. He came back for a third run at Olympic
glory in the hopes of accomplishing his dream of placing an Olympic gold medal
around his mother’s neck but it wasn’t meant to be for the Cincinnati native.
“I came out in the first round really
strong, throwing combinations. In the second and third rounds, I was kind of
sitting on my shots, waiting for one shot so I could catch him coming in and
try to drop the big left hand and hurt him and work off that but that didn’t
work,” Warren said. “After the first round, I was kind of flicking the jab and
delivering one shot instead of three or four shots and I guess that’s what cost
me the fight, he was more aggressive. I was just trying to land my shots and
deliver them with power.”
Spence
wasted no time getting started in his bout with India’s Krishan Vikas, staying busy and aggressive through all nine minutes
of boxing. Yet Vikas took a 4-2 advantage after the first round. Spence
continued to press the action in the second round, peppering Vikas with
combinations despite the Indian’s constant movement. Although Spence was the
much more active boxer in the second round, Vikas held on to a one-point lead
after the second. The American boxer picked up his output even further in the
third round while Vikas held throughout the last three minutes. Spence’s
efforts weren’t enough for the five judges and Vikas was initially named the
winner on an 13-11 decision.
“I felt I needed to be aggressive
because he was the favorite. He was the top seeded boxer, so I know that the
judges see that,” said Spence. “He’s more known than me internationally so I
felt that I needed to be aggressive and pick up the pace and throw more shots
and I thought I landed more shots than he did. “It was kind of frustrating, but
he was fighting to the computer system so I’m kind of used to that because I
was the aggressor. I kind of switched the game plan up and I adjusted well.”
Yet
following a United States protest of the bout result, the Competition Jury
hearing the appeal ruled in Spence’s favor, noting two different rule
violations that should have added four points to the American’s point total.
For the full details, see the AIBA release below. Spence will return to the
ring for quarterfinal action on Tuesday in a bout with Russia’s Andrey Zamkovoy of Russia.
Women’s
boxing will open action on Sunday with lightweight Queen Underwood (Seattle, Wash.) taking the ring in afternoon
action. Flyweight Marlen Esparza (Houston,
Texas) and middleweight Claressa Shields (Flint, Mich.) will compete on Monday following a first round bye.
U.S Results
114 lbs:
Nordine Oubaali, FRA, dec. Rau’shee
Warren, Cincinnati, Ohio/USA, 19-18
152 lbs: Errol Spence, Desoto, Texas/USA, dec.
Krishan Vikas, IND, 15-13 (following protest)
Rau’shee Warren Quotes
“I thought I had the decision, but
overall you don’t know what they are counting and what they are scoring. It’s a
bit disappointing, coming for my third time and losing in the first round. As
you can see, I feel that this isn’t my lane anymore, going to the Olympics and
trying to bring a gold medal on the United States.”
“He got the decision, I thank
everybody back home for supporting me. This isn’t the end of Rau’shee Warren.
My journey is going to continue, I’m going to stay hungry no matter what I’m
doing.”
“Stuff happens in the ring as far as
you don’t know what the judges are scoring. It might look to the person on the
outside of the ring, it might look like a person is winning the fight. But to
the judges who have been doing it for years, they like to score a lot of things
– jabs, hooks, body shots. You never know what they are scoring. There wasn’t
any pressure on me, I just went out there and did my thing. I came out there
really explosive in the first round and took the first round 9-6 and then tried
to sit down on my shots.”
“It’s always a good experience to do
something that isn’t normally done like me being the first American boxer to go
to the Olympics three times. It isn’t a setback for me. I still have a lot of
head for me. I’m going to put this behind me, learn from it and take it to
another level.”
“My headgear kept going down over my
eyes and my contacts fell out in the first round and when they fall out, I have
to wait for my opponent to get a little closer so I can throw my shots. It
always happens, even in training. I get hit and my contacts come out and it
will be really blurry.”
“In Beijing, I felt like I won that
fight. I felt like I did enough to win. In this fight, I put a lot of that on
my shoulders in not letting my combinations go and trying to deliver big shots.
I was trying to set up off the jab but I was kind of rushing my shots. I feel
like I didn’t let anybody down because I was chasing a dream that I’ve had
since I went to my first Olympics in 2004. By coming here for the third time,
it shows people that I didn’t give up on my dream. My mom and I will have to
talk about getting something else, maybe a world title in the pros.”
“I didn’t give my whole life, I just
gave my dream to the Olympics but I have a lot of life ahead of me. This is
just another step to success. Working off this mistake and figure out what I’m
going to do next. I’m getting ready for my next journey.”
Errol Spence Quotes (prior to the bout being overturned)
“I thought I threw more punches and
landed more shots and was the more aggressive boxer. I thought I won, and the
coaches and the crowd thought I won but the judges didn’t think so.”
“Yes, I thought they announced me the
winner.”
“This was a once in a lifetime
experience being at the Olympics and I will cherish this experience no matter
what happens. The guy from India is a good fighter, I take nothing from him and
wish him the best of luck.”
“Of course, it’s disappointing because
we hate to lose and expect to come home with medals and we didn’t. We’re kind
of sad right now, it’s kind of a sad day. I’m more sad than anything right now,
I felt like I let down a lot of people. My family and people that are at home.”
“I gave my everything in the ring so
I’m not going to hang my head low too long but there’s nothing I can do about
that decision.”
“You just have to use angles, throw
punches and adjust to what he’s doing. I thought I had a high guard too and I
thought I was landing punches between his shots too. He’s a good fighter, I
take nothing from him.”
“My style is just to be really
aggressive and throw a lot of punches, I’ve always done that.”
“I thought I scored more than two
punches in the first round but I’ve seen it before, there’s nothing you can
do.”
Errol Spence Quotes (Following the decision)
“I am
obviously thrilled that my the competition jury overturned my decision and I
can continue chasing the gold medal I came here to win. I am going to make the
most of this second chance that I’ve been given. I can’t wait to get back in
that ring on Tuesday.”
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).
READ OFFICIAL STATEMENT: Olympic Boxing Results: AIBA overturns Krishan Vikas vs Errol Spence - Review db
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