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Monday, January 26, 2026

Daniel Ivanovski to Face Hector Bobadilla

Cruiserweight prospect Daniel Ivanovski is scheduled to face journeyman Hector "Snart" Bobadilla in a bit of a step up fight. The contest will take place at the Pendennis Club in Louisville, Kentucky, USA on February 6.

A 24 year old from Israel, Ivanovski brings a record of 4-0 with 3 KOs. He will have been off for nearly a year when he enters the ring in about ten days. Daniel is a skilled and well-schooled fighter, but he has shown some flaws in a couple of his fights. Against Marcus Smith, Ivanovski was susceptible to overhand rights Against Romelle Terrell, he faded a bit in the final round.

Bobadilla is a 39 year old from Aguascalientes, Mexico. He sports a record of 9-20-1. As a boy, he was interested in weightlifting, but his dad forced him to try boxing when he was 14 years old. It came naturally for him and he was a national-level amateur in Mexico. Snart turned pro in 2009.

Early in his career the man nicknamed El Gatito fought as light as bantamweight and as heavy as super featherweight. He lost to a young Rey Vargas, Alberto Guevara, Yan Barthelemy, and Rocky Hernandez to name a few well-known opponents. His best result was a draw against world title challenger Alejandro Gonzalez in 2016.

El Gatito has since grown into a full-size cat. After a nearly six-year layoff, Bobadilla reinvented himself as a blown up junior middleweight. His last couple of fights have come at super middleweight. He has developed some sneaky punches as his career has progressed, but he's a wide puncher who doesn't counter much. Super middleweight was very heavy for him; this fight is at cruiserweight. Hector might need to hide some weights in his shorts to get close to 200 pounds.

This bout is slated for four rounds. Because of the size difference, it's not difficult to imagine Ivanovski knocking Bobadilla silly and putting his lights out.

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Lev Jackson Targeting March Date

According to BoxRec, Lev Jackson is fighting in two days in Jamay, Mexico. Chalk it up to: Don't believe everything you read on the internet. When asked if he was fighting on January 24, the Vancouver-based lightweight responded, "Not to my knowledge," his tongue firmly in his cheek.

After a nearly two-year layoff, the 33-year-old Jackson has been active recently. He traveled to Mexico and scored a knockout in April and another in December to improve his record to 5-1-1 with 3 KOs. The all-action southpaw boxed a little more than usual in those two fights.

Jackson told The Jewish Boxing Blog that he's targeting a March date in Canada, but nothing's set yet. In the meantime, he's been in training. He recently sparred with prospect Isaiah Guy, who won his debut in November against an old Jackson foe, Elroy Fruto. Guy is also looking to fight in March. He's scheduled to face another old Jackson rival, Ely Avelar.

courtesy of Jackson's IG page

Monday, January 19, 2026

Yuri Foreman Elected to New York State Boxing HOF

Rabbi Yuri Foreman has been elected to the New York State Boxing Hall of Fame as part of the class of 2026. The native of the Soviet Union went 35-4 with 10 KOs during his professional career, which lasted from 2002-2021.

Foreman began his career 28-0 and won the WBA junior middleweight world championship with a decisive victory over Daniel Santos on November 14, 2009. To that point, he also had wins over quality opponents Jesus Soto Karass, Anthony Thompson, Andriy Tsurkan, Saul Roman, and Jamie Moore. The win over Tsurkan garnered him the NABF title. A headbutt prematurely stopped a fight against future world champion Cornelius Bundrage when Yuri was ahead on the cards.

Foreman's defining fight came on June 5, 2010 at Yankee Stadium against future IBHOF inductee Miguel Cotto. Foreman's stock grew immensely in the loss. He tore his meniscus, but continued to fight on until his corner threw in the towel. Inexplicable, the fight continued and Foreman was eventually stopped in the ninth round.

He rushed back into the ring too quickly and came up flat against Pawel Wolak nine months later. The second half of his career was hampered by long layoffs and managerial trouble with a loss to Erislandy Lara mixed in.

