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MMA Olympics 1

Latest Olympics 1 Stories

Attractive Olympian: Boxer Demetrius Andrade

Olympic athletes often don't get paid to do anything other than look good. In that vein, Attractive Olympians handicaps which athletes may rake in endorsement deals after the Olympics.

Demetrius Andrade isn't old enough to buy beer, but he's the reigning world AIBA champion at 152 pounds. Along with flyweight roommate Rau'shee Warren, the 20-year-old from Connecticut became the USA's first world champion since 1999 when he dominated Thailand's Non Boonjumnong in a fight that was stopped before the second round ended.

Andrade is young but well established in the amateur ranks of the sport. The son of a boxer, he's been training in the ring since age six. He repeated as gold medalist at the U.S. Amateur Boxing Championship in '05-'06 and was a Golden Glove winner in '06 and '07. Before his gold in Chicago, he lost a narrowly contested and controversial championship bout at the Pan Am Games in 2007, where he settled for silver.

He may be a favorite for gold in Beijing, but does Andrade have the right features for underwear ads and adoring fluff pieces in People? After the jump, examine the visual evidence and vote in our tastefully superficial poll.

Thai Olympic Medalists Paying for Manus Boonjumnong's Mistakes

Chances are, unless you're a close follower of Thai Olympians, the name Manus Boonjumnong is a new one to you. He was the 2004 gold medalist in light welterweight boxing and, as a result, won some $600,000 in bonuses. He promptly blew all of it in a frenzy of gambling and partying which cost him both his national respect and his pregnant wife.

Thailand wants to be sure that history doesn't repeat itself this summer so they're going to act like parents of small children. They're still offering fistfuls of Baht to winning athletes, $314,000 for a gold, but they won't fork it all over at once. 2008 medalists will get half their money paid out over 20 years.

"We don't want them to spend it all at once, they might need this money when they get old," Thai Olympic committee member Charoen Wattanasin said. "We will give it to them every month. Most of them manage their finances but there have been a few bad examples in the past."

Strangely enough, Boonjumnong himself may end up being a test case for the success of the new payout system. He's expected to contend for a medal again this summer, though you'd have to wonder why a man with his taste for the high life didn't turn pro in the intervening years.

Equestrian: World's Most Dangerous Sport?

This is Darren Chiacchia competing in equestrian at the Athens Olympics. He won a bronze medal there and was a favorite at the Beijing Games as well.

But he won't be going to Beijing. Last month he was training a stallion that fell on top of him as it jumped a fence, leaving him in a coma for a week and nearly killing him. He's now in a rehabilitation facility in Buffalo, and he's much better off than many equestrian riders whose horses stumble on jumps: Katie Thomas of the New York Times reports that 12 equestrian riders have died in the last year and a half during falls in practice or competition.

Equestrian may very well be the world's most dangerous sport, and although there are various calls for the sport's governing bodies to make it safer, it's surprising that there aren't more people speaking out for the International Olympic Committee simply eliminating it.

And, of course, I have to ask: Can you imagine the way the media and the politicians who think it's their job to protect us from ourselves would react if 12 mixed martial arts fighters had died in the last year and a half? There are risks associated with every sport, but when the media shine a light on those risks, they ought to put them in some perspective. Thomas's reporting makes clear that if you want to go after dangerous sports, equestrian should be your top target.

U.S. Boxing Team May Not Be Well Represented in Beijing

Boxing is a dying sport. That's a familiar refrain to anyone who follows the sport in this country. The conventional wisdom is that boxing is on its last legs. Pundits cite numerous reasons from convoluted sanctioning bodies to mixed martial arts to pay-per-view broadcasts that make it too hard for the casual fan to follow the sport. All have some truth but with the Olympics coming this summer, we're being reminded of a reason that may trump all the rest. Amateur boxing is in a bad way in this country.

Only five members of the U.S. Olympic boxing team have qualified to put on the headgear in Beijing at this point. The other six will need to qualify, either at the current Americas Olympic qualifier in Trinidad or in April's event in Guatemala, by finishing in at least the top three, although some of them need to reach the finals or win. Unlike previous qualifiers, the Cuban team is competing in Trinidad which should make matters more difficult.

During the Oleg Maskaev-Sam Peter and Wladimir Klitschko-Sergei Igbramov heavyweight title bouts, much was made of their extensive amateur backgrounds. None of the fighters grew up in the U.S., something that's the case among champions in many weight classes as is the deep amateur experience. The training begets better boxers which begets championships. The U.S. Olympic struggles underscore the problem developing fighters here and the lack of a home team is a big reason for boxing's diminishing returns in this country.

