Boxing at the 2020 Summer Olympics

Dates 24 July – 8 August 2021
Medal Events 13

The five years between the Rio and Tokyo Games had been incredibly difficult for the sport of boxing and especially for the International Boxing Association (also known under the acronym AIBA). President Wu Ching-kuo resigned in late 2017 after allegations of financial mismanagement and accounting irregularities were made against him by the governing body’s Executive Committee. His successor, Gafur Rakhimov, was an equally controversial choice. While never convicted of any crime, he was accused of being one of Uzbekistan’s “leading criminals” with “links to the heroin and cocaine trade” by the US Treasury.

With allegations mounting the IOC voted to suspend its recognition of AIBA as the governing body for the sport in June 2019 and stripped AIBA of any practical involvement in the Olympic Games. Through a task force chaired by Morinari Watanabe, President of the International Gymnastics Federation, the IOC took direct oversight of the qualification events and the boxing tournament at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Canadian lawyer Professor Richard McLaren was appointed to conduct a three-stage investigation on the conduct of AIBA since 2012. In September 2021 the first stage of the report was published which stated that “Professor McLaren and his team have identified a system for manipulating the results of bouts at the Rio 2016 boxing tournament.”

There were drastic changes in the Olympic schedule. Men’s boxing was reduced from 10 weight classes to eight with light-flyweight, light-welterweight, and bantamweight being dropped although the returning featherweight division was merely a slightly modified bantamweight division under a different name. On the women’s side featherweight and welterweight were added to the Olympic programme.

The COVID-19 pandemic wreaked havoc on the qualification for Tokyo. Although the African and Asia/Oceania qualifying tournaments were completed before the pandemic shut down world sport, European qualification was halted after three days of the London tournament and not resumed until 14 months later in France. The Pan-American and last chance World qualifiers were not as lucky and had to be abandoned with the Olympic places instead being allocated via regional and global world rankings respectively.

Cuba topped the boxing medal table in Tokyo, for the first time since 2004