To Life! SPOR TS The Fight Game Local builder takes his lifelong love of boxing to the printer. Alan Hitsky Associate Editor A lien Rosenfeld may have been the first Detroiter to hear that an Orthodox Jew had won a U.S. boxing cham- pionship last month. His nephew, former Detroiter Terry Schiff of Chicago, was at the New York bout and Rosenfeld has been following the young Dmitriy Salita's career (see "The Orthodox Champ," facing page). In fact, Rosenfeld has been fol- lowing a lot of boxers' careers — both Jews and non-Jews. The semi-retired builder from West Bloomfield has been involved with boxing since a few Allen Rosenfeld scrapes as a kid in the old Dexter neighborhood in Detroit. As a teenager, he became an amateur boxer, learning from Lou Handler at Camp Tamakwa and Nate Coleman at the Jewish Community Center. He trained at Gene Tunney's Boy's Club at 12th and Fenkell. He even boxed in the Army, finishing runner-up in the novice 135-pound class at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., in the early 1950s. As a civilian, Rosenfeld took his boxing interest in different directions. He became a licensed cornerman."I would be on TV every Saturday night — in the corners," he said. "I didn't know a lot [about giving water and fix- ing cuts], but I learned from the others!' He was an unofficial boxing coach in the Army while serving as a military policeman in New Orleans and trained youngsters in his basement back in Detroit. But Rosenfeld's latest love for the sport — his book — got its early beginnings as a reporter. At the age of 11, he started calling Detroit newspaper reporters to read them stories out of boxing magazines. At age 13, Don Wattrick invited him onto his half-time radio show at a Detroit Lions-Washington Redskins football game. At 18, he worked as a reporter for Boxing Illustrated, sending in results from local fights. In the 1960s, in the heady days when Detroit's Kronk Gym had six or seven champions, Rosenfeld realized that Bert Sugar's Ring Magazine didn't have a reporter'in Michigan. He called Sugar, got the "job" and represented the magazine for a number of years at local fights. "All you got out of the deal was tickets," Rosenfeld said, "but they were ringside tickets. And you got to hobnob" with the celebri- ties. His wife, Ruth, would come occasionally, but she didn't like it very much. But at the time, it was a very popular social event." During down times in the family building business, Rosenfeld worked as an editor for the Pontiac Press, the Farmington Observer and other (( The Fight Game on page 36 The Orthodox Champ Dmitriy Salita was pushed into boxing, just like a lot of Jews in the 1920s and '30s. Only Salita has taken the sport a lot further than most. The now 23-year-old was 8 when a boy called him a zhid in his native Ukraine. He kicked the boy in the groin. After his family moved to New York in 1991, Salita was harassed by other youngsters because he was white, Jewish and an immigrant. His father took him to a boxing club so that he could learn to fight properly. On Aug. 25, at the Manhattan Center in New York City, the 5'9" 146-pound Salita won the North American Boxing Association junior welterweight championship, defeating Shawn "The Educator" Gallegos (15- 2, 5 knockouts). Dmitriy "The Star of David" Salita is 23-0, with 14 knock- outs as a professional. The young boxer prays daily at the Chabad Center of Flatbush. He keeps kosher and a nti September 29 2005 will not fight on the Sabbath. In 2002, his mother died of cancer. During her long hospital stay, she shared a room with a Lubavitch woman, who also died. The woman's husband put Dmitriy and his brother in con- tact with a Lubavftch rabbi, who visited the hospital room daily. The two brothers began pray- ing for their mother's recovery every day at the Lubavitch Center. After her death, they continued going to say Kaddish. Gradually, Dmitriy became observant. He was also training with Jimmy O'Pharrow at Starrett City Boxing Club, a predomi- nantly black gym. O'Pharrow says Salita "looks Russian, prays Jewish and fights black." O'Pharrow, who is black, says Salita "had that European style. He was a stand-up- straight fighter. I changed him to the American style he has now — lean a little, slip to the side, go down underneath the punches, bobbing and weaving. I taught him to fight like a Dmitriy Salita lands a left against Shawn Gallegos on Aug. 25. black boy." Salita has become a sensa- tion in New York, appearing on Russian-language and English radio stations, When he was introduced to the crowd Aug. 25, while being led in by Chasidic reggae singer Matisyahu, he was greeted with a thunderous roar from his Orthodox and Chassidic fans. Salita won the fight by tech- nical knockout in the ninth round. From Jerusalem Post and Washington Post reports