L.A. Twin Brothers Will Both Box in Olympics: One for USA, One for Mexico

Twin brothers Javier and Oscar Molina were born in Southern California to Mexican parents 18 years ago, and they both took up boxing at an early age and became great fighters. Here's a look at Oscar from last year's Police Athletic League boxing championships:

Javier won the 141-pound class at the U.S. Olympic trials last year, and assuming he fights as well as he's expected to in this week's qualifying tournament in Trinidad, he'll box under the American flag in Beijing.

Oscar lost in the 152-pound class last year, but that didn't end his Olympic dream: Because Olympic rules allow athletes to represent their parents' home countries, Oscar then went to Mexico, where he won the qualifying tournament. He's expected to qualify for the Beijing Games at the qualifying tournament in Trinidad as well.

That will make the Molinas the first pair of twins ever to compete for different countries in the same Olympics. Thanks to the 11-pound weight difference, there's no concern that they'll have to fight each other, which they've both said they won't do. But they could bring medals back to the same home -- even if they're doing it for two different homelands.

[Machochip.com]

U.S. Boxer Fighting Positive Drug Test

The U.S. Boxing team may have to head to Beijing without one of its best hopes at a medal. Sadam Ali tested positive for cathine, banned by the IOC, while in China for a recent bout and is awaiting the results of his backup sample. The test was conducted in December and Ali was placed on "voluntary" suspension pending the second test.

Several boxers suffered from flu-like symptoms during the trip to China and were given over-the-counter medication by team doctors, only Ali tested positive. Cathine is extracted from khat, a plant native to East Africa and the Arabian Peninsula.

Khat is a major part of Yemeni life. 60% of the men there are believed to chew it for its narcotic effects. Ali is from Brooklyn, but his parents are Yemeni. Khat leaves must be fresh to have the stimulating effect, however, and there's other ways that cathine can be produced. Small amounts can be found when the human body metabolizes pseudophedrine, which is used in most decongestants. Ali, of course, used such decongestants while in China. The lightweight has retained a lawyer to represent him if an appeal of the drug test is necessary.

Interestingly, Ali is not the only boxing related client of Salvatore Strazzullo. He is also representing Milana Dravnel, the stripper who was responsible for leaking photos of Oscar De La Hoya in lingerie and is now suing the boxer for defamation.

Two-Time Cuban Gold Medalist Could Be Banned From Competing in Beijing

In 2004, the Cuban Olympic boxing team won gold medals in six of 11 weight classes. That's nothing new. Cuba has produced almost as many great fighters as great cigars, including two of the three three-time gold medalists in the history of the boxing competition.

The Cubans also have a list of defectors just as long. Three of those 2004 gold medalists have defected since Athens and it appeared as if Guillermo Rigondeaux joined them during the Pan American Games this summer in Brazil. Rigondeaux has won just about every amateur competition in the world since the late 90's, including the last two Olympic golds. He was a favorite to become the fourth triple winner.

He didn't show for a quarterfinal bout and appeared to be headed to Europe when he was caught and arrested by Brazilian authorities, at the request of his home island. Rigondeaux asked to return to Cuba but was met by a letter from Fidel Castro saying he'd passed the "point of no return" and would not be allowed to fight for the national team.

The VP of the Cuban Boxing Federation Teofilo Stevenson, three-time gold winner and a Cuban hero, wants him reinstated, however.
"In our country there is a system of re-education that can be applied to those who commit an error or have flaws. The only ones you can't pardon are traitors."

I'm not too familiar with the Cuban "re-education" process but I'm fairly certain that's a euphemism.

Roy Jones Jr. vs. Park Si Hun at the 1988 Olympics

After looking back at the vertigo-inducing logo for the 1988 Summer Olympics, I was inspired to reminisce about the only thing worse about the Seoul Games than the logo: The decision to award the hometown favorite Park Si-Hun the gold medal over Roy Jones Jr. in the light middleweight division. Here's their fight, in its entirety:

Marv Albert did excellent work calling the fight on NBC. It was the wrong decision, of course, but watching it again, I have to say it's no more ridiculous than a lot of other rulings by Olympic judges, in boxing and in other sports. Just your typical boneheaded Olympic decision.
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