Foreman was the best Jewish fighter of his generation, a living example that Jewish boxing persists.
Respected boxing judge Steve Weisfeld has also been elected to the New York State Boxing Hall of Fame. Weisfeld, a native of New Jersey, started his career in 1991 and is still an active judge. He even rendered his verdict in four of Foreman's fights, not including the Cotto fight, which ended before Weisfeld's card mattered.

The induction ceremony will take place on April 19.

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Brooklyn Barwick Auditions for TBL Return

Brooklyn Barwick auditioned for Team Boxing League in Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA over the weekend. She arrived Friday morning and sparred Saturday night. One of the co-founders, Mark, was very gracious to Barwick. He and TBL shared kosher snacks with her as she observed Shabbat.

Barwick stayed at the Showboat Casino and headed over the Bally's for the tryout when the sun went down Saturday night. Last year, she competed for the Phoenix Fury in one contest and hopes to join a team this season.

In the meantime, Barwick, who is 6-0 as a pro with 6 KOs, is preparing for a shot at the NBA featherweight title on February 26 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. After the fight, she'll head back to New York to support David Malul, who is fighting on the 28th at the Paramount Theatre in Huntington. Barwick's fight is scheduled for six rounds.

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Noah Shneidman: Holocaust Survivor

A professor of Russian literature, N. N. Shneidman was a skilled amateur boxer in his youth. His burgeoning boxing career was cut short by the Nazi invasion of his hometown, Vilnius.

Noah Norman Shneidman was born on September 24, 1924 in Wilno, Poland. Wilno is now widely know as Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania. When Noah was born, it was part of Poland and a hub for Jews, whose presence in the city dates back to 1326. Many lived within the old city although the Shneidman family stayed just outside.

Noah attended Tarbut for high school with its secular Zionist bent. Students at Tarbut learned to primarily speak in Hebrew and were schooled in the importance of physical activity. Noah joined one of the many Jewish sports clubs in the city. He became a member of the Jordan club junior basketball team. The Jordan team practiced in the Tarbut gym, where the club's boxers also trained. A group of the ball players showed up early one day to see what boxing was all about. The other players didn't take to boxing, but Noah became enamored with the sport.

Boxing was a popular sport in Poland. A bantamweight, Noah was initially trained by a Jewish heavyweight from Warsaw named Igo Blium. Shneidman started off his amateur career beating most of his opponents who were from rival Jewish clubs. The 14 year old then stepped up to face older, stronger opponents, many who were gentiles. While facing his gentile foes, Noah often heard vociferous cries of "biy Zhida!" meaning "hit the Jew." Though Jewish fans looked up to Jewish boxers, they usually remained quiet during the fights for their own safety.

In the spring of 1939, Shneidman faced Stanisław Lendzion, the runner-up at Poland nationals that year at flyweight. A 22 year old, Lendzion was an all-round athlete, competing in track and field, swimming, and skiing. In an upset for Noah, the referee called the bout a draw.

In August, Shneidman was invited to a training camp for prospects. A month later, Lithuania annexed Vilnius. Basketball was the national sport of Noah's new country as boxing was not nearly as popular as it had been in Poland. Consequently, Shneidman's Lithuanian opponents were not as tough as his Polish foes had been. In April of 1940, he fought in the Lithuanian nationals at bantamweight. Along the way to the final, Noah beat J. Žemaitis, who had grabbed silver in 1937 and gold in 1938. In the final, he faced Lendzion in a rematch. Though Shneidman's technique was superior, Lendzion's strength advantage carried the bout. Shneidman came away with silver at just 15 years old.

As a result of the earlier Molotov-Ribbentrop pact between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, Vilnius was swallowed by the USSR in October of 1940. Jewish life, including schools and clubs, were erased. Still, Noah looked forward to graduating from high school and, as the champion of Vilnius, improving his skills enough to join the Soviet boxing team.

It was not to be. On June 22, 1940, the Nazis invaded Vilnius. The Jews inside the old city were rounded up and killed. The Jews who lived just outside, including Noah and his family, were forced into old city, which was walled off and turned into the Vilnius ghetto. Ghetto life was miserable. Noah tried desperately to get work that would keep him inside during the frigid Lithuanian winters. The stress of ghetto life eventually took his 48-year-old father. In retrospect, his father may have been lucky to avoid the hell to come.

