Sports
Pro Boxing Gains Another Father-Son Duo
“If you wish to say my identify helped him get this chance on Friday, then that’s honest,” he stated in a video interview alongside together with his son final week after Giovanni’s final prefight exercise on the Raul Marquez Boxing Health Gymnasium in Humble, Texas, exterior Houston.
Then once more, Giovanni Marquez, 21, has been producing boxing buzz for a while. On the Nationwide Golden Gloves championships final 12 months in Tulsa, Okla., he gained the 152-pound title and was voted the excellent boxer of the event. His newbie report was a gaudy 75-12.
“Gio has been coping with the notion that his success is the results of his dad’s identify his entire life,” stated Raul Marquez, 50. “However he by no means complains. He places his head down and works, and the outcomes converse for themselves. My identify didn’t assist him dominate the amateurs.”
Giovanni Marquez added that he didn’t really feel a lot strain on account of bearing the household identify.
“I simply place confidence in God,” he stated. “Work laborious. Keep targeted.”
The youthful Marquez’s opponent, Nelson Morales, had his personal compelling story. He was born within the Dominican Republic, grew up in Newark, lives in Scranton, Pa., and is a part-time police officer who trains each time he can. Morales, 30, entered the bout with a 2-0 skilled report, he stated in an interview on Tuesday, simply as he had completed getting a haircut.
“I’m simply making an attempt to look good on TV,” he stated. “I’ve bought to promote myself.”
With a spouse and two youngsters, and a 3rd youngster on the best way, Morales stated he relished the possibility to combat the son of a world champion.
Sports
2014 Boston Marathon winner receives prize money from stranger
Ten years and one month after Buzunesh Deba finished as the rightful winner of the 2014 Boston Marathon, she was finally given the prize money she never received — but it didn’t come from the Boston Athletic Association.
Rather, it came from a stranger.
When Deba crossed the finish line on Boylston Street in 2014, she didn’t receive international praise, the ceremonial gold wreath or the purse of $100,000 ($75,000 for winning plus $25,000 for breaking the course record). Rather, those honors and winnings went to Rita Jeptoo, who crossed the finish line first that year, but whose victory was stripped by the BAA in 2016 after a failed drug test.
Deba finished just over one minute behind Jeptoo for second place that day, but her time of 2:19:59 still shattered the previous course record set by Margaret Okayo in 2002.
But while Deba’s name replaced Jeptoo’s in the history books after the failed test, the money never appeared in Deba’s bank account.
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Despite Jeptoo’s record being scrubbed and her name being tarnished, her winnings have never been reclaimed. Similar cases have unfolded with the Chicago Marathon, where Liliya Shobukhova won the race three times for a total of $265,000 before she was caught doping. Like with Jeptoo, no money has ever been recovered from Shobukhova.
That is until Doug Guyer gave her the money out of his own pocket. Guyer, a businessman from Philadelphia, personally paid Deba her $75,000 after reading an article in The Wall Street Journal in April about her never receiving her winnings.
“We cried. I called my mother to tell her and she was so happy,” Deba told The Athletic in an email.
Deba, who has competed internationally for Ethiopia, is based in the Bronx, N.Y., with her husband and two children.
She found success at the 2014 New York City Marathon, where she finished ninth, and returned to Boston in 2015, where she finished third.
But for Deba, that 2014 win remains the pinnacle of her career. And for her family, those winnings were sorely needed.
“It means so much. It allows me to train again. We don’t have a sponsor. We have to pay for everything,” she said. “And I have two children. The money will go to my training and my family. We are so grateful. We have waited so long for this and almost gave up. God bless Mr. Doug.”
Guyer, who played football at Boston College and was beaten out for the starting quarterback spot by Doug Flutie in 1981, told the Boston Globe, “It was just about righting a wrong that’s been wrong for 10 years.”
Guyer said he’ll consider sending the $25,000 course record bonus if the BAA doesn’t.
The BAA said in a statement it is in “pursuit of reclaiming prize money awards from Rita Jeptoo” and plans to pay Deba her winnings when the association receives them. The organization said it is backed by policies held by World Athletics and supported by World Marathon Majors.
“The BAA is still pursuing Ms. Jeptoo to recover the prize money for Ms. Deba, which the BAA believes would be a just and fair result for her and all runners who follow the rules,” a BAA spokesperson said.
Deba said she was skeptical of Jeptoo’s performance from the day of the 2014 race, saying she wondered why Jeptoo wasn’t tired when she crossed the finish line.
But when Deba was told in 2016 that she was the winner, she couldn’t believe it.
“I was in my apartment and I jumped up and down. It was my biggest win,” she said. “Not only was I the champion but I was also the course record holder.”
Despite her decade of waiting for her proper winnings, Deba said she’s never held bitterness against the BAA. Instead, she considers the organization “like family.”
While she took her story public in April, in the weeks before the 10-year anniversary of her win, she held back from sharing it so for many years because she trusted the BAA would do right by her. She also feared that if she said something she would not be invited back to the prestigious race.
“This started when my friend came to my apartment and looked at my second-place trophy and asked, ‘What’s this? Where’s your real trophy?’ I told her that they never sent one to me,” Deba said. “She was so upset for me. We wrote to them and I eventually got my medals. Then they asked me to come to a celebration for the 10 year winners. She told me that I should see what they planned to do about the money.”
