Daniel Garcia is fighting for redemption. When he was young, his mom smuggled him across the border to Washington. In school, he got involved in the Sureño gang. “I kept getting in trouble,” he said. In 2010, he was charged with felony assault, imprisoned and then deported, leaving his mother, daughter and two brothers behind. His father and several of his friends have since been killed in gang and drug related violence. “Boxing, it keeps me away from all the bad things. I don’t drink, I don’t smoke, I don’t go out,” Daniel said, “I just work and come to the gym.”
Romanza is named for two of Nacho’s fighters: two time champion Gilberto Roman and four time champ and Hall of Fame member Daniel Zaragoza. The gym has cultivated some of Mexico’s top fighting talent.
“Four years back, Golden Boy Productions called me and said that he’d pay me $50,000 to join him. Nacho called me the next day. He told me, ‘I’m not gonna give you $50,000, I’m gonna give you technique,’” said Hector Andres Reyes Anguiano and so he had packed his bags and moved to Mexico City from Juarez. He’s undefeated as a professional boxer.
“I fucked it up because I fell in with the wrong crowd,” said Ruben Orozco, “but now I have a second chance.” Like Daniel, his parents brought him to the states when he was young. In 2010, he was arrested with 5oz of cocaine disguised as a baked potato. “I had to fight a lot in prison, probably 20 times,” he explained. After he was deported, he came to Romanza to get in shape. “My day dream is to see my son,” he said. His son’s still in America with his family and, he explained, “That’s my real fight in life.”
Luis Mora grew up in Tepito, one of Mexico City’s most notorious neighborhoods. The legend goes that it was the last part of the city to fall when Hernan Cortes invaded the Aztec capital and it now harbors markets for knockoffs, stolen goods and drugs. “I had friends in the drug business, but they’re all dead,” Luis said as we sat in his car watching a gang lookout signal our presence on his walkietalkie, “I don’t drink or do drugs. I work and I train.”
Luis Mora grew up in Tepito, one of Mexico City’s most notorious neighborhoods. The legend goes that it was the last part of the city to fall when Hernan Cortes invaded the Aztec capital and it now harbors markets for knockoffs, stolen goods and drugs. “I had friends in the drug business, but they’re all dead,” Luis said as we sat in his car watching a gang lookout signal our presence on his walkietalkie, “I don’t drink or do drugs. I work and I train.”
Sonia Osorio became the Super Flyweight World Champion this fall. She’s been training at Romanza for 12 years and, on Tin Tan’s advice, stayed in school the whole time became a lawyer. Professional boxers in Mexico typically make only 1000 pesos ($50 USD) per round and might only fight a four round match once ever couple months. Even a champion like Sonia can’t live off of boxing alone unless she lucks into a lucrative, wellpublicized fight.
Fighting isn’t lucrative, but the guys help each other out. Ruben moved to Mexico City from the Yucatan. First, he stayed with Hector for a little while and then Daniel helped him move into his apartment building a short walk from the gym and to get a job at the call center he works at.
“I’ve been a single parent for the last three years,” Jose Casarez explained. He’s been training at Romanza for seven years and his son, Joshua, inspires him to keep working. The two train together sometimes. “He should know how to defend himself,” Jose says of his son.
“I’ve been a single parent for the last three years,” Jose Casarez explained. He’s been training at Romanza for seven years and his son, Joshua, inspires him to keep working. The two train together sometimes. “He should know how to defend himself,” Jose says of his son.
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Abuse, Action, Arrests and Prosecutions, Borders, boxing, Celebrity, Combat, Community, Confrontation, Crime, Drug Abuse, Gangs, Illegal Trafficking, Immigration, Incarceration, Latin America, Lifestyle, Poverty, Prison
Romanza Gym is a boxing
Mecca in Mexico City where
Hall of Fame trainer Ignacio
“Nacho” Beristain has held
court since 1992. Now 80
years old, Nacho has managed
more than 30 world champions,
including Joan Manuel
Marquez who knocked out
Manny Pacquiao in what was
billed as the Fight of the
Decade.
The gym is a spartan space,
gritty and stripped down to the
essential training equipment.
Every morning, professionals
and amateurs pack in, filling
the small space with the steady
slap of speed bags and flurries
of sparring.
Some fighters come with
dreams of being Nacho’s next
start. Others just need a fresh
start.