Jewish leaders of the ghetto would occasionally stage sporting events for visiting German officials. Noah participated in a basketball game for which he was paid a pound of sugar. On May 18, 1943, he fought a Jewish refugee from Poland named Kos. Kos was older, bigger, and stronger, but Noah had better technique. Still, Noah came up short. The loss to Kos was the 18 year old's twentieth fight, so he was gifted a medal created by a Jewish craftsman commemorating the fight. His mother and sister appreciated the pound of butter he earned for the fight, but Noah was excited and grateful to have received the medal. It signified a link to his pre-ghetto life and hope for what life could become again.
Shneidman (left)
Shneidman was involved in resistance activities and hid a gun in his family's apartment. At one point, he was arrested and put in jail. Many Jews who were jailed were executed, even if they were held only for a short time. Shneidman believed his popularity as a boxer contributed to his safe and timely release. In September of 1943, Nazis came in the ghetto to round up a group of Jews in order to deport them to the camps. Shneidman was part of the armed resistance. The Jewish fight resulted in two consequences: fewer German soldiers guarding the perimeter and the liquidation of the ghetto. Noah escaped into the forest.

Shneidman joined a partisan group in the fight against the Nazis. His mother perished in the camps, but his sister survived and moved to Poland. After the war, Noah became a Soviet soldier. He boxed a captain in the army and felt he deserved the win. Instead, the captain was granted the decision. Lower-ranking soldiers vehemently protested and an immediate rematch was ordered. Both fighters were exhausted, but Noah won the return bout. His reward was a lengthy furlough, which he used to return to Vilnius in hopes of finding his sister and recovering his belongings. A gentile family had taken over his ghetto residence and wouldn't let him in.

Noah continued to box until about 1949. He was a member of the Lithuanian national boxing team and the club Zaligis. He missed an opportunity to regain Polish citizenship, so he was stuck in the Soviet Union for another decade. In the meantime, he gained a PhD in sport education and coached boxing. In 1958, a window reopened to repatriate to Poland and he, his wife, and young child immigrated. They soon moved to Canada where Noah reunited with his sister. He became a professor of Russian literature at Toronto University and wrote several well-regarded books about the Vilnius ghetto and sports in the Soviet Union.

In 2006, two guys with medal detectors were scrounging around a farm in Lithuania when they heard a beeping sound. One had found something. They dug until they uncovered a small medal with unfamiliar writing. They showed friends and family the medal until one recognized the language as Yiddish. A college student studying Yiddish revealed that the medal belonged to a boxer named Noah Shneidman.

Bureaucratic squabbles prevented the medal from being returned to Noah immediately. The Jewish museum of Vilnius wanted to keep the medal. After much effort, Shneidman eventually received his medal after nearly 65 years.
Shneidman (right)

On December 30, 2016, Noah died at the age of 92 in Toronto, Canada. His life was a testament to the perseverance of the Jewish people. Even in the face of unspeakable hardship, we eventually thrive.

Sources
Bertašius, S.A. "Lietuvos Sporto Žinyas." 1999. Pg. 36.
Noah Shneidman Obituary. The Globe and Mail. 
Osmólski, Piotr. Leksykon boksu. 1989.
Shneidman, N.N. The Boxing Medal. 2015.

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Boxing in the Catskills: Review of Ringside in the Mountains

Evan Haiman
Baker Street Productions, 2025

Capturing the nostalgic oasis of the Catskill Mountains, the documentary Ringside in the Mountains chronicles the evolution of training in the resort area of Sullivan County, New York. Over twelve rounds of information, the impact of such legendary boxers as Barney Ross, James Braddock, Rocky Marciano, Sonny Liston, Joe Frazier, and Muhammad Ali on the "Borscht Belt" is highlighted throughout the 55-minute film.

Hotels such as Grossinger's, Kutsher's, and the Concord were relics of a bygone era, primarily catering to New York City's vacationing Jewish population. The fighters loved staying at the hotels for two reasons: they were treated well and because of the environment. The combination of the cool mountain air and the isolation, which didn't allow for fighters to get in trouble, enhanced their preparation.

