
The New York Times has a great article up about Cheryl Ziegler, an 18-year-old single mother from the Lower Brule Sioux Reservation in South Dakota, who is also a boxer.
Ziegler is Hawk’s latest prize student. She is tough and determined and fights with proper technique: hands up, chin down. She said she planned to turn professional in a month and a half. She spoke of wanting to be a champion. But she had been training seriously for only two months. This fight at Standing Rock was to be her second amateur bout.
A pummeling defeat here could injure her or lacerate her confidence. Ray Hawk feared that she would quit boxing just as she was beginning. Only recently had she gained some fragile orderliness in her life.
Pregnant at 17, in treatment for alcohol abuse, Ziegler continued to drift after giving birth in October 2007. Last spring, she failed almost all of her courses on the Lower Brule Sioux Reservation in South Dakota. To the surprise of teachers and administrators, she returned to Lower Brule High in the fall. She seemed different, more responsible. She improved her grades, and the night before the fight she finally became eligible to rejoin the Lady Sioux basketball team.
There’s a video at the link as well, and it’s amazing to see what a great fighter this woman is. It reminds me of all that is good about sports, and how desperate the need is for feminists to dedicate more resources to helping more women and girls to get involved.
At the same time, the article/video also really hit home in a very sad sort of way. As a woman of color that comes from poverty (not nearly as bad as Ziegler’s, but still), and has seen how the lure of quick money can suck much needed resources from improving and even maintaining educational and community programs for the majority of kids who will *not* make it big, I have to wonder why it’s ok with so many of us that so many children in the U.S. grow up with such limited resources and alternatives–to the point that competition and sports is no longer about the game, but about the sense of desperation that sports may be the only answer there will ever be.
I am deeply thankful and inspired that Ziegler has an oportunity to help herself and is doing it in such a fierce, driven way. But I also have to wonder about all the other girls on her reservation, all the other girls in poor urban communities–and even about Ziegler herself. How would their lives be different if, in addition to boxing (and other sports), they also had access to family planning/sexual health services, community network programs that help children of imprisoned people, alternative education programs, after school programs, etc?
How would their lives be different, if, like Ziegler’s trainer suggested, they were told every day of their lives, not just on game day, that they were important and necessary?
10:49 am By Maegan La Mala · Celebrities|Chismes|Controversia|Drugs|Sports · Comments Off
2 Feb 2009
Gold medalist and all-around sports hero Michael Phelps is in the midst of what might be a decisive moment in his career: a scandal, according to some. A photo of Phelps puffing on a bong has surfaced, and las malas lenguas are all about taking him down for it. As is to be expected, the U.S. Olympic Committee isn’t happy:
The United States Olympic Committee, which Jan.22 named Phelps its Male Athlete of the Year, issued a statement saying it was “disappointed” in Phelps’ behavior.“Michael is a role model, and he is well aware of the responsibilities and accountability that come with setting a positive example for others, particularly young people. In this instance, regrettably, he failed to fulfill those responsibilities.
I am not a sports fan save the occasional futbol game (and no I am not talking Superbowl football), pero even I knew who Jose Chegüi Torres was. I would listen to the first Latin-American world light-heavyweight boxing champion discuss not just race in sports on radio station WBAI, pero identity politics and power in general as he was a regular guest on many Latino themed shows.
From Ponce, Puerto Rico, Chegüi Torres passed away on January 19th.
From a tribute written by Julio Pabon:
José “Chegüi” Torres was one incredible role model for anyone that took the time to speak to him. The fact that he was loved in the Puerto Rican communities of the 60’s is a matter of record. He was an inspiration for every Boricua sweating in the factories of New York struggling in a city that did not understand our political plight.The 1960’s were a very rough period for the Boricua’s living in this city. It was the height of the struggles between Italians and Puerto Ricans that was manifested in many schoolyards, rooftops and parks in this city with casualties that would equal those of many undeclared wars that received no international attention. It was West Side Story in every community where Puerto Rican’s were moving into and Italians were holding on to.
In was during that volatile period in our history that Chegüi Torres got his long awaited chance to fi ght for the World Championship that was being delayed for no other reason except that he was a dark skin Puerto Rican. Finally in 1965 Chegüi was given the opportunity to fight the reining Champ, Willie Pastrano the pride of the Italian’s.
What people might not know is that Chegüi not only negotiated for himself for this important fight, he also negotiated for the entire Puerto Rican community. Chegüi explained it to me this way: “I knew that every Puerto Rican who could afford it was going to go to Madison Square Garden to see this fight. I also knew that the other half of the Garden (sitting in the lower expensive seats) was going to be filled by Italians. I wanted to do something special for our community so I negotiated that I wanted the Puerto Rican national anthem to be played before the fight.”
This might seem trivial today, however, historians would tell you that no other countries national anthem, other than the American national anthem was ever played in a boxing match, especially if both fighters were American citizens.
