Sponsored by: Ben Mynatt Nissan | Archive Search
sports

DeSanto makes pro boxing debut


Dominic leaves the ring with Eric Williams with his dad Davuid smiling in the back. Photo by David Livengood



Dominic DeSanto waits for the start of his professional debut to begin. Domminic defeated Tabron Farmer in the first round. Photo by David Livengood



Dominic Desanto and Tabron Farmer get final instructions from referee Bill Clancy. Photo by David Livengood



Dominic after his first win. Photo by David Livengood



Bill Clancy anounces Dominic DeSanto as the winner. Photo by David Livengood



Tabron Farmer goes down for the first time after a flury from Dominic DeSanto. Photo by David Livengood


E-mail to a friend



By David Shaw

dshaw@salisburypost.com

Dominic DeSanto began painting on a larger canvas last weekend — and made it look easy.

The 18-year old welterweight from Spencer engineered a seamless transition from the amateur to professional boxing ranks July 26 when he recorded a first-round technical knockout in his pro debut.

"Surprised? Not at all," a straight-faced DeSanto said after leveling Tabron Farmer of Norfolk, Va., in two minutes flat at Charlotte's Southwest Middle School. "Why would I be? We trained hard. Our preparation was thorough. What happened wasn't a surprise. It's what was expected."

Right there you have a snapshot of the only life DeSanto has known. There has always been a plan in place, a well-scripted storyline with an anticipated outcome.

"This is what I've been doing since Day 1," said DeSanto, a quick-fisted left-hander. "Since the day I was born, this has been my dream. There was never a question of if I would get here. It was always 'When I got here.' "

A veteran of 100 amateur bouts — each arranged and managed by his devoted father and long-time trainer, David — DeSanto's journey to the bigs has been meticulously plotted. Since he first stepped into the ring 11 years ago, he's won 80 percent of his fights and captured state, regional and national titles.

"Dominic was born into boxing," said David, a New Haven, Conn. native who works out of Force Fitness in Spencer. "As a kid he was always in the gym with me. When other kids were playing in sandboxes, he was training to fight. It's what he knows."

By age 7, Dominic expressed an interest in fighting competitively. David took him to an amateur boxing show, "just so he could see it close up and live."

Dominic took the bait and was immediately hooked.

"It brought me closer to my dad," he said. "Who doesn't want that? When I'm in that ring, he's right there with me. We're always a team, me and him.

"And our team has pretty much stomped everyone so far."

Now they're a professional team — and one to watch.

"He was ready for this," David said. "He's got the speed, the power and the reflexes. He's the total package. You know, 11 years as an amateur and he'd already fought the best kids in the country and done extremely well. It would have been kind of redundant to fight another 150 over the next year or two.

"This is just a different stripe on the same animal."

So Team DeSanto took a well-measured leap and turned professional. Dominic weighed in at 1441/2 pounds for his scheduled four-round debut against Farmer. Some 90 boisterous well-wishers from the Salisbury-Spencer area, including Spencer mayor Jody Everhart and his wife, helped fill the stands.

"I have to say, seeing all those people from home made me excited," Dominic said. "But definitely not nervous. Everything I'd ever done was leading to that moment, my first pro fight. This is what I do."

Farmer found out the hard way. DeSanto spent the bout's first stages calculating his attack, circling the ring and exchanging a few introductory jabs.

"I was very confident, " he said. "I knew I was going in there to destroy. That's what the game is."

Was it ever. At the one-minute mark DeSanto exploded, like a Rottweiler lunging at a chain-link fence, and flattened Farmer with a vicious left hook.

"I set him up," he explained. "I saw he was flinching to the right a lot. So I went with right hook to feign him in. He dipped into the left hook and it was open."

Seconds later the scene repeated itself — only this time DeSanto used a flashing right to drop Farmer for the second time.

"By then I knew he was looking for the right," DeSanto said. "I'd hurt him twice with it."

The bout came to an abrupt end after DeSanto retreated to a neutral corner, received directions from his father and immediately delivered a head-snapping left uppercut to the jaw that staggered Farmer. Referee Bill Clancy had no choice but to end the fight.

