PORTLAND, OR - (January 27, 2019)
WBAN is proud to announce the International Women’s Boxing Hall
of Fame (IWBHF), Class of 2019.
This sixth annual induction represents a record breaking number
of honorees in the history of this signal institution which has
recognized and honored those individuals who have, over the
history of the sport of Women’s Boxing, contributed to,
advocated for and brought esteem and distinction to the sport in
and out of the ring.
To purchase tickets online for the
2019 IWBHF Induction Ceremony - Buffett/Dinner - Aug. 30, 2019
4:00 p.m. - Meet and Greet
6:00 p.m. - Doors Open
6:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m - Food/Buffett
*No host bar (one)
7:00 p.m - Induction Ceremony begins
To purchase tickets for the Beautiful
Brawlers Amateur Event - Saturday, August 31, 2019
Included in this year’s class are seven former boxers: Terri
Cruz, Melissa Fiorentino, Lisa Holewyne,
Carina Moreno, Bridgett Riley, Wendy Rodriquez
and Martha Salazar. The Non-Boxer category includes
David Avila, Stephen Blea and Blanca Gutierrez.
Pat Emerick and Patricia [Sandy] Martinez-Pino are recipients in
the Pioneer Female Boxer and the Posthumous categories,
respectively.
FORMER BOXERS
Terri Cruz
Terri Cruz compiled a 17-7-2
record, over a nine year career (1999-2008), highlighted by
winning the IFBA bantamweight crown over highly regarded Heather
Percival in 2005. Cruz’s love of and dedication to the sport
brought her out of retirement in 2009 to challenge top ranked
Alesia Graf for WIBA Flyweight title, losing a close decision
and again in 2011 for another bout with unbeaten Susie Ramadan.
Melissa Fiorentino, a 5’1”
dynamo, imbued with the appropriate sobriquet “Fury”, put up a
sterling 17-2 record over a seven year (2001-08) career during
which she stepped in with the top ranked fighters in the
featherweight class, including wins over Belinda Laracuente,
Esther Schouten, Jaime Clampitt and Cindy Serrano. She capped
her career, in January, 2008, winning the IWBF super
featherweight title.
Lisa Holewyne fought to a 25-17-2
record over almost eight years (1998-2006) as a professional
boxer. A common boxing dictum states, “you are what your record
is” and Holewyne is exactly that. Coming to the ring after a
four year stint as a pentathlete at the University of Texas,
Holewyne quickly established herself as an “anyone/anywhere”
lightweight boxer, fighting Sumya Anani twice (when very few
ranked fighters would come within a couple of time zones of that
matchup), unbeaten Mary Jo Sanders twice, splitting two fights
with the formidable Sunshine Fettkether to mention only some of
the top opposition Holewyne sought out during a career that
should serve as a signpost for any boxer seeking to do the sport
the right way.
Carina Moreno was a standout in
the flyweight ranks, fighting, over her ten year career
(2003-13), 203 rounds while compiling glittering 23-6 record
against the best boxers in this competitive weight class. In
addition to wins over Eileen Olszewski, Yessica Bopp and Holly
Dunaway, she held the WBC and WIBA minimumweight titles for
several years. She finished her career still competing against
the best in her class, winning the WBA flyweight title against
Susi Kentikian in Germany in December ‘12, before losing a close
decision to Kentikian seven months later in the same country.
Bridgett Riley
fought in the ring, for nine years (1994-03), compiling a 15-3
record, exactly how she lived life, in perpetual motion. “Busy
fighter” might be an understatement, since from the opening
bell, Riley had one gear, full speed ahead. She held the IFBA
bantamweight title beating Yvonne Trevino over ten rounds in
February ‘98 and, in possibly her most remembered bout, Riley
KO’d Englishwoman, Alicia Lahsen, in June ‘98, after surviving
an early knockdown. It was her first defense of the IFBA title.
Among Riley’s other pursuits in her active life range from
martial arts champion to movie stunt person.
Wendy Rodriguez
Photo credit:
Mary Ann Owen
Wendy Rodriguez is
another of the West Coast fighters who brought the female
bantamweight division to the attention of the boxing public.
Along with her co-2019 IWBHF inductee, Carina Moreno, Rodriquez
set a standard of competitive excellence in the ring that raised
the public perception and appreciation of the division.
