FEATURE-Olympics-Italian boxers tone up in edgy Marcianise
(The following is an updated version of a feature first issued on Feb. 13)
MARCIANISE, Italy, July 29 (Reuters) - A three-year-old boy punches a boxing bag with a pair of big gloves. Nearby, his father is training a group of wannabe champions. Out in the street a poster reads: "Marcianise, land of boxers."
This town of 40,000 people north of Naples -- whose once rural landscape is now scarred by bleak factories -- has reason to be proud of its boxing tradition.
More than half the members of the Italian team which has qualified for the Beijing Olympics were born in this troubled region, where newspapers are frequently dominated by tales of a trash crisis and the Camorra, the local version of mafia.
"The inhabitant of Marcianise is born with a great desire to be in punch-ups. So we have a very easy task," chief coach Domenico Brillantino told Reuters during a sparring session at the "Excelsior boxe", the club he founded 30 years ago.
"We prepare them, we try to mould their desire to fight so it's within sporting rules. And we turn them into champions."
The "Excelsior", a Latin name for "higher", is housed rent-free in an elementary school. Far from the glitzy arenas seen on television, it has a story of self-denial to tell.
"When I see my picture on the cover of a glossy magazine I see a whole life of sacrifices that started when I was 10 years old," world amateur heavyweight champion Clemente Russo, one of the sport's most popular athletes, told Reuters during a training session at the "Fiamme Oro" police sports centre outside Rome.
"I was 14 but I was still going to school. I used to wake up at six and go running in the dark, in the cold and rain," added Russo, his eyes glazing over as he recalled his early training in Marcianise.
ONLY EXCEPTIONS
Four of the six Italian boxers who have qualified for August's Beijing Games -- heavyweight Russo, lightweight Domenico Valentino, flyweight Vincenzo Picardi and bantamweight Vittorio Parrinello -- were born between Naples and Caserta.
The only exceptions are featherweight Alessio Di Savino, who comes from Rome and the world amateur super heavyweight champion Roberto Cammarelle, who lives in Northern Italy, though his parents moved from the southern Basilicata region.
His fellow boxers at the Italian police team say he has "southern blood in his veins".
"Many of the greatest Italian fighters come from Caserta and Marcianise," said Italy's boxing federation president Franco Falcinelli.
"Our fighters are in very good shape," he added. Continued...




