THE Pan American Games are the goal
and the Olympics the dream of the Argentine boxers
training in Cuba this month.
"Training in Cuba is a lesson in
boxing and also a lesson in life," said Brian Carlos
Castaño, 69kg champion in the ODESUR Games.
"We get polished here, we're in the
ring everyday against the Cubans, allowing us to
gain experience and perfect what we learn with
Professor Sarbelio," Castaño added.
The 20-year-old South American
champion dreams of mounting the podium in the 2012
London Olympics, but knows that the road there leads
through the Pan American Games in Guadalajara, while
he also hopes for positive results in the World
competition this year.
The best Argentine boxers, who are
training with Cuban coach Sarbelio Fuentes, will
complete a month-long preparation session in Havana
alongside Cubans, as well as fighters from
Australia, Hungary and Peru.
Argentine Fabian Escalada, the team's coach,
affirmed that training in Cuba is helping his boxers
improve immensely, "since this is where the best
amateur boxing in the world is."
Here the Argentine boxers are
"quiet, concentrating on the training which is
intense," he adds, "The interchange between the two
cultures is very positive, as well. [The training]
provides experience in a short period of time and
helps us polish a few aspects."
Juan Carrasco, bronze medal winner
in the ODESUR games at only 18 years of age, is
looking for "strength, agility, experience in the
daily sparring with the Cubans."
Carrasco's first goal is to classify
for the Gudalajara Pan American Games scheduled for
next October. After that, he dreams of the London
2012 Olympics.
"I come from a modest family. We're
six brothers, if it weren't for boxing who knows
where I'd be, on the street in danger of getting
caught up in drugs, alcohol and other negative
things," he explained.
Carrasco added, "Professor Sarbelio
is like a father to us, I want to train with him
until London."
For Brian Damian Chaves, training in
Havana is "having an important fight every day,
something that builds confidence along with
technical and physical benefits, but above all it
prepares us for major events."
The 18-year-old featherweight wants
to continue the family tradition begun by his father
Abel and continued by his brother Diego in
professional boxing. "Here the training is very
rigorous; it's very important for me physically
because I am fast, I move around the ring a lot
because I don't have many punches, just a good left
hook."
Alberto Palmetta, 64kg champion in
the Ecuador Pan Americans this past year, hopes to
"take full advantage of this opportunity we were
given to measure up against such different boxers. I
think I will be able to classify for Guadalajara,
it's up to me, it depends on the work I do," the
20-year-old said.
Junior Zárate is the 49kg second
place champion on the continent and wants to
maintain his momentum into the Pan American Games to
shake off some poor performances in previous years.
"With the professor I'm acquiring
the experience and the confidence I lacked. As for
the rest, I have speed, strength, I've beaten a
Cuban before, my goal is London, an Olympic medal is
the great dream of every athlete," Zarate indicated.
José Sosa, professional boxing
champion, is working now on his country's prospects.
"I love sharing my experience with the young ones,
it is continuity. I learn a lot with Sarbelio, as
well, which allows me to keep up in the world of
boxing to which I have dedicated all of my life."
The 41-year-old boxer commented that
he sees his country's young fighters as "very
motivated. They improve in the ring here; it's very
beneficial for the future."
The Argentine coaches and the Cuban,
Sarbelio Fuentes, hope to see positive results in
the Guadalajara Pan American classificatory
tournaments, the sites of which have yet to be
established.
Escalada is more optimistic, seeing
opportunities for six or seven of the nine boxers,
while Fuentes and Sosa are more careful, hoping for
"the best possible outcome."
Fuentes believes that the team's
stay in Havana "has elevated the technical, tactical
level of the Argentines," and that the presence of
rivals from other countries is advantageous since "experience
and international competition, they very much lack."
The experienced coach praised the
commitment of his students, "They are very concerned;
they train with intensity in the ring where they
always give their all, though they still need many
hours of training and practice."