Rodriquez, in her seven year (1999-08) career put up an
exemplary 19-4-3. Early on, (Oct. 2000) she fought an 8 round
draw with Margaret Sidoroff and in her penultimate bout, she
stepped in with Regina Halmich, (Regina was inducted into the
Inaugural Class of the IWBHF in 2014) . Rodriquez finished her
career on a high note, revenging an earlier loss to Holly
Dunaway in the process of winning the vacant IBA minimum weight
crown.
artha Salazar
competed as a professional boxer for 15 (2001-16) years,
fighting 18 times and winning 13 of those bouts. It is an
unfortunate reflection of the dearth of competition at the
female heavyweight level. But for those athletes who posses
persistence, combined with a don’t quit attitude, along with,
most importantly, ring talent, the top rung of this division is
attainable. Martha Salazar has those qualities in world class
supply. Salazar won the WIBF heavyweight title via TKO over
Pamela London in November ‘04 and finished her career winning
the WBC crown in a November ‘14 by decision over Tanzee Daniel,
before relinquishing the title via a close decision to Alejandra
Jimenez in the final bout of her career in March of 2018.
NON-BOXERS
David Avila is a
prominent and widely followed West Coast boxing writer. His
linage to the sport comes from his father who fought a number of
times at the Olympic Auditorium in the 1950s. Avila began his
journalism career as a writer for the LA Times in the 1990s and
is currently working for the Riverside (CA) Press Enterprise and
La Prensa newspapers. But, unquestionably, it is Avila’s
longtime support for and advocacy of the sport of Women’s boxing
and it’s athletes that has earned him this well deserved IWBHF
honor.
Stephen Blea’s
reputation as a boxing official has been well documented and has
led him to be ranked among the finest in the sport. But it is
his myriad additional contributions to the benefit to the sport
and it’s athletes that makes Blea singular in the sport. He has
been a coach at USA Boxing along with providing his referring
and judging skill to that organization. He has coached boxing at
the Denver Police department. He has managed WBC Cares for the
state of Colorado and overlaid those efforts with a long time,
full throated support of the sport of Women’s boxing whenever
the opportunity arises.
Blanca Gutierrez is
proof positive that the promotion of the sport of boxing begins
with whole hearted empathy, And few promoters in the sport of
Women’s boxing can match the personal connection and caring that
Gutierrez brings to the sport and it’s athletes. Her father,
Javier, was a professional boxer in Mexico and and Gutierrez’s
interest and love for the sport came early and fervent. She is
the driving force behind Beautiful Brawlers, a West Coast
promotional powerhouse, that continues as a prime force behind
the recent resurgence in the sport of female boxing.
David Avila and Stephen Blea are the second and third males to
be inducted into the IWBHF.
PIONEER FEMALE BOXER
Pat Emerick -
[AKA Arvilla (Pat) Lancaster-Landreth] reduces
her outlook on the sport of boxing to it’s most basic, “put one
foot in front of the other and be prepared.” If only getting a
chance to climb through the ropes was that easy for a female in
the middle of the previous century. It wasn’t. Emerick’s
opportunities were essentially limited to her hometown, South
Bend, IN, where, at 5’4”, 123lbs, after losing her first bout,
she reeled off 18 straight wins, highlighted by a TKO win over
Jo Ann Hagan in 1949 before 4,000 fans in Council
Bluffs, IA., winning the Ladies World Boxing Association
Championship. Emerick becomes the second oldest living IWBHF
Pioneer Boxer inductee, born five months after Year 1 honoree
Barbara Buttrick.
POSTHUMOUS 2019 INDUCTEE
Patricia “Sandy”
Martinez-Pino, who passed away in September of last year, was a
longtime leading advocate for the sport of Women’s boxing in
this country. She worked tirelessly within the sport, with the
AIBA to open up opportunities for females as referees and judges
and served with U S Boxing as President (Hispanic), as well as
terms as Vice President and Secretary. Her untiring efforts in
support of and improving conditions and opportunities for women
in the sport will be well remembered and sorely missed and are
best described by her co-inductee, Stephen Blea, ”Sandy broke
down barriers and achieved accolades no woman had achieved in
this sport.”
As previously noted, the 2019 IWBHF Class of Inductees is the
largest, and quite possibly, the most diverse, in the six year
history of the Hall, conceived and formulated in 2014 by Sue
Fox, founder and publisher of Women’s Boxing Archive Network
(WBAN). Fox envisioned the Hall as a needed addition to the
boxing community, a way of honoring those, in and out of the
ring, upon whose athleticism, support and advocacy for the sport
of Women’s Boxing continues to stand on and progress.
An induction ceremony for the 2019 inductee class is being
discussed and details will be announced forthcoming.
Contact Information:
Sue Fox/Founder-Chairwoman/President
International Women's Boxing Hall of Fame
Website: www.iwbhf.com
Email: wban100@aol.com
Email: iwbhf@aol.com
Facebook:
www.facebook.com/iwbhalloffame/