2010 CISM World Military Boxing Championships – Benedosso vs. Singh – 101014 – FMWRC – U.S. Army
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2010 CISM World Military Boxing Championships - Benedosso vs. Singh - 101014 - FMWRC - U.S. Army
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U.S. Army World Class Athlete Program boxer Capt. Michael Benedosso advanced to the light flyweight finale of the 2010 CISM Military World Boxing Championships with an 8-3 victory over Pvt. Debendro Singh of India on Oct. 13 at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, N.C. (U.S. Army photo by Tim Hipps, FMWRC Public Affairs, cleared for public release, not for commercial use, attribution requested)
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WCAP Soldiers lead U.S. at CISM Military World Boxing Championships
By Tim Hipps
FMWRC Public Affairs
MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. â" Two U.S. Army World Class Athlete Program boxers led the United States to one of its best performances in Conseil International du Sport Militaire history at the 2010 World Military Boxing Championships.
Spc. Jeffrey Spencer and Capt. Michael Benedosso won gold medals as the U.S. team finished tied for second with Brazil (18 points) behind champion Kazakhstan (22 points).
âStanding on that podium above every other country and seeing your flag raised and hearing that national anthem was a surreal feeling,â said Benedosso, 25, a 2007 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. âI had chills up and down my spine. Itâs more motivation to continually train harder and try to get the same feeling again at the Olympics.â
U.S. Marine Corps light welterweight Cpl. Jamel Herring struck silver, and USMC middleweight Cpl. Damarias Russell and lightweight Lance Cpl. Tommy Roque both claimed bronze.
Pennsylvania Army National Guard Spc. Samuel Vasquez Jr., another WCAP boxer, added a bronze medal for Team USA. Vasquez was eliminated in the semifinals by French welterweight Capt. Alexis Vastine, the 2008 Olympic bronze medalist, who won gold and was selected as the best boxer of the weeklong tournament.
Spencer prevailed 5-0 over Sgt. Erdos Janabergenov of Kazakhstan in the light heavyweight finale to secure his gold medal.
âI tried to establish myself as the bigger, stronger fighter and being dominant â" not letting him bully me around like his teammates were doing everybody else,â said Spencer, âI was trying to change my combinations â" head-to-body, body-to-head â" trying to throw him off where I was going with my shots.
âCoach told me to stay relaxed, keep doing what I was doing, tighten up my defense, and just keep letting my hands go.â
Spencer defeated Cpl. Gianluca Rosciglione of Italy, 4-3, in the quarterfinals and AB Diver Gan Fernando of Sri Lanka, 10-1, in the semis.
âIâm just happy my performance picked up,â Spencer said. âThe first fight I let my opponent do something I rarely let opponents do and thatâs frustrate me. I normally try to frustrate them instead of let them frustrate me. I calmed down eventually in the third round and pulled out the victory.
âEvery fight after that I just maintained my mental toughness and stayed focused on what I wanted to do, not what they were doing. I was determined to make a statement that nobody here will beat me. This was my first CISM, so I was really excited about representing the U.S. Armed Forces ⦠right now I feel like the sky is the limit.â
Benedosso and Pvt. Ilyas Suleimenov of Kazakhstan boxed to a 2-2 tie in the light flyweight finale and Benedosso claimed the gold by virtue of a 4-3 tiebreaker.
âI knew I had to get inside that reach and muscle my way and toughen him out to get those points any way I could,â said Benedosso, 25, a 2007 graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. âHe had a really good European style, so I felt a little awkward because I kept punching out of range. I just tried to maintain my tight defense and get any points I could.
âMy coach told me going into the third round that they were not scoring any points to the body, so I had to go straight and only to the head,â said Benedosso, who was inspired late in the bout by chants of âUSA! USA! USA!â that drowned out a chorus of âKaz-akh-stan! Kaz-akh-stan! Kaz-akh-stan!â
Benedosso, a three-time U.S. Armed Forces champion making his international boxing debut, prevailed in the semifinals with an 8-3 victory over Pvt. Debendro Singh of India.
âThis tournament means a lot to me because in the World Class Athlete Program we train to be world-class athletes, not just nationally-ranked athletes,â Benedosso said. âWeâre Soldiers first, and ambassadors for the country and the Army. Every bout I go into, I try my best to represent all our brothers and sisters overseas in harmâs way and try to give my best effort because I know theyâre giving their best effort. Everything I do, I do with pride for them.â
Only three times in CISM history has the U.S. boxing team performed better: four gold medals, five silvers and one bronze in 1985 to capture the team title; four golds, one silver and three bronze medals in 1983 for runner-up team honors, and in 1981, the winning U.S. squad had six gold medalists.
