Philippines, 02 May 2024
  Home >> News

 


BOXERS

CURRENT CHAMPIONS 

FORMER CHAMPIONS   

RATINGS                       

NEWS           

FORUM        

FIGHT GALLERIES        

RING CARD GIRLS        


 
 
News  


Newly-turned pro Ortiz hoping to 'break records' as he tackles the best in lightweight division

PhilBoxing.com


PROVIDENCE, R.I. (June 29th, 2016) -- Arguably the most decorated amateur boxer from New England to enter the professional ranks in quite some time, Jamaine Ortiz of Worcester, Mass., is on the fast track to success under the promotional guidance of CES Boxing.

He'll encounter obstacles and deal with inevitable change along the way, but there'll always be that one constant, that calming influence in his corner, his longtime coach Carlos Garcia, Worcester's world-renowned trainer and the heart and soul of the city's Boys & Girls Club, where so many fighters before Ortiz honed their craft.

The bond between Ortiz (1-0, 1 KO), 20, and Garcia, which began when Ortiz was just 7 years old, goes far beyond boxing.

"Carlos is a guy that teaches you more about life than he does about boxing," said Ortiz, who made his professional debut in May and will return to the ring Friday, July 15th, 2016 at Twin River Casino on the undercard of CES Boxing's summertime spectacular.

"He's a great coach. Everybody knows him. He's been in boxing forever. He teaches you discipline and he teaches you respect, so when you're in the ring and you're in the gym, it's serious. I've always looked at him like a father figure because he always gave me rides when I was walking home from the gym and fed me whenever I was hungry when I was younger.

"I could never, ever disrespect Carlos. He teaches you how to love. He teaches you about God. It's never about money with him. He'd give his last dollar from his wallet to someone who'd use it on drugs just because he has that kind of heart. You can't run away from that."

Thirteen years since Ortiz first stepped foot inside the Worcester Boys & Girls Club, where Garcia has been an instructor for more than three decades, he and his coach have been inseparable. The 66-year-old Garcia remains a father figure to Ortiz as the 5-foot-8 lightweight begins a journey many believe will take him to the top of his class.

"Not only do I want to be world champion," Ortiz said, "but I want to one day be pound for pound the best fighter. I want to break records. I want to do the impossible, whatever my body allows me and whatever God has in store for me, I'm willing to do and go as high as I can in boxing."

Ortiz's improbably journey began as a youth growing up in the Great Brook Valley Projects in Worcester, a neighborhood notorious for a series of riots in the late 1970s due to increasing racial tension between Latinos and police officers. Ortiz got into a lot of fights in elementary school, so his father told him to put on a pair of gloves instead of using his bare fists.

"One day, he had me outside in front of the house boxing everyone in the projects," Ortiz recalled. "Me versus everybody, one by one, taking turns."

Shortly thereafter, Ortiz's mother signed him up at the Boys & Girls Club, where he eventually met Garcia and began his amateur boxing career, a whirlwind journey that led him to a New England Golden Gloves championship in 2015 and a spot alongside the nation's elite at the 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials in Reno, Nev.

Ortiz made it to the fourth day of the trials, where he lost to eventual Olympian Gary Russell, the younger brother of current World Boxing Council (WBC) featherweight champion and 2008 Olympian Gary Russell Jr.

After winning the Western New England Golden Gloves in February, avenging an earlier loss to Jeffrey Torres with a split-decision win in the rematch, Ortiz turned pro three months later on May 13th, stopping Josh Parker at the 3-minute mark of the opening round.

Fighting without headgear in front of a crowd of more than 2,500 fans didn't bother Ortiz, who also boxed without headgear at the Olympic Trials in Reno after the U.S. Olympic Committee announced all fighters at the 2016 Rio Games would box without headgear for the first time since 1980.

"It wasn't much to me," Ortiz said. "It was my first pro fight, but it wasn't my first time fighting without headgear. I had fought without headgear over 10 times already and I fought in there with more quality opponents, with the best, people who are going to the Olympics, people who've been ranked in the country without headgear, so I felt pretty confident going into the ring."

