Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Hiatus

Due to conflicting interests and personal situations, I will be taking a hiatus for a unspecified amount of time, but I will be back. Thanks for reading. Randy

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Miguel Cotto vs Zab Judah


Miguel Cotto stopped Zab Judah last night 49 seconds into round eleven. Apparently it was a classic war. I say apparently, because I missed it! I'm going to have to wait for HBO to replay it, hopefully, during the week. I'll hold off on my opinion until then. From all that I've heard though, it was a classic and they did their part to continue to keep the sport of Boxing alive. Kudos!. Go to HBO Boxing orfightnews.com for updated info on the fight.

Sunday, June 03, 2007

Peter Wood: Boxer, Teacher, Author

Reprinted from May 31, 2007 article from The White Plains Times


Peter Wood, at Borders Books. Photo credit: Paula Markowitz Wittlin
Peter Wood: Boxer, Teacher, Author



By: Jean Bello
Published: May 31, 2007

White Plains High School English teacher Peter Wood describes his boxing career as a “poignant time of life.” A 1971 New York City Middleweight Golden Gloves Finalist who was also selected to represent America in the 1976 Maccabian Games in Tel Aviv, Israel, Wood competed from 12 through 20 years old, logged 34 wins, one loss and 20 knockouts—all chronicled in his personal coming of age tale, “Confessions of a Fighter: Battling Through the Golden Gloves.”

In a telephone interview Wood offered an observation: “Show me a boxer and I’ll show you one unhappy childhood,” adding, “the size of the talent equals the size of the pain.” He says the anger and pain an individual feels becomes fuel in the ring. Wood’s pain comes from the emotional turmoil he experienced after his parents divorced when he was eight years old and his mother remarried when he was nine, whereby he acquired a stepfather whom he did not like and four stepsiblings. He admits everybody was “suffering in silence,” but sublimating their negativity in art. Wood’s art was boxing, “my sick way of remaining healthy.” Calling boxing “the closest thing to assault and battery that society allows,” and saying he was never raised to be a fighter, Wood says he has to take a “positive look at a pretty lousy sport”; boxing provided him with an emotional outlet when he needed it most.


Peter Wood, answers questions from an audience including (l. to r.) Carolyn Tokson, Marcia Kowan and Linda Rodney.
Photo credit: Paula Markowitz Wittlin


After moving out of the house, Wood says the need to “lash out” was gone, and he recognized that “at some point, I knew I had to start hitting the books instead of people.”

Besides teaching in White Plains for about 22 years, Wood has served as the high school Junior Varsity football coach and baseball coach for five years, and has been coaching boxing at the White Plains Youth Bureau for seven years. He says his childhood experience has helped him in his role as a teacher because he tries to be “sensitive to every kid.” Recognizing that some adolescents have a wonderful passage, Wood understands the students who express their anger through art or music, and he sees the quiet little girl in the classroom as perhaps having “World War II raging in her mind.”



Wood's wife Sue, an artist, painted the cover of his latest book.
Photo credit: Paula Markowitz Wittlin

Wood and his wife of 12 years, Sue, and their daughter Zoe live in Mt. Kisco. His father, Guy Wood, “a soft, gentle, self-effacing type of fellow,” was a songwriter who wrote “My One and Only Love,” which was recorded by Frank Sinatra in 1956, “Shoo-Fly Pie and Apple Pan Dowdy,” and “Till Then.” He passed away Feb. 23, 2001 at 89 years of age. His mother is an artist and Wood says, “We’re doing great. There’s been a lot of healing through the books and boxing.”

Wood’s latest book, “A Clenched Fist: The Making of a Golden Glove Champion,” tells the story of a couple of White Plains boys Wood worked with in the gym, one of whom goes to the Golden Gloves finals at Madison Square Garden. Book sales have been brisk and book signings well attended. “Confessions of a Fighter” is in its second printing. Asked whether he would give up teaching to pursue writing full time, Wood says, “No, I draw energy from teaching!”

A Remembrance

By Randy De La O From the first (and best) Rocky 1976. Almost fifty years ago. If my memory serves me right, the filming took place in Janua...