Dino Duva doesn't see it that way. This is about sports and business, not politics.
“It's different, different than what I've done my whole life,” says Duva, whose family helped guide US Olympians such as Evander Holyfield and Mark Breland to professional stardom.
For the past two years, ever since he sat inside Workers Indoor Arena during the Beijing Olympics and watched
He got the chance to see the payoff Friday, when the
“The Chinese are going to have a good, solid team,” says Al Mitchell, an American trainer enlisted by Duva to work with them. “And these fights will go a long way towards seeing who is ready to contend for the Olympics.”
While the US team struggled to win a lone bronze medal in Beijing, the culmination of a precipitous decline for USA Boxing, the Chinese pronounced themselves as perhaps the sport's next great power, with two golds among their four medals.
After tearing down layers of bureaucratic red tape, Duva managed to strike an agreement with the Chinese Boxing Federation to train and market its fighters, with the idea of commercializing the sport in a country where boxing had been banned before 1986.
“The turning point was the 2008 Olympics, that's when the Chinese team did unbelievable, they shocked the whole Olympic sports community,” Duva says. “Once they had some success at the Olympics, the government decided they're going to support and subsidize boxing to become a mainstream sport over there. They didn't know how good they could be.”
Already, several members of the Chinese team have visited the
They're also learning about the business of boxing. As part of their agreement, Duva has exclusive rights to market them through sponsorships with companies like Adidas.
“We spend more time training in one day here than we do in one week in
The Chinese won the first two matches Friday in front of a pro-China crowd, before the US rattled off victories in five of the next six — two by tiebreaker and another by a single point.
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Duva understands that some people might question his decision to work with the Chinese team while the
“You know what flak I get? A lot of my promoter friends wish they were in this position, they pat me on the back, they think you're going in the right direction,” Duva says. “I'm sure there's some cynics, there's always going to be cynics. This is about sports and business for me, I don't get into the politics, nothing like that. That's not me.”
Duva hopes that there's a payoff, to be sure. The plan is to not only develop the Chinese amateur team, but to eventually shepherd many of the athletes to the professional ranks.
“Our focus right now is the London Olympics, and we definitely have plans for some of them to turn into the pros after that,” Duva says. “But during this next two-year timeframe, we're going to have coaching clinics, we're also going to be marketing them — we have a long-term marketing plan — promoting dual matches, generating sponsorship for the team, the individuals.
“It's a whole comprehensive plan,” Duva says, “but the first and foremost goal is to teach them to be the best boxers they can be.” -AP






























