ISC boxer Jerry Armstrong honored
November 29, 2006
November has been a very good month for former Idaho State College boxer Jerry Armstrong.
Armstrong, 70, is one of four Bengal boxers to represent ISC on U.S. Olympic teams. He competed at bantamweight, 119 pounds, at the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome.
His Olympic gear was recently assembled into a display that joins Olympic memorabilia from four other Bengals in the foyer of the Sports and Orthopaedic center at ISU, located adjacent to Holt Arena.
Armstrong鈥檚 Olympic uniform, photograph, and various patches and medallions joins displays honoring 2000 Olympic pole-vault champion Stacy Dragila, 1956 U.S. Olympic boxing coach Milton 鈥淒ubby鈥 Holt, 1952 Olympic heavyweight boxing champion Ed Sanders and 1992 U.S. high-jumper Amber Welty.
鈥淪tanding there before the likes of gold medalists Ed Sanders and Stacy Dragila, Dubby Holt and Amber Welty really put my achievements into perspective,鈥 says Armstrong, who with his wife of 47 years, Kay, traveled from his home in Boise to view the display. 鈥淭hese people are at the pinnacle of sports at ISU and I am humbled to be in their presence.鈥
Viewing his Olympic display was the Saginaw, Mich., native鈥檚 second memorable experience in November.
On Nov.3, he was one of nine individuals inducted into the Saginaw County Sports Hall of Fame, joining former University of Michigan and University of Arizona basketball coach Bill Frieder, former National Football League linebacker Monty Brown and others.
Armstrong traveled a circuitous path to Idaho State College. He was fighting in an all-service tournament when a referee asked him if he planned to attend college. Armstrong said that he didn鈥檛 know anyone who鈥檇 gone to college and hadn鈥檛 graduated from high school. <>The referee replied, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 all right. I know Dubby Holt.鈥
鈥淚t saved my life,鈥 Armstrong says. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know what I was going to do after I got out of the Army.鈥
After graduating from ISC, Armstrong went to work for the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare. He retired in 1998 after 29 years as personnel director.
He has stayed active in the sport he loves. He estimates he has refereed some 100 professional boxing matches, including the July 29 pay-per-view Roy Jones Jr.-Prince Badi Ajamu bout in Boise.
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