(SEPT 27) The competition will
be the first women’s tournament for the United States since the
August IOC announcement of inclusion of women’s boxing in the 2012
Olympic Games.
More than 13 countries are expected to compete in the event, which
will feature the best female athletes from North, Central and South
America. Ten U.S. boxers will box in the event with nine reigning
number one ranked national champions and one number two ranked
athlete representing the United States. First round action will
begin on October 5 at the Abel Jimenez Parra Coliseum with semifinal
boxing taking place on October 7 and the finals being contested on
October 8.
The ten boxers competing in Ecuador will be: Light Flyweight
National Champion Laura Ramirez (Bronx, N.Y.), Flyweight National
Champion Marlen Esparza (Houston, Texas); Bantamweight National
Champion Seniesa Estrada(Los Angeles, Calif.); US National
Championship featherweight bronze medalist Liz Leddy (Portland,
Maine); Lightweight National Champion Patricia Manuel (Gardena,
Calif.); Light Welterweight National Champion Queen Underwood
(Seattle, Wash.); Welterweight National Champion Andrecia Wasson
(Center Line, Mich.); Middleweight National Champion Alyssa Defazio
(Peoria, Ariz.); Light Heavyweight National Champion Tika
Hemingway(Pittsburgh, Pa.); and Heavyweight Traynora Locke
(Lexington-Fayette, Ky.).
The United States team will be lead by 2001 Women’s World
Championship coach Christy Halbert (Nashville, Tenn.) and Amy
Griswold (Clayton, N.C.). with former two-time national champion
Angel Bovee (Tully, N.Y.) working as the Team Manager. Dr. Martha
Dodson (El Paso, Texas) joins the squad as the Team Physician with
Brent Venegas (San Rafael, Calif.) working as the AIBA Official.
The United States delegation will depart for Ecuador on October 3 in
preparation for the opening day of competition on October 5.
USA Boxing, as the national governing body for Olympic-style boxing,
is the United States’ member organization of the International
Amateur Boxing Association (AIBA) and a member of the United States
Olympic Committee (USOC). It is responsible for the selection and
management of the United States Olympic Boxing Team, and for the
governance and oversight of USA Boxing’s national organization of
38,000 members, 1,400 individual boxing clubs, and 1,600 sanctioned
events annually.