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    Female Soldier's ninth title fuels Olympic dreams

    Female Soldier's ninth title fuels Olympic dreams

    Photo By Tim Hipps | U.S. Army World Class Athlete Program, or WCAP, boxing head coach Staff Sgt. Charles...... read more read more

    DENVER, CO, UNITED STATES

    06.16.2015

    Story by Tim Hipps 

    U.S. Army Installation Management Command         

    DENVER -- Twenty-year-old Pfc. Rianna Rios won her ninth Golden Gloves state crown March 27, and has begun focusing on the long road to the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

    Rios earned a unanimous decision over Katina Melendrez in the women's 132-pound division of the 2015 Colorado Golden Gloves Championships at the Crowne Plaza Convention Center.

    Rios won seven Golden Gloves belts in Texas before joining the U.S. Army World Class Athlete Program, or WCAP, at Fort Carson, Colorado, where she is training for a shot at making Team USA for the Olympic Summer Games.

    "It's my time, definitely," she said. "It's time for Rios in Rio."

    The first victory of Rios' amateur career came at age 11 in a Texas Golden Gloves competition at 106 pounds.

    "I went 0-and-3 my first three fights," said Rios, a native of Ben Bolt, Texas. "And then I got my first win at the Golden Gloves when I was 11. It was pretty sweet."

    Rios won more Texas Golden Gloves belts at ages 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17. She missed the annual tournament at age 18 to attend Army Basic and Advanced Individual Training. At 19, she became a Colorado Golden Gloves state champion.

    At the 2015 Colorado Golden Gloves Championships, Rios pressured Melendrez into taking two standing-eight counts in the first of four two-minute rounds.

    "She was really not wanting to let go tonight - just holding and holding, but that's part of boxing," Rios said. "That's part of trying to stay on the outside, though. When they get inside, they start holding. I'm a little shorter, so they always want to keep me on the outside. That's something I'll have to get used to, being at a heavier weight class."

    Rios recently completed a five-week strength and conditioning program with WCAP strength and conditioning coach Maj. Jason Barber. She bulked from 125 to 140 pounds before cutting to her current competitive weight of 132 pounds for the 2016 U.S. Olympic Team Trials for Boxing.

    "Maj. Barber did an awesome job with our strength and conditioning program," Rios said. "I felt a lot stronger at this tournament than I did in January when we fought at nationals."

    Earlier in the evening, U.S. Army World Class Athlete Program head boxing coach Staff Sgt. Charles Leverette was inducted into the Colorado Golden Gloves Hall of Fame. With Rios in control of her bout throughout, the WCAP duo shared a double celebration in the ring.

    "Coach Lev keeps it fun," Rios said. "He doesn't put a lot of pressure on you. He doesn't yell at you. He motivates you in different ways coaches don't usually motivate you.

    "Being in there laughing with him, I was so relaxed and calm. I was able to stay patient and calm in the ring, also. When I went back to the corner, he was laughing and taking selfies with me. It kept me calm and kept me composed. It's just the way he coaches. And it works."

    Rios was proud to be a part of Leverette's Hall of Fame induction night, and even more content to add another Golden Gloves belt to his coaching resume.

    "Instead of napping or resting, I was here watching him receive his Hall of Fame ring," she said. "It's awesome to see a coach get that. He works hard, so definitely I'm going to get to where I want to be because of him."

    Her championship bout went the distance, but Rios took it in stride almost as if she was working out at WCAP's "House of Pain" boxing room on Fort Carson.

    "I was trying so hard to finish it," Rios said. "I should have been able to stop her, but there were circumstances where she would hold me most of the round. I had to realize that I wasn't going to stop her and just work.

    "I was definitely in control. I did what I wanted."

    Rios estimated that she is about 80 percent where she need be to earn a berth on the U.S. Olympic Team.

    "It's all based on how your camp goes," she said. "When we get back into to camp, it's going to be 110 percent the whole way through. I feel I'll be at my best at our next qualifying tournament [for the U.S. Olympic Team Trials for Boxing], so I'm definitely going to qualify at the next one."

    On the long road toward Rio de Janeiro, Rios said she appreciates support from family, friends, fellow troops, the U.S. Army Installation Management Command and WCAP.

    "This was awesome," she said. "I had my teammates here backing me up. It's always nice to win and see your improvements and see what you need to improve on. So we're going to go back, look at the tape, and then build up from there."

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 06.16.2015
    Date Posted: 06.16.2015 22:48
    Story ID: 166929
    Location: DENVER, CO, US

    Web Views: 52
    Downloads: 1

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