10:40 am By Maegan La Mala · Bizarro|Brazil|Drugs|Sports · Comments Off
14 Jan 2009You’ve heard of athletes using steroids to soup up their game, but what about Viagra? Well one Brazilian soccer team is about to get a prescription for the wonder drug, allegedly to help them fight the effects of altitude sickness. Yeah…
The possibility was admitted by the club’s doctor in the city of Porto Alegre, Alarico Endres, who has been studying if the blue pill might help oxygenization of the blood in athletes and help reduce the effects of altitude.According to Endres, some specialists believe that the remedy used by men with erectile problems can benefit athleses who need better blood oxygenization in adverse conditions.
“Based on assumptions we won’t do anything, but if research shows scientifically that Viagra improves performance in [high] altitude, we can offer it to players,” said Endres.
I don’t want to think about the atmosphere in the locker room after one of these “altitude” treatments. Look what happens in the commercial when only ONE person is on the stuff!
Via / 20 Minutos
11:23 am By Maegan La Mala · Latin America|Spain|Sports · Comments Off
12 Dec 2008
Futbol is the only sport la Mala half ass follows.Today FIFA announced the finalists for the 2008 World Player and FIFA Women’s World Player awards, to be handed out here on January 12, 2009 and some of the top nominees are from Latin America.
The male nominees are Kaka (Brazil), Lionel Messi (Argentina), Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal), Fernando Torres (Spain), and Xavi (Spain).
Nadine Angerer (Germany), Cristiane (Brazil), Marta (Brazil), Birgit Prinz (Germany) and Kelly Smith (England) will contest the women’s award.
Last year Kaka won the award and yes his name still makes me laugh as if I were a 13 year old.
Via / France 24
Last night Filipino boxer Manny Pacquiao beat the Mexican American Golden Boy Oscar de la Hoya. In fact, it’s being said Pacquiao beat De la Hoya into retirement, even though no official announcement has been made.
It was clear by the third round that De La Hoya was going to need a miracle to reverse the pummeling he was taking.
Pacquiao displayed every punch in the arsenal, raking the Golden Boy with straight lefts that nearly closed De La Hoya’s left eye and stunning him with hooks, jabs and uppercuts.
It was so savage of a beating that it was hard not to feel sorry for De La Hoya. At the end of the bout, a thoroughly beaten De La Hoya trudged across the ring and met his one-time trainer, Freddie Roach.
“You’re right,” De La Hoya said to Roach, who had prepared Pacquiao brilliantly. “I don’t have it any more.”
2:00 pm By Maegan La Mala · Sports|US Presidential Race 2008 · Comments Off
13 Oct 2008Peep the people booing, thumbs down, and Obama signs in the background. I feel bad for the Palin kids pero not for Sarah Palin. I mean did she seriously think peeps would give her a warm welcome? This ain’t no McCain rally.
Via / Culture Kitchen
12:40 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Beijing Summer Olympics|Sports · Comments Off
8 Sep 2008
Like most U.S. citizens, you probably weren’t aware that the Paralympics began this past Saturday in Beijing, China. What are the Paralympics? Originally billed as the “Parallel Olympics” to signify the fact that they ran “parallel” to the Olympics, the Paralympics is a two week long sporting event that centers disabled athletes. Modifications are made in different sports to accommodate the needs of physically, mentally and learning disabled athletes, including lowering nets in volleyball, and using bells to guide blind athletes.
9:43 am By Maegan La Mala · Beijing Summer Olympics|Bizarro|Controversia|Cuba|Latin America|Sports · Comments Off
24 Aug 2008
Taekwondo isn’t a sport for the faint of heart, but the violence needs to be kept in the ring and the kicks directed at your opponent. But Cuban martial artist Ángel Matos apparently doesn’t see it that way. When Matos was down for count during yesterday’s finals match due to an injury, the ref called time, giving the win to opponent Arman Chilmanov of Kazakhstan. As Chilmanov celebrated jumping up and down, Matos jumped up himself and began screaming at the referee. His trainer joined in in the belaboring of the ref. Then the stadium went still as Matos delivered a huge kick to the referee’s unexpecting face.
Both Matos and his trainer, Leudis González, have been banned from ever participating in the Olympics again as a result of the attack. According to Spain’s El País, González insists that Kazakhstan “bought” the judges, bribing them into ruling in favor of their team.
Via / El País
Image via Reuters/El Pais
6:07 am By Maegan La Mala · Argentina|Beijing Summer Olympics|Spain|Sports|World · Comments Off
24 Aug 2008
Not too many of us will have had the energy to stay up all night to watch the game, but I’m here to tell you that the U.S. men’s Olympic team was unstoppable in the final match-up with current world champion, Spain. I was only able to catch the last quarter, and it was a super tight game. Spain and the U.S. were both at the top of their game (Spain was down an average of only 6 points) and it was disputable whether or not The Dream Team would actually win this one up until about 2 minutes before the final buzzer. In the end, the stars of the NBA triumphed over the Spaniards 118-107.
Spanish media is calling Spain’s loss a win, referring to the game as “the most dignified defeat” and “a golden silver medal”, given the fact that they were so very close to winning against the world’s most storied basketball team.
Argentina is also celebrating its triumph as bronze medal winners in basketball, stepping up to the podium in third place. An excellent representation for Latin America in one of the Olympics’ most watched sports.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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