"I believe the amateurs were for me great because when you're fighting in the Nationals you're always fighting the best at all times," he continued. "The Olympic Trials, the Olympic Qualifiers, when it comes down to it, you're always fighting the best of the best and you don't have time to prepare for who you're fighting. You don't have time to prepare. You just go in there and do what you know.

"Now in the pros when you actually have time to train for one specific guy and you have two months ahead of knowing when you're going to fight, it's an advantage."

With his second pro fight less than three weeks away, Ortiz remains thankful for that one constant in his corner, Garcia, who has helped teach him right from wrong while making sure he stays on the path to success.

"Carlos, ever since I met him he always kept me on track," Ortiz said. "Anytime I was ever going to do something bad I just always thought about Carlos. 'Would Carlos be happy with the decision I'm making? What would Carlos say?' I would always have his picture in my head and his voice speaking and I would always hear him and it would always prevent me from doing anything bad when I would see his face."

The sky's the limit for Ortiz, whose improbable climb from Worcester to Nevada puts him in elite company as one of the city's -- and New England's -- most celebrated prospects.

"I always believed in myself," he said. "You can't get far in life without believing in yourself. I feel like I could've won the whole thing and gone to the Olympics. It was all in the making.

"When you work hard and you believe in God and keep having faith in yourself, anything is possible. That was always in my mind and is still in my mind to this day."

Undefeated Providence, R.I., native Angel Camacho Jr. (15-0, 5 KOs) headlines the July 15th card and puts his Universal Boxing Federation (UBF) International and New England Light Heavyweight Titles on the line in the 10-round main event against Willimantic, Conn., vet Kevin Cobbs (10-2, 4 KOs).

The Camacho-Cobbs main event is one of three title fights July 15th; Cranston, R.I., super lightweight Nick DeLomba (9-1, 2 KOs) makes the first defense of his New England Title in a six-round bout against Oscar Bonilla (3-1-2) of Bridgeport, Conn.; and Thomas Falowo (14-3, 8 KOs) of Pawtucket, R.I., the reigning New England Middleweight Champion, returns to Twin River for the first time in more than two years and puts his belt on the line in an eight-round rematch against Jersey City, N.J., slugger Chris Chatman (13-5-1, 5 KOs), who beat Falowo at Twin River in 2013.

Tickets for the event are priced at $42.00, $67.00, $102.00 and $152.00 (VIP) and can be purchased online at www.cesboxing.com, www.twinriver.com or www.ticketmaster.com, by phone at 401-724-2253/2254 or at the Twin River Casino Players Club. All fights and fighters are subject to change.

July 15th also features the return of newly-crowned World Boxing Council (WBC) Female Middleweight World Champion Kali Reis (9-5-1), who captured the belt in April in New Zealand, in an eight-round bout against Atlantic City vet Althea Saunders (3-2-2), plus middleweight Kendrick Ball Jr. (1-0, 1 KO) of Worcester, Mass., and the professional debut of New London, Conn., welterweight Cristobal Marrero.

Also on the undercard, Ray Oliviera Jr. (4-0, 1 KO) of New Bedford, Mass., battles Worcester's Andy Gonzalez (3-0, 3 KOs) in a four-round junior middleweight attraction featuring two undefeated New England fighters.

Visit www.cesboxing.com, www.twitter.com/cesboxing or www.facebook.com/cesboxing for more information, follow CES Boxing on Instagram at @CESBOXING and use the hashtag #CamachoCobbs to join the conversation.