"It lifted his whole body," David observed. "It got him."

Afterward, Dominic raised his arms toward the local contingent and absorbed their cheers — a moment he'll always cherish.

"They showed me love; I showed them respect," he said. "Yeah, I'm the one in there fighting. But I'm doing it for all the people who helped me get there."

DeSanto, a 2008 North Rowan graduate enamored with boxing great Jack Dempsey, expects to fight again Aug. 30 in Charlotte. David knows matchups will be tougher to book as his son's reputation grows, but the current plan calls for 10-15 bouts by next summer.

"He's still has to take some lumps and give some lumps," David said. "He still has to face those kids from New York City and Philly and Jersey. Dominic's still an unknown — a white, Italian kid from North Carolina. Once he starts giving those guys a hard time, this thing's really gonna take off."

They couldn't have scripted a better start.





What do you think? Post your comment below.

Comments

SalisburyPost.com is pleased to offer readers the ability to comment on stories. We expect our readers to engage in lively, yet civil discourse.

SalisburyPost.com does not edit user submitted statements and we cannot promise that readers will not occasionally find offensive or inaccurate comments posted in the comments area. Responsibility for the statements posted lies with the person submitting the comment, not SalisburyPost.com. If you find a comment that is objectionable, please send us an email to webmaster@salisburypost.com with the article title and offensive post's contents and we will review it for possible removal.

Please be reminded, however, that in accordance with our Terms of Use and federal law, we are under no obligation to remove any third party comments posted on our website.



We need more youth like you. : Sunday, August 03, 2008 3:32 PM

Congratulations Dominic - What a difference this young man is in comparison to the thugs roaming the streets - Making something of his life! A strong father who is involved in his life, family support, a desire to achieve. Parents get your children involved and support them -and getting them involved in Church is also not a wrong path to choose.
Report Abuse

DeSanto makes pro boxing debut : Sunday, August 03, 2008 8:18 AM

Congratulations on a job well done. Keep up the hard work and good luck in the future!
Report Abuse

 

Other Headlines
Legion Baseball: South Rowan 12, Wilkes 7
Posted on Saturday, July 04, 2009 12:20 AM

Legion Baseball: Rowan 6, Mocksville 2
Posted on Saturday, July 04, 2009 12:20 AM

NASCAR: Rain gives pole to Stewart
Posted on Saturday, July 04, 2009 12:05 AM

NASCAR: Earnhardt hoping for turnaround at Daytona
Posted on Saturday, July 04, 2009 12:20 AM

Area Sports Briefs: Seager reaches contract agreement
Posted on Saturday, July 04, 2009 1:05 AM

Major Leagues: National League Roundup
Posted on Saturday, July 04, 2009 12:35 AM

Major Leagues: Braves 9, Nationals 8
Posted on Saturday, July 04, 2009 12:35 AM

Major Leagues: American League Roundup
Posted on Saturday, July 04, 2009 12:35 AM

Golf: Tiger moves into lead
Posted on Saturday, July 04, 2009 12:20 AM

NBA Notebook
Posted on Saturday, July 04, 2009 12:20 AM

 




Today's Newspaper Ads

Announcements
Automotive & Vehicles
Community
Home Improvement & Gardening
Real Estate & Rentals
Services
Apparel & Jewelry
Business & Finance
Dining & Entertainment
Medical
Recreation
Shopping

Website Forms

Birth Announcement
Birthdays
Business News
Celebrations Forms
Employee News
Feedback
Graduations
Hold your paper delivery
Letter to the Editor
Mailing List
Sponsorship
Subscribe
Worship directory submission

Special Sections

A Day In The Life
Autos Only Baby of the Year
Biotech 101
Bridal Page
Celebrations
Explorer
Faith 4th
Living Here
NC Statewide Classified Line Ad Network
Pops at the Post
Prime Time
Shop Local
Spring Home Improvement
Summer Fun
Taste of Home
Worship Directory

View All