Is Dallas Boxer Luis Yanez a Future World Champion or Just a Suburban Myth?

He was an Olympic disappointment, but with his first pro fight on Friday, Yanez is out to prove he's the real deal.

Had to see for myself about Luis Yanez.

Like you, I kinda followed his story last summer. Kicked off the U.S. Olympic boxing team in early July. Reinstated just before Beijing, only to lose in the second round. Then he disappeared. Now he's turning pro, with his first fight Friday night at American Airlines Center televised live on Fox Sports Net.

Olympic disappointment Luis Yanez has a chance to prove
he’s the real deal. He’s beginning his professional career 
in a fight at the American Airlines Center on Friday night.
Eli Luna
Olympic disappointment Luis Yanez has a chance to prove he’s the real deal. He’s beginning his professional career in a fight at the American Airlines Center on Friday night.

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Click on the photo to see more of Yanez at the gym.

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Sound about right?

The kid is intriguing: Duncanville-born and Dallas-bred, his immense talent trumped only by infinite confidence.

But is he merely the latest fabricated "star" of the prosperity-before-puberty generation, a petulant athlete who considers special treatment a right rather than a reward? Or, fingers crossed, is Yanez the real deal?

C'mon, let's ask him:

This, in far east Dallas, is his training center, a new gym constructed on one of his handlers' 10-acre spread. That's his car, the white Infiniti G35 with the silver Dallas Cowboys logo affixed on the back.

And that's Yanez, the 20-year-old with the diamond doorknobs accessorizing each earlobe. Amidst the gym's eclectic décor of an old school desk, a poster of Marilyn Monroe and the Rock 'Em, Sock 'Em Robots game, Yanez provides the electricity. One minute he's throwing and catching a Nerf football while somehow balancing atop one of those rubber training balls. Next he's taking a gulp of Venom energy drink, shadow boxing in the ring and dancing to Christina Aguilera on Movin' 107.5 FM.

He's Joaquin Phoenix on Letterman. Only opposite.

"Nice to meet you," Yanez says politely, profoundly. "Latin legend."

Funny, but Dallas' next big thing is 5-foot-4-inches and 118 pounds.

Yanez hasn't given up his steady paycheck: floor manager at the Blue Moon Café in Lewisville. Yet, he is training five hours a day and commandeering attention, advertisers and accolades as Dallas' only Olympic boxer, its first boxing hero since Curtis Cokes in the 1960s and its most prominent Mexican athlete since golfer Lee Trevino.

"I was a busboy when I started out at 12," Yanez says of his day job. "So I'm moving up."

Out of the kitchen and in the ring, he plans to become the first boxer to simultaneously hold four different world championships in four different weight classes.

"With Luis anything's possible," says Yanez's longtime trainer, Dennis Rodarte. "No doubt in my mind he'll be a world champion."

Before Yanez dreamed of winning a belt, he had to learn how to avoid one.

When Luis was an 8-year-old at Duncanville's Fairmeadows Elementary, his father, Bulmaro, tired of the disciplinary problems. Desperate for his wayward son to stay in class and out of trouble, Bulmaro drove Luis to a converted warehouse behind an immigration center in Oak Cliff, better known as Rodarte's Casa Guanajuato boxing gym.

"One day he just opened the car door and told me to get my butt in," Yanez remembers. "I didn't want to go. I kept asking questions, kept bugging him. He just drove. Silent."

Rodarte, as he's done with hundreds of local fighters, agreed to calm Yanez' mind by training his body.

"The kid was bouncing off the walls," Rodarte says. "The first thing we had to do was take all that sugar out of his diet and lay down some rules. After that, it didn't take long."

Says Yanez of his first visit, "Magical."

Yanez—who barely knows his mom but still lives with dad in Duncanville—immediately made better grades, better decisions and spent his free time at Rodarte's gym.

"He's a great kid that took to whatever I said," Rodarte says. "You could see 'champion' in his eyes. If I told him to do 100 pushups he'd do 200. He has a hunger you just can't teach."

Yanez is one of the U.S.' most decorated recent amateur boxers, winning the 2007 Pan Am Games gold medal and his last 92 fights on American soil. His flamboyance—his sassy strategy includes a "Matrix" move where he momentarily moves in super-slow motion before unleashing a fury of fists—is considered charismatic as a professional, but as an amateur it painted him cocky.

Other than being named captain of the U.S. Boxing Team for last summer's games in China, staying three doors down from Michael Phelps and having his picture taken with President George W. Bush, Yanez's Olympic experience was a disaster.

It started at USA Boxing coach Dan Campbell's training camp in Colorado Springs. Yanez says the coach required each boxer to move to Colorado, wouldn't allow Rodarte or other personal trainers on site and treated the fighters with disrespect.

"The only time he talked to me," Yanez says, "he was trying to totally change the way I fought."

Unhappy with Campbell's camp, Yanez bolted to Dallas where his older sister, Jessica, was battling a near-fatal drug addiction. Considering his top boxer AWOL and calling Yanez "one of the biggest liars I've ever met," Campbell kicked Yanez off the team July 1.

"I thought about the Olympics every day from the time I was 15," Yanez says. "I missed my prom and my graduation and everything to fight in Beijing. But if it came down to making [Campbell] happy or taking care of my family, it was an easy decision."

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  • R. Cole 02/23/2009 5:35:00 PM

    Went to the fight Friday night. Yanez is going to have trouble fighting at the weight class he is now fighting in. He has to run way too much to maintain his current weight class. Because of that Yanez appears to not have the power he needs to compete against top rank fighters. He really needs to change the trainer (Dennis) he has at this time. Yanez's trainer is a former federal ex-con who is not going to give Yanez the advice and guidance he will need as he seeks to rise to the top of his field. It is horrible that Yanez' trainer already has him working as a "greeter" at his family's restaurant in Lewsville, TX. That is the kind of job you see boxers (example: Joe Louis) doing who are already retired and/or over the hill. What Yanez' trainer should do is support Yanez by assisting him in obtaining his college education. Advice to Yanez: Get rid of the ex-con and move on to better things.

  • Florencio Canizales 02/19/2009 11:16:00 PM

    Take your time. Reach one goal, then go after the next. Four different championships in 4 different weight classes at the same time sounds far fetched. That kind of talk reminds me of Paul Gonzalez an olympicgold medalist out of Pomona California in the mid 80's. He did not even get one championship. He was beaten into retirement by Orlando Canizales out of Laredo Texas. Don't let the fame go to your head. Keep your feet on the ground. We need Spanish heroes, role models, let your fists do most of the talking. Best of luck. I will be rooting for you!

 

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