The Bengal Bouts, a tradition unlike any other

by Jimmy, (6256 days ago)

Let Jim Nantz' voice echo in your head. It's almost time for Augusta. But this is a boxing post.

For all the Irish alums on this forum, I'm sure you have fond memories of friends and guys from your dorm (or you, yourself) boxing in the Bengal Bouts. They (you) may have joined as a lark one year and gotten pasted in the first round. Or they (you) may have taken to the sport, learned the sweet science, and basked in the basketball arena's lights on Finals night. Domers know how cool and one-of-a-kind the tournament is, while the subway alum network can't believe something like this exists, an outlet that truly exemplifies amateur boxing. I've had the privilege and pleasure of serving as coach/administrator for the boxing team the last three years and the rewards from the experience are immeasurable. I'd call it the spring semester equivalent to the grand tradition of the football gameday experience.

If it weren't for Rockne, the boxing program wouldn't have started in the early 1920s. He considered boxing the best way for his players to stay in shape and make them mentally tough. Rock would be impressed at how the program has grown over the years, though probably a bit miffed that football players aren't allowed to compete anymore. Gone are the days of legendary heavyweight battles, like 1976 when Ross Browner and Ken MacAfee went toe-to-toe in front of a screaming crowd of 10,000.

The 2009 Bouts started this past Sunday. Of the 185 boxers in the tournament who trained four months for their moment in the ring, three minutes and forty-five seconds later, the dream was over for half of them. Quite the sacrifice for such a short moment, but the journey is much more rewarding than the destination. The quarterfinals are tonight. For those that want to track the Bouts or read up on the boxing team a little, check out: http://bengalbouts.nd.edu/mainhome.html

The last couple years, und.com has streamed the Finals live, which will be Feb. 28th at 7pm EST. If you live in town, you should be at the Joyce Fieldhouse supporting the boxers and the Holy Cross Missions in Bangladesh, to which all proceeds are donated. It's pretty remarkable how far a $50-$100K donation goes in helping these impoverished people.

There's even current work being done on a feature documentary film that follows the first Irish boxers who made the trip to Bangladesh last summer, along with plenty of boxing footage and other stuff. Check out strongbodiesfight.org for more information.

I'd love to hear any and all personal accounts on boxing stories from your days under the Dome. Fire away.

locked

Jimmy, cool post

by Jay, San Diego, (6256 days ago) @ Jimmy

Did you fight the bengals when you were in school?

Also, who are the good boxers to keep an eye on this year?

A buddy of mine fought. Dave "Respect Your" Elder. He won his match I think.

locked

Boxers to Watch

by Jimmy, (6255 days ago) @ Jay

A few boxers of note to keep an eye on in this year's Bouts:

Kris "El Azteca" Perez (140 lb) is shooting for his 4th championship. I think he would become either the 12th or 13th boxer in 79 years to win all four years. The last was Pete Ryan in '01. Youtube Kris Perez and you'll find him puttin the hurt on guys.

Matt "Poz" Posluszny (150 lb), cousin of Paul and David Posluszny, has become a very good boxer with his trademark knee high socks.

Daniel "You're in the Lion's Den, Now" Rodgers (155 lb) is aiming for his 3rd title. He'll have to get through two tough bouts to do so, including potentially a returning champ, Alex "Speedy" Gonzalez, in the finals.

Mike "The Big Dog" Lee (175 lb) is also aiming for his 3rd championship. Lee was last year's Larry Ash Award winner for being the tournament's best boxer.

The 185 lb. division has 2 great semifinal matchups, with Leo "The Southpaw Lion Claw" Rubinkowski and John "The Boogie-Woogie Monster" Tchoula as the favorites to tussle in the finals.

And to answer your question, Jay - boxing wasn't even a pipedream. I would've needed Coach Bayliss' permission to test my might in another forum. Not sure how many tennis players have a boxer mentality - I certainly did not. I threw my support behind a high school buddy who became a 3-time champ - Mark "Bright Lights Big City" Criniti.

locked

I doubt that

by Gator77, (6256 days ago) @ Jimmy

anyone who was at ND in 76 could forget the "Battle of the Century." The anticipation for that match built and built and the arena was electric. I also seem to recall Doug Becker in another eagerly waited match (can't recall who it was but DB was not someone I'd care to see across from me in a ring.)

Perhaps even more memorable was knowing someone who was in the program. Hearing the stories, watching them prepare, seeing them get ready for their match and, of course, screaming your support for them.

A lot of things have been lost over the years that made up the fabric of a year in the life at ND. Death March, real pep rallies, panty raids, SYR's, etc.

Thank God this worthy event and its very worth cause survive.