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Indian boxers eye strong show at Asian Championships

May 23, 2021 21:14 IST

India had delivered its best ever Asian Championship performance in the 2019 edition in Thailand, claiming 13 medals, including two gold, four silver and seven bronze.

MC Mary Kom, who has won five gold medals at the Asian Championships, at a training session

IMAGE: MC Mary Kom, who has won five gold medals at the Asian Championships, at a training session. Photograph: SAI Media

A crucial test of preparations for Olympic-bound boxers, the Asian Championships get underway in Dubai on Monday with India aiming to better their record-shattering medal haul in the event's previous edition.

A total of 19 Indian boxers -- nine men and 10 women -- will stake their claim for top honours, which will also come with an unprecedented bonus of prize money this time.

The boxers reached Dubai on Saturday after a tumultuous few hours, which included a delayed landing and some confusion over approval paperwork. In addition, the team had to withdraw South Asian Games gold-medallist Vinod Tanwar's (49kg) name after he tested positive for COVID-19.

 

The build-up and the subsequent journey seemed symbolic of the Indian boxers' Olympic preparations this year with COVID-19 disrupting training on several occasions.

"This will give us a good sign as to where we stand before the Olympics and where we need to adjust. It would be good for us that way," Indian men's boxing's High Performance Director Santiago Nieva told PTI.

India had delivered its best ever Asian Championship performance in the 2019 edition in Thailand, claiming 13 medals, including two gold, four silver and seven bronze. This time too, expectations are high.

"We always come to win. We know it will be a very tough competition with many nations featuring Olympic qualified boxers and many medal winners from the world championships. But we are confident that our team will bring home a good results," Nieva added with confidence.

From the Olympic-qualified group, defending champion Amit Panghal (52kg), last edition's silver-winner Ashish Kumar (75kg) and past medallist Vikas Krishan (69kg) will be the ones spearheading the men's challenge.

Among the women, six-time world champion M C Mary Kom, who has won five gold medals in this event in the past, along with Simranjit Kaur (60kg), Lovlina Borgohain (69kg) and defending champion Pooja Rani (75kg) will be the strong medals bets. All four are bound for the Tokyo Games.

Also closely watched would be four-time medallist Shiva Thapa (64kg) eyeing a fifth successive podium finish.

He has claimed one gold (2013), one silver (2017) and two bronze medals (2015 and 2019) in his four previous appearances at the showpiece.

And this time, the International Boxing Association has also announced a prize fund of the USD 400,000 for the event.

The tournament, which was originally planned in India but shifted to Dubai because of the COVID-19 pandemic, will award US$10,000 to gold winners.

For silver-medallist, the prize money is US$5,000 and for both bronze medallists, it is US$2,500 each.

Apart from India, Indonesia, Iran, Kazakhstan, South Korea,  Kyrgyzstan, Philippines, and Uzbekistan are among the prominent  countries which will compete at the continental showpiece.

Kazakhstan's line-up looks quite intimidating with world medal winners Saken Bibossynov (52kg), Ablaikhan Zhussupov (69kg), Bekzad Nurdauletov (81kg), Vasiliy Levit (91kg) and Kamshybek Kunkabayev (+91kg) in the men's fold.

Their four women's world Champions -- Nazym Kyzaibay (51kg), Dina Zholaman (54kg), Valentina Khalzova (69kg) and Lazzat Kungeibayeva (+81kg) -- will also be in action here.

Indian Squads:

Men: Amit Panghal (52kg), Mohammad Hussamuddin (56kg), Varinder Singh (60kg), Shiva Thapa (64kg), Vikas Krishan (69kg), Ashish Kumar (75kg), Sumit Sangwan (81kg), Sanjeet (91kg) and Narender (+91kg).

Women: Monika (48kg), MC Mary Kom (51kg), Sakshi (54kg),  Jasmine (57kg), Simranjeet Kaur (60kg), Lalbuatsaihi (64kg),  Lovlina Borgohain (69kg), Pooja Rani (75kg), Saweety (81kg) and  Anupama (+81kg).

 

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