Recent PhilBoxing.com In-House articles:

  • VIC SALUDAR FINISHES OFF SANCHAI YOTBOON IN 30 SECONDS (VIDEO)
    By Dong Secuya, , Thu, 02 May 2024
  • Bryce Mills Returns to the Ring June 7 During 2024 International Boxing Hall of Fame Induction Weekend
    , Thu, 02 May 2024
  • Saludar KOs Thai foe in 37 seconds; Dumam-ag drops Macado three times en route to a 1st round stoppage
    By Lito delos Reyes, , Wed, 01 May 2024
  • REGIE SUGANOB DEFENDS WBO GLOBAL LIGHT FLYWEIGHT TITLE BY TKO OVER KAI ISHIZAWA
    By Maloney L. Samaco, , Wed, 01 May 2024
  • West Top Three Seeds Have Advanced to Next Round, None Yet From East as Sixers, Bucks Beat NY, Indiana
    By Teodoro Medina Reynoso, , Wed, 01 May 2024
  • Muhsin Cason Remains Undefeated with Stunning First Round Knockout
    , Wed, 01 May 2024
  • Pinoys who shone in UK rings
    By Joaquin Henson, , Wed, 01 May 2024
  • Undefeated Brooklyn Heavyweight Prospect Pryce Taylor looking forward to fighting in Atlantic City on May 11th
    , Wed, 01 May 2024
  • Panamanian Harmodio Cedeño honored for over 60 years in boxing world
    By Gabriel F. Cordero, , Wed, 01 May 2024
  • Boxing Powerhouse Top Rank Launches 24/7 Channel Top Rank Classics on Pluto TV
    , Wed, 01 May 2024
  • The Past Week in Action 29 April 2024: Ramirez Outpoints Barthelemy; Ortiz Stops Dulorme in 1; Alaniz Defeats Esparza to win WBA/WBC/WBO Titles
    By Eric Armit, , Tue, 30 Apr 2024
  • Saludar ready to fight Yotboon
    By Lito delos Reyes, , Tue, 30 Apr 2024
  • White Heat: Boston Whips Miami; Denver, OKC Thunder End Series
    By Teodoro Medina Reynoso, , Tue, 30 Apr 2024
  • Hopefuls Above 122 Lbs.; Elephant in the Room
    By Teodoro Medina Reynoso, , Tue, 30 Apr 2024
  • PAUL vs TYSON will be sanctioned as a regular professional fight in Texas
    By Gabriel F. Cordero, , Tue, 30 Apr 2024
  • Dainier Pero Continues Undefeated Streak with Impressive First Round Knockout on DAZN
    , Tue, 30 Apr 2024
  • Jessica Camara Defeats Undefeated Former World Champion Hyun Mi Choi in South Korea to Win WBA Gold Title
    , Tue, 30 Apr 2024
  • THURSDAY: Erik Bazinyan-Shakeel Phinn Super Middleweight Battle to Stream LIVE & Exclusively in the U.S. on ESPN+
    , Tue, 30 Apr 2024
  • HALL OF FAMERS MARCO ANTONIO BARRERA & ERIK MORALES TO REUNITE IN CANASTOTA DURING 2024 HALL OF FAME WEEKEND
    , Tue, 30 Apr 2024
  • PPV.COM's Jim Lampley's Canelo vs. Munguía Preview Analysis
    , Tue, 30 Apr 2024
  • Arca sweeps Dujali Rapid chess fest
    By Lito delos Reyes, , Mon, 29 Apr 2024
  • NY Knicks Beat Sixers, Move Ahead 3-1; Clippers Tie Series With Mavericks
    By Teodoro Medina Reynoso, , Mon, 29 Apr 2024
  • Lugay, Catubig win in 21K BLD Run
    By Lito delos Reyes, , Mon, 29 Apr 2024
  • Panamanian legend Hilario Zapata inducted into the California Hall of Fame
    By Gabriel F. Cordero, , Mon, 29 Apr 2024
  • FEDOR GORST WINS 2024 WORLD POOL MASTERS
    , Mon, 29 Apr 2024




  •  



     
    PhilBoxing.com has been created to support every aspiring
    Filipino boxer and the Philippine boxing scene in general.
    Please send comments to feedback@philboxing.com


    PRIVATE POLICY | LEGAL DISCLAIMER
    developed and maintained by dong secuya
    © 2024 philboxing.com.