Stepping into the Bald Eagle Recreation Center in Washington is to step out of a neighborhood better known for street violence, armed robbery and assault, and into a state-of-the-art boxing gym home to world-class athletes.
The center is stocked with two elevated rings, rows of fleshy punching bags and all the workout equipment an aspiring athlete could dream of.
However, the equipment is just a small part of the gym’s draw; most come for father-figure coaches who have built this safe harbor in a rough part of town.
Photo: AFP
“When we become adults, we forget the struggles of the younger people, so we lose the connection with them. I’ve never lost that, I connect with them from day one,” one of the founders, Barry Hunter, said.
Tracing the border with Maryland, the suburb of Washington Highlands is just a 20-minute drive from the White House, yet reports of late-night gunshots, armed robbery and violence are common within the predominantly African-American neighborhood.
Tyrek Irby, 21, came to Bald Eagle to turn a past marked by neglect and street fighting into a future as a world-class boxer.
“I learnt from other people’s mistakes. I’ve seen friends lose their lives on the streets... That was about the time when my daughter was born, and I realized I had to change my life around,” he said. “I got off the streets, I stopped smoking and doing stupid stuff, and now my focus is just my daughter and boxing. That’s it.”
Currently ranked No. 1 in the US amateur light welterweight category, and No. 2 in the world, Irby was growing up in a lawless, violent culture of street fighting when he discovered the “sweet science” of organized boxing. He joined the Headbangers team at Bald Eagle and now has his sights on a World Series Boxing title.
Although Irby has succeeded inside the ring at full speed, he has had to learn the sport’s discipline the hard way.
When he was given second place at a local tournament at Maryland University, he threw his runner-up trophy into the crowd in a rage and was impolite to the judges.
The Potomac Valley Boxing Association, one of his sponsors and supporters from the start, wanted to suspend him, but settled for an in-house punishment that consisted of Irby scrubbing toilets, floors and equipment at the gym, unable to train for one month.
Bald Eagle began in a small school annex 27 years ago, where Hunter and Marshall Cunningham began training kids from the neighborhood. A few years ago, then-Washington mayor Adrian Fenty approached Hunter with the promise of building a new facility in recognition of the work they did with city kids.
In their new gym, inaugurated in 2012, Hunter and Cunningham have coached hundreds of kids and adults. Hunter has been a boxing coach for the US Olympic team and he is one of the most sought-after trainers in the country.
However, it is the row of belts and trophies in the glass display case at the gym that makes his eyes shine.
“This program has resurrected a lot of kids,” he said, adding that some of his current coaches started as students.
Patrice “Boogie” Harris is Hunter’s right-hand man when it comes to training, but they go back to when Harris was 16 and had the ambition of going pro. He stopped fighting, but began coaching and passing the HeadBangers legacy to the younger fighters.
While it mostly draws boys from the streets, one woman, Tiara Brown, 27, currently trains with the team.
“Being a woman, most people say you have to go the extra mile. As a woman in a male-dominant sport, you have to go the extra five miles,” she said.
Restricted to the three Olympic weight categories for women’s boxing, Tiara has spent the last months gaining weight to reach the 132 pound (59.9kg) lightweight category, finally qualifying for the Rio trials on Sept. 17 with a semi-final victory.
In 2012, she became only the third US woman to win a title at the International Boxing Association World Championships, a status she maintained until last year, when she came in third.
Brown knows violence outside the ring, too. Her brother was murdered in their home state of Florida in 2010 and Brown says that her future could have been very different had she not committed to boxing through the HeadBangers.
She earned a degree in Criminal Justice and is working on becoming a US Marshall.
“Crime is everywhere,” she said. “The world we live in now is just so tainted for the youth. There’s more to life than drugs, robberies and murder. I want to make a difference and clean the streets up.”
There are several other HeadBangers who have built careers in other demanding fields, such as law, medicine and computer sciences. For the younger kids, the coaches keep track of their homework, enforcing a few simple rules that help keep boxing in balance with formal education.
“Our program isn’t just boxing, it’s a youth program disguised as boxing and we teach the kids discipline, teamwork and comradery, which help build self-esteem and life skills,” Cunningham said. “It’s an outlet, a positive alternative from the streets, crime and delinquency.”
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