Olympic hopefuls Aaron Prince and Michael Alexander were in action at Tuesday Night Boxing at the Castle, as former West Indies batsman Brian Lara opened his home to boxing for the first time in Port-of-Spain, on Tuesday night.
SPORT | Amatuer Boxing |
AFFILIATE | Trinidad and Tobago Amateur Boxing Association |
PRESIDENT | Cecil FORDE |
SECRETARY | Deopersad Ramoutar |
CONTACT | (868) 736-4715 |
MAILING ADDRESS | 149 St. James Street, Battoo Avanue, Marabella |
trinbagoamabox@hotmail.com |
Olympic hopefuls Aaron Prince and Michael Alexander were in action at Tuesday Night Boxing at the Castle, as former West Indies batsman Brian Lara opened his home to boxing for the first time in Port-of-Spain, on Tuesday night.
Amateur boxing will take centre stage for the month of January when the Trinidad and Tobago Amateur Boxing Association in collaboration with LAY Management Group [LMG] and the Pearl & Bunty Lara Foundation play host to ‘Tuesday Night Boxing at the Castle’ which punches off at Brian Lara’s residence on Lady Chancellor Hill, Port-of-Spain, tonight.
Amateur boxing will take centre stage for the month of January when the T&T Amateur Boxing Association, in collaboration with LAY Management Group [LMG] and the Pearl & Bunty Lara Foundation host Tuesday Night Boxing at the Castle [TNBC] at Brian Lara’s residence, starting tonight at 7 pm, and continuing for the next two Tuesdays.
National super heavyweight boxer Nigel Paul was among six gold medal winners for T&T at the Caribbean Boxing Championships, which was held in Guyana from November 25 – 29.
Amateur boxing is combat sport that is practiced at the Olympic Games as well as the Commonwealth Games and at the collegiate level.
The first Olympic boxing tournament was held in St. Louis 1904, and apart form the 1912 Games, has been a part since. Amateur boxing emerged as a sport partly as a result of the moral controversies surrounding professional prize fighting. The most noticeable differences between the two boxing disciplines are the use of head protection and a white stripe across the knuckle of the glove in amateur boxing.
The white stripe acts as a standard for the point system; boxers gain points for connecting the white stripe with legal blows. Bouts are short and comprise four rounds of two minutes in the Olympic and Commonwealth Games