‘Rumble in the Gart’ brings boxing to Stuttgart

Photo by Laura CastroStephen Pickers of Team Vicenza dodges the onslaught of Albert Miranda during the third bout of the Rumble in the Gart invitational boxing tournament April 5.
Photo by Laura Castro
Stephen Pickers of Team Vicenza dodges the onslaught of Albert Miranda during the third bout of the Rumble in the Gart invitational boxing tournament April 5.

Team Stuttgart won the “Rumble in the Gart” invitational boxing tournament April 5 at the Patch Fitness Center on Patch Barracks, beating out 10 other teams through 15 bouts for the top slot, with Fit Boxing Esslingen in second, and Team Kaiserslautern coming in third.

Laura Castro Adetermined Abdulahaziz Shribati, in blue, of ESV Rot-Weiss Stuttgart squares off against Corey Gulley of team Hohenfels in the fourth bout of the Rumble in the Gart invitational boxing tournament April 5.
Laura Castro
Adetermined Abdulahaziz Shribati, in blue, of ESV Rot-Weiss Stuttgart squares off against Corey Gulley of team Hohenfels in the fourth bout of the Rumble in the Gart invitational boxing tournament April 5.

Some 33 boxers competed in the tournament representing 11 teams: Schwäbisch Gmünd, Team Stuttgart, Team Vicenza, Team Hohenfels, Fit Boxing Esslingen, Team Kaiserslautern, ESV Rot-Weiss Stuttgart, Ansbach TSV 1860, Team Spangdahlem, Team Baumholder, and SV Gold-Blau Stuttgart.

In the first bout, Pascal Stern of Schwäbisch Gmünd defeated Steven Webb of Ansbach TSV 1860 by decision.

Greg Jones  An exhausted Allen Wallace of Team Spangdahlem gets advice from his coach  during a break in the fifth bout of the tournament.
Greg JonesAn exhausted Allen Wallace of Team Spangdahlem gets advice from his coach
during a break in the fifth bout of the tournament. 

The second bout featured the first Stuttgart boxer, Vijy Seedan, who beat out Marcus Green of Kaiserslautern and was followed by Schwäbisch Gmünd’s second win of the evening when Albert Miranda defeated Stephen Pickers of Vicenza during the third bout.

Robert Krlin of ESV Rot-Weiss Stuttgart, is named the best overall boxer and wears a championship belt presented by Command Sgt. Maj. Bernard P. Smalls, USAG Stuttgart’s senior enlisted advisor at the conclusion of Rumble in the Gart. Greg Jones
Robert Krlin of ESV Rot-Weiss Stuttgart, is named the best overall boxer and wears a championship belt presented by Command Sgt. Maj. Bernard P. Smalls, USAG
Stuttgart’s senior enlisted advisor at the conclusion of Rumble in the Gart.
Greg Jones

A very heated fourth bout featured Corey Gulley of Hohenfels squaring off against Abdulahaziz Shribati of ESV Rot-Weiss Stuttgart. Both boxers came out fast and furious, but toward the end of the match fatigue glared on both their faces. Gulley, however, did sustain enough energy to secure the win.

Bout five went to Pajhin Ramadani of Fit Boxing Esslingen over Allen Wallace from Spangdahlem. In bout six, Marcus Jacobs brought Kaiserslautern the team’s first victory of the evening, defeating Alex Ortega of Stuttgart.

Bout seven was decided by default in favor of Raymond Garcia of Stuttgart when the opposing boxer failed to show.

During bout eight, Donald Watts of Baumholder earned the team’s first and only victory of the evening against Stuttgart’s Jonathon Mullis.

During an intermission between bouts eight and nine, food and door prizes, to include a four-day stay at the Edelweiss Lodge in Garmisch and roundtrip ticket to the U.S., were offered.

Greg JonesStephen Pickers of Team Vicenza gets advice and water from his coach during a brief respite between rounds in the third bout of the Rumble in the Gart.
Greg Jones
Stephen Pickers of Team Vicenza gets advice and water from his coach during a brief respite between rounds in the third bout of the Rumble in the Gart.

Following the break, the tournament continued with bout nine in which Reno Sullivan of Stuttgart pummeled Michael Logan from Kaiserslautern intensively, urging the referee to call the fight early in Sullivan’s favor. The intensity of this fight was a direct result of equally intense training, according to Sullivan.

“The hardest part for me in any fight is training, and in this particular case my hard work paid off,” he said.

Bout 10 was also called early by the referee, this time in favor of Abel Amsaleteghen of SV Gold-Blau Stuttgart who thrashed Jose Sandoval.

A fantastic bout 11 featured Robert Krlin of ESV Rot-Weiss Stuttgart squaring off against Jose Rivera of Stuttgart. The two boxers went back and forth with grim intensity for the entirety of their three rounds and it was difficult to call at the end. Ultimately, the decision went to Krlin, who also took the “Best Boxer” award for the evening.

In bout 12, Giuseppe Masutto with Fit Boxing Esslingen secured his team’s second place spot by defeating Clinton Kendall of Stuttgart.

Xavier Martin of Team Stuttgart (in blue) squares off against Corey Taylor of Hohenfels in a very heated 13th bout during the Rumble in the Gart invitational boxing tournament at Patch Fitness Center April 5. Boxers from around Germany gathered to test their mettle against one another in this 15-bout points- based tournament.  Laura Castro
Xavier Martin of Team Stuttgart (in blue) squares off against Corey Taylor of Hohenfels in a very heated 13th bout during the Rumble in the Gart invitational boxing tournament at Patch Fitness Center April 5. Boxers from around Germany gathered to test their mettle against one another in this 15-bout points- based tournament.
Laura Castro

In the only ten-count knock out of the evening, Corey Taylor of Hohenfels earned enthusiastic cheers from the crowd, defeating Stuttgart’s Xavier Martin in bout 13.

In what may have been the most crowd-pleasing bout of the evening, Vicenza’s William Runson defeated Tyler Mielearch of Baumholder in bout 14, but not without some real effort.

“That guy weighs about 260 pounds, and believe me, I felt every bit of it,” Runson said after his bout. “I’d land a punch, and it wouldn’t move him at all. I won, but it sure tired me out!”

In the final bout, Julian Wiggins of Stuttgart defeated teammate James Freund.

For the boxers, it wasn’t necessarily about losing or winning the tournament, but about the experience and building resilience, according to Wiggins.

“Boxing, along with other individual combat sports, helps test your intestinal fortitude and builds confidence to overcome your fears,” he said. “Anybody can watch from the bleachers and talk about how the boxers are fighting, but not everybody can get in the ring in front of a crowd of people and fight.”