âOur boxers represented the Marines and the Army very well. Iâm proud of them,â said U.S. Armed Forces coach Jesse Ravelo, a former All-Army Boxing coach.
Though he didnât capture the gold, Herring showed his grit by surviving three standing eight counts in his final bout. He won 3-1 over Kumarasinghe of Sri Lanka in a light welterweight semifinal before losing 7-1 to Pvt. Merey Akshalov of Kazakhstan in the finals.
Russell prevailed in the middleweight quarterfinals over Barbabosâ Ronald Als when the referee stopped their contest at 1:55 of the second round. In the semis, Pvt. Peter Mullenberg of The Netherlands defeated Russell, 4-0.
Roque won 14-2 over Sgt. Praveen Kurre of India in the lightweight quarterfinals before losing 11-4 to Sgt. Berik Abdraklmanov of Kazakhstan in the semis.
âHe just faced somebody who was tougher than he was,â Ravelo said. âThat kid was pretty tough. It seemed like he had a lot of experience and he just outdueled Tommy Roque.â
Ravelo was happy that all six U.S. boxers won a medal.
âNot the color we want, but six medals,â he said with a smile.
âOther than Herring, most of our guys are brand new to international competition,â Ravelo added. âThose other competitors belong to the national teams from their countries, not just the military team. A lot of them are national champions who are going to represent their countries in the Olympic Games and some of them are former Olympians.â
Vasquez, 24, who has deployed twice to Iraq, squared off against Olympian Vastine during just his second month in WCAP at âthe biggest tourney of my life.â
âI was trying to get in range, and every time I got in range, he was smarter,â said Vasquez, who went toe to toe with Vastine, a polished boxer who won 8-1. âHe got in and got out. He did it perfectly. Thatâs something Iâve got to learn and add it to my arsenal.
âI donât know if his reputation might have psyched me out. I wanted it to look like he was nothing to me and I am better than him. Thatâs what I was thinking, and I believe I am better than him. The next time I fight him, itâs not going to go that way. ⦠Going toe to toe with him shows me where Iâm at Olympic-wise, and where I can be.
âIâve got too much heart and dedication, and now, knowing what I need to do, determination is just going to take me where I need to go.â
Spencer, the reigning U.S. amateur national light heavyweight champion, sensed that feeling before heading to Camp Lejeune.
âIâm trying to go for gold in everything I do,â Spencer said. âI just want to represent the USA in the best way that I can and let them know that Iâm not just number one in the country, Iâm going to be number one in the world.â
voorzitter van de organisatie taptoe / military tattoo
Image by tdietmut
Ik ben naar het stadhuis Rotterdam gegaan om fotoâs te maken. Door toeval ben ik in een groep genodigden (oud militairen) terecht gekomen. Ik kon vrij in het stadhuis fotoâs maken. Na een toespraak van de burgemeester van Rotterdam de heer Ahmed Aboutaleb begon op straat (Coolsingel) een mini-taptoe. Op het gegeven moment kon ik geen kant meer uit en zat voor ik het wist in de eerste rij voor het stadhuis. Een prachtige plek om te kijken, maar helaas niet de beste plek voor fotoâs. Het gehele programma van het âNationale Taptoe 2009â was van 1-4 oktober 2009 te zien in AHOY, Rotterdam.
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Het doel van een taptoe is om de militaire muziek en de diverse krijgsmachtdelen van Defensie aan een breed publiek te presenteren. Oorspronkelijk was de 'taptoe' een militair trommelsignaal om aan te geven dat soldaten uit de kroegen in de stad naar de kazernes moesten terugkeren en dat de kroegbazen 'den tap toe' moesten doen en geen bier meer mochten tappen. De drummers gaven dit signaal vanaf 21:30 uur tot aan de avondklok van 22:00 uur. (wikipedia)
The original meaning of military tattoo is a military drum performance, but nowadays it sometimes means army displays more generally. It dates from the seventeenth century when the British Army was fighting in the Low Countries (Belgium and The Netherlands). Drummers from the garrison were sent out into the towns at 21:30 hrs (9:30PM) each evening to inform the soldiers that it was time to return to barracks. The process was known as doe den tap toe (old-Dutch for "turn off the tap"), an instruction to innkeepers to stop serving beer and send the soldiers home for the night. The drummers continued to play until the curfew at 22:00 hrs (10:00PM) (wikipedia)
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