The best part of the film comes at the end when three living legends -  Roberto Durán, Ray Mancini, and Gerry Cooney - share anecdotes from their experiences up in the mountains. A former lightweight champion, Mancini chuckled as he called himself "a token Jew" because he absolutely loved the kosher food served at the hotels. Cooney, a heavyweight, on the other hand, could only eat so much of it because he craved diversity in his cuisine.

Featured in "Round 4," Barney Ross, the three-division world champion, was one of the first to use the Catskills as a home base for his training camp. Historian John Conway gives a great story about Malka Grossinger learning to embrace Ross after initially being suspicious of his profession. However, another pundit - one recently inducted into the Hall of Fame - misrepresents Ross's origin story by claiming he learned to fight as a newsie. Many boxers of Ross's era did indeed learn to fight by protecting their corner in order to sell newspapers, but Ross doesn't appear to be one of them. Barney helped out his father's tiny grocery story until the elder Ross's murder. Douglas Century mentions in his biography of Ross that Barney subsequently "went to work at a variety of low-paying jobs - a movie-house usher, a stock boy at Sears, Roebuck, as a Maxwell Street 'puller,' finagling customers into a dry good store," (pg. 16). He learned to fight by joining one of the many gangs that operated in Chicago at the time.

One misguided anecdote aside, Ringside in the Mountains provokes fond memories even if they're not our own. My grandparents traveled annually from the Bronx to vacation in the Catskills with an army of their friends. Many other Jews with ties to New York have a similar family history. It was a delight to see how their getaways contributed to the careers of some of the best boxers of all-time. Fans of Jewish boxing will enjoy this film.


Friday, January 9, 2026

Yan Zak to Fight February 14

Cruiserweight prospect Yan Zak is training for his next fight, which is scheduled to take place on February 14. Nicknamed the "Terminator," the 25 year old from Ashdod, Israel is 5-0 with 3 KOs.

The challenge for Zak's team will be finding suitable opponents for their talented fighter. A decorated amateur, Zak has already proven himself too good for the gritty journeymen that prospects typically fight when they reach double digit wins.

Zak has convincing wins against professional B-siders Mukhiddin Rajapbaev and Viktor Chvarkou. He also trounced winning fighters Bakhromjon Fozilov and Abdul Ubaya. The latter two were naturally smaller than Zak, but Yan still held the speed and skill advantages.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

David Malul and Brooklyn Barwick to Fight in February

Jewish boxing in New York has a long and proud history, dating back well over a hundred years. David Malul and Brooklyn Barwick are the latest two to keep the tradition alive. Malul, 23, and Barwick, 26, both train under the watchful eye of the Sosa Crew, based at the NYC Cops & Kids Boxing Club.

Malul, who ran his first event as a promotor in November, recently made the switch to Aureliano Sosa. Barwick has been training with Sosa's brother, Jimmy.

The Sosas trains pros like Jarrell "Big Baby" Miller and Chris Colbert, just to name a couple. They have been in the game for decades, molding champions. Barwick's skills have improved tremendously since she linked up with the Sosa Crew, and she expects Malul's game to rise to the next level with his new team.

Malul is scheduled to fight on February 28 in New York City. Barwick is set to fight for the NBA title in the Dominican Republic the same day.

Friday, January 2, 2026

Daniel Ivanovski Back in February

Cruiserweight prospect Daniel Ivanovski is scheduled to be back in the ring on February 6 at the Pendennis Club in Louisville, Kentucky, USA. A 24 year old, Ivanovski will have been out of the ring for nearly a year when he returns next month.

The Israeli's pro career started on September 7, 2024 and moved rapidly over the next five months. After fighting twice in eight days last February, Ivanovski suffered a bad cut and was on the shelf for several months. He was slated to come back last summer, but his fight was cancelled.

Ivanovski is 4-0 with 3 KOs and has fought in Louisville, Philadelphia, and Durham. He's a skilled boxer who has been somewhat susceptible to overhand rights.

His next fight is scheduled for four rounds. No opponent has yet been named.