Sports

Clayton picks up Canada's 1st boxing win in 8 years

Custio Clayton earned Canada's first Olympic boxing victory in eight years with a 12-8 decision over Mexico's Oscar Molina on Sunday in the men's 69-kg division in London.
Canada's Custio Clayton, left, takes on Mexico's Oscar Molina Casillas during welterweight boxing on Sunday in London. (Canadian Press)

Custio Clayton earned Canada's first Olympic boxing victory in eight years with a 12-8 decision over Mexico's Oscar Molina on Sunday in the men's 69-kg division in London.

Clayton, a 24-year-old welterweight, is Nova Scotia's first Olympic boxer in 12 years. He is from Dartmouth and has studied under his great-uncle, Gary Johnson, and Kirk Johnson, the 1992 Canadian Olympian.

With elusive movement and timely punching, Clayton avenged a loss to Molina at the 2011 Pan-American championships.

"I think I did amazing," said Clayton, who hoped his daughter, Cheyla, was watching at home. "All the hard work has paid off. I had a tough draw, I thought, but I've fought him before. It was all a learning experience. I sat down and saw what I did, and then what I should do."

Canada hasn't won an Olympic boxing medal since Halifax's David Defiagbon took bronze in 1996, and Lennox Lewis's super heavyweight win in Seoul in 1988 was the last gold. Just three Canadians qualified for London, but middleweight Mary Spencer drew a first-round bye, putting her one win away from medal qualification when she fights next week.

Britain, Ireland and the revitalized American team are all off to a perfect start in the Olympic boxing tournament.

Jose Ramirez and Errol Spence won their opening bouts Sunday night to improve the Americans to 4-0, while Freddie Evans and Josh Taylor rode the home crowd's raucous cheers to a 3-0 start for Britain. Welterweight Adam Nolan then added a win in the late session, pushing Ireland's record to 3-0.

The young Americans fought nearly back-to-back, and both produced impressive wins over seasoned amateur veterans for a formerly powerful boxing nation that won just six total fights and one medal during its worst Olympic performance in Beijing.

This tight-knit American team doesn't plan to go out that way.

"I'm not surprised, because we worked very hard in training camp," Spence said of the American team, which didn't have a coaching staff until four weeks before the Olympics began. "Everybody has a certain plan, and we're all following that plan. We're all relaxed and focusing on the task at hand."

Ramirez, a 19-year-old business major at Fresno State and a former Starbucks barista, pressed the action and fought out of trouble throughout a 21-20 win over France's Rachid Azzedine. Ramirez got a last-minute pep talk from his family on Skype, saying, "I'm glad this place has WiFi."

"There's always a lot of nerves when you have a lot of intensity when you go in there with a lot of motivation," said Ramirez, who sported neon-yellow boots. "I feel like I shook those nerves out. ... I didn't really feel a strong hit from him. I just stayed smart, fought hard and continued to work."

Spence had an easier time in a rougher fight, persevering through questionable tactics by three-time Brazilian Olympian Myke Ribeiro de Carvalho for a 16-10 victory. The national champion welterweight has a tough second-round matchup against third-seeded Krishan Vikus of India.

"The first one is always the toughest one, because you've got the butterflies, and I haven't fought since, like, March," Spence said.

The Brits are on a roll, too.

After Evans posted an 18-10 victory over Algerian welterweight Ilyas Abbadi in the final bout of the afternoon session, Taylor upset Brazilian lightweight Robson Conceicao 13-9 in the opening bout of the evening session, delighting two sold-out crowds waving dozens of Union Jacks and giving repeated standing ovations.

The crowd support clearly is buoying Britain, which has thoroughly revitalized its amateur ranks in the eight years since teenager Amir Khan won a silver medal in Athens as the team's lone fighter, and this strong start at home suggests podium finishes in the Brits' future.

"It was unbelievable, like nothing I've ever experienced before," Evans said of the crowd support after he peppered Abbadi with quick punches. "It just builds you up and gives you a great positive feeling."

Taylor jumped to a lead in the first two rounds and fought defensively in the third, barely hanging on for the win against the promising Conceicao, who nearly upset top-ranked Vasyl Lomachenko in last year's world championships.

Taylor and Conceicao sparred in the British training camp during the weeks leading up to the Olympics.

"But I was just covering up, because I didn't want to show him too much just in case I drew him," Taylor said. "I never expected to draw him, though. ... It's the best I've ever felt in my life."

France's Alexis Vastine beat German welterweight Patrick Wojcicki 16-12, and Thailand's Saylom Ardee lost an agonizing decision to Kazakhstan's Gain Zhailauov in the most entertaining early fights at ExCel.

Dominican lightweight Wellington Arias was impressive in a 17-8 victory over Colombia's Eduar Marriaga, but earned the dubious honor of facing Ukraine's top-seeded Vasyl Lomachenko in the second round Thursday. Lomachenko, who had a first-round bye, won a gold medal and the Val Barker Trophy as the Olympics' top boxer in Beijing before adding two world championships in the last three years.

Ardee bloodied the nose of Zhailauov, the tournament's fifth-seeded lightweight, in the first round on the way to a 12-12 draw. But Zhailauov escaped with a victory on the tiebreaking countback, which factors in punches that weren't scored by the majority of judges.

Vastine, a bronze medalist in Beijing, narrowly held off the promising Wojcicki with a 6-4 advantage in the final round. Vastine's next bout is against Mongolia's Tuvshinbat Byamba, who dominated Gabon's Yannick Mitoumba Mbemy.