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Olympic Boxing: A.I.B.A
declares "Womens Boxing and Taylor's Gold" highlights of
London 2012 boxing
August 18, 2012
by Michael O'Neill |
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(AUG 18) The A.I.B.A, the
governing body for the amateur sport ,worldwide, Saturday,
described the 2012 boxing programme as ‘one of the finest
Olympic boxing competitions of all time, adding that ‘ London
2012 will hold fond memories for the boxing family and the
Olympic Movement’.
In particular the Association declared that the introduction of
women boxers - the last Olympic sport to include both sexes -
was considered to be one of the highlights of the entire London
2012 Olympic Games, enticing spectators and media from around
the world to one of the hottest venues of the past weeks.
The hosts will be delighted after securing five medals including
three gold, one silver and one bronze , but despite the packed
venue and raucous crowds, support was not limited to the home
boxers.
The A.I.B.A went on : ”Perhaps the story of the competition was
the victory for Ireland's Katie Taylor. The Irish have always
been fanatical about boxing but the Women's Lightweight (60kg)
champion - and Best Women Boxer of the tournament - who was
trained by her father prompted an ‘unofficial national holiday’
when she beat Russian Sofya Ochigava in the final. For her
quarter-final against Brit Natasha Jonas, the 10,000 ExCeL seats
shook the loudest venue of the Games, reaching 113 decibels,
louder than a plane taking off which reaches 100 decibels”.
Great Britain also had something to cheer in the Women's
competition with Nicola Adams winning the very first gold
against China's three-time AIBA world champion Ren Cancan in the
Flyweight category (51kg).
Despite being a flat-footed asthmatic who previously appeared on
television soap operas to support herself while training, Adams
is already looking forward to the Rio 2016 Olympic Games.
She may well be joined there by Anthony Joshua, who claimed the
Super Heavyweight (91+kg) title with a dramatic win over Roberto
Cammarelle of Italy in the final bout of the competition. Joshua
became a pin-up for the home team, having overcome adversity
through boxing and joining Men's Bantamweight (56kg) Luke
Campbell in winning gold “.
On the subject of one of the most controversial bouts of the
Games, the Association had this to say : “China's defending
world and Olympic champion Zou Shiming won the men's Light
Flyweight (49kg) gold with a 13:10 victory over Thailand's Kaeo
Pongprayoon, becoming the first boxer to defend the Light
Flyweight title and is the first Chinese to win two boxing gold
medals.
He is also the first man to win three medals at Light Flyweight
having taken bronze in Athens in 2004 and is the oldest Olympic
champion at that weight.
Ukrainian Lightweight (60kg) Vasyl Lomachenko proved once again
why he is one of the top Olympic boxers with a second successive
gold, following up the title he won in Beijing four years ago.
How do they see the future? : “Whereas before the best Olympic
boxers used the Games as a platform to join the pro ranks, AIBA
will launch the AIBA Professional Boxing (APB) in autumn 2013,
its own fully professional competition that will still allow
participants to compete in the Olympic Games with Lomachenko's
teammates, AIBA World Champions Oleksandr Usyk and Taras
Shelestyuk, as well as Italian superstars Domenico Valentino and
Clemente Russo announced as participants during the Games.
The AIBA’s statement goes on : ” APB will revolutionize the
world of boxing and establish a blueprint for its development.
Boxers will be supported and guaranteed fights while retaining
eligibility for the Olympic Games while the World Series of
Boxing also grows with new franchises set to enter the third
season within a couple of months, providing further
opportunities for Olympic boxers”.
The final word from AIBA President, Dr Ching-Kuo Wu who stated
stated: "The Olympic boxing competitions inspired the world and
we now look forward to carrying on the momentum from London 2012
over the course of the next four years. Certainly the
introduction of women's boxing was one of the Games' highlights
and there were so many wonderful stories that captured the
imagination. We will look into further developing the sport by
reviewing the scoring system and other elements such as
headguard to ensure we continue to raise the standards of the
sport."
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