U.S. middleweight Claressa Shields advances to gold-medal bout
(AP) LONDON - The newest American boxing sensation is a cocky teenager with heavy hands, fleet feet and a serious mean streak.
And just like Cassius Clay, Joe Frazier and Oscar De La Hoya before her, Claressa Shields is about to fight for a gold medal.
The U.S. middleweight dominated Kazakhstan's Marina Volnova in the semifinals of the first Olympic women's boxing tournament Wednesday, earning a spot in the title bout against Russia's Nadezda Torlopova.
After pounding away at the slower Volnova for most of the 29-15 fight, Shields pounded her taped right fist against her left shoulder and screamed out for joy. The London crowd loved Shields' combination of charisma, skill and strength - a familiar formula for so many U.S. Olympic boxers over the years, but not lately.
"I'm still kind of shocked," Shields said. "I'm thinking in my head, 'Is it really true? Am I fighting for a gold medal tomorrow?'"
Shields is the last American boxer left in London after flyweight Marlen Esparza lost 10-8 to Chinese world champion Ren Cancan an hour earlier. Ren will fight Britain's Nicola Adams for the flyweight title, while Irish world champion lightweight Katie Taylor also advanced with another strong performance, moving into the championship bout Thursday against Russia's Sofya Ochigava.
Esparza will get a bronze medal, but Shields is the 12-member American team's only shot at gold after all nine men were eliminated in stunning fashion, leaving the winningest team in Olympic history without a medal for the first time in its history.
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But nobody in London is sleeping on Shields.
The rest of amateur boxing now knows all about this ebullient 17-year-old from Flint, Michigan, who's one of the sport's fastest-rising stars.
Less than two years after emerging on the American amateur scene, she won her second bout in three days with punishing right hands and relentless aggression, forcing Volnova to take a standing-eight count in each of the last two rounds after she was stunned by vicious combinations.
Shields laughed with joy at the verdict and raised both arms sky-high as she walked to the tunnel after beating up an opponent that wasn't much trouble for her, just as she predicted Monday.
"I was able to put my combinations together, land a lot of clean shots, punch straight," Shields said. "I took the best of her shots and made her miss a lot. I did what I wanted to do with her."
While Shields punched holes in Volnova's defense, Esparza found Ren impenetrable.
Ren's cautious defensive style in her win over the livelier Esparza got the card off to an inauspicious start. The crowd finally got into it when Adams beat Mary Kom of India 11-6, and ExCel then went nuts for Taylor, the Irish world titlist and pound-for-pound champion of the women's sport.
Taylor didn't disappoint, dominating Tajikistan's impressive teenager, Mavzuna Chorieva. But Taylor didn't impress Ochigava, her longtime nemesis and gold-medal opponent, who said fighters "begin with minus-10 points" against the wildly popular Irish star.
Esparza gamely tried to force Ren into a fight, but the Chinese champion sat back dispassionately and threw counterpunches that scored just enough points to win. Ren's rigid strategy and Esparza's attempts to wait her out earned warnings for both fighters in each of the first three rounds for not throwing enough punches.
Esparza broke down in the fighters' tunnel after the bout, but soon turned her cerebral analytical skills on the only opponent who has ever beaten her in two straight meetings.
"It's as boring to me as it is to you," Esparza said. "Everybody can't stand it, but it works. ... I thought I did everything I could do. We knew she wasn't going to commit - ever - so the game plan was just to not go forward. When I did go forward, that was when I got caught."
Esparza, the 23-year-old veteran, insists she'll follow through on her plan to retire from boxing and go to college, even though she would still be younger than many of the world's current top amateurs when the Rio Games roll around.
"My body is falling apart already," she said with a grin. "I'm in sports medicine four hours a day."