In response to The Wall Street Journal story, fans from around the world came to Deba’s defense, with many even willing to crowdfund her winnings.
“I am so grateful to know that so many people are behind me,” Deba said. “It is important that people know how hard I worked to win. This is my job. I was not begging for something that wasn’t mine. A lot went into winning and I am glad to see that the community agrees with me.”
It wasn’t until after the April article was published that the BAA responded about trying to move her case forward, Deba said.
And yet, that doesn’t diminish her adoration for the race or even deter her from wanting to return to the world’s most famous marathon.
“It is still my dream to come back and not only run but win Boston,” she said.
Required reading
(Photo: John Blanding / The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
Sports
Scottie Scheffler gets support from popular golf influencer after arrest
Scottie Scheffler received a ton of support at Valhalla Golf Course on Friday when he returned from jail to shoot a 66 in the second round of the PGA Championship.
At home and on social media, Scheffler received even more support. Golf influencer Grace Charis was among those who showed their love for Scheffler. She posted a photo of herself in a crop top shirt with Scheffler’s mugshot across her chest.
“#FREESCOTTIE,” her shirt read.
Charis has 3 million followers on Instagram, 2.9 million on TikTok and another 880,000 on X.
Scheffler was in the mix for the lead after the second round, finishing only three shots off the leader. Xander Schauffele went into the clubhouse 12-under par.
“As far as best rounds of my career, I would say it was pretty good,” Scheffler said after the round. “I definitely never imagined ever going to jail, and I definitely never imagined going to jail the morning before one of my tee times.”
Scheffler faces second-degree assault of a police officer (a felony), criminal mischief, reckless driving and disregarding signals from an officer directing traffic charges stemming from the early Friday morning incident.
He chalked it up to a “big misunderstanding.”
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Sports
Friday’s high school baseball and softball scores, updated playoff pairings
City Section
BASEBALL
Friday’s Results
Open Division
Quarterfinals
Granada Hills 3, El Camino Real 2
Bell 3, Sylmar 0
Carson 4, Cleveland 3
Birmingham 8, San Pedro 0
Saturday’s Schedule
(All games at 3 p.m. unless noted)
Quarterfinals
Division I
No. 8 North Hollywood at No. 1 Garfield
Roosevelt at No. 4 Chatsworth
No. 14 L.A. Marshall at No. 11 South East
No. 7 Wilmington Banning at No. 2 Verdugo Hills
Division II
No. 16 Van Nuys at No. 8 Monroe
No. 13 Fremont at No. 5 Harbor Teacher
No. 11 King/Drew at No. 3 Eagle Rock
No. 7 Port of L.A. at No. 2 Sotomayor
Division III
No. 9 Middle College/No. 8 Lakeview Charter vs. No. 1 L.A. University at Dorsey High
No. 12 Valor Academy at No. 4 East Valley
No. 11 Diego Rivera at No. 3 Jefferson
No. 7 Fulton vs. No. 2 Lincoln at Torres High
Tuesday’s Schedule
At Pepperdine
Open Division
Semifinals
No. 3 Carson vs. No. 2 Birmingham, 11:30 a.m.
No. 4 Bell vs. No. 1 Granada Hills, 2:30 p.m.
SOFTBALL
Saturday’s Schedule
At Long Beach State
Finals
Open Division
No. 3 Carson vs. No. 1 Granada Hills, 7 p.m.
Division I
No. 3 Granada Hills Kennedy vs. No. 1 Garfield, 4 p.m.
Division II
No. 2 Marquez vs. No. 1 Chatsworth, 1 p.m.
Thursday’s Schedule
At Venice
Division IV
Finals
No. 10 LACES at No. 5 University
Southern Section
BASEBALL
Friday’s Results
Finals
At Diamond Stadium in Lake Elsinore
Division 7
Oxford Academy 5, South El Monte 4
Division 6
Colony 8, Village Christian 3
Division 5
Chino Hills 4, Santa Monica 1
Division 2
Hart 7, Moorpark 6
Saturday’s Schedule
Finals
At Diamond Stadium in Lake Elsinore
Division 8
Orange County Pacifica Christian (22-6) vs. Azusa (17-5), 10 a.m.
Division 4
Camarillo (23-5) vs. St. Francis (19-13), 1 p.m.
Division 3
St. John Bosco (20-10) vs. Beckman (24-6-1), 4 p.m.
Division 1
Corona (29-3) vs. Harvard-Westlake (27-4-1), 7:30 p.m.
SOFTBALL
Friday’s Results
Finals
At Barber Park in Irvine
Division 8
Hesperia Christian 8, Jurupa Valley 7
Division 6
Ganesha 21, Viewpoint 1
Division 4
Paraclete 8, JW North 0
Division 1
Garden Grove Pacifica 3, Orange Lutheran 0
Saturday’s Schedule
Finals
At Barber Park in Irvine
Division 7
Oxford Academy (25-5) vs. Eastside (22-10), 10 a.m.
Division 5
Liberty (22-6) vs. Cerritos Valley Christian (17-6), 1 p.m.
Division 3
Etiwanda (27-5) vs. King (19-9), 4 p.m.
Division 2
California (28-3) vs. Gahr (18-10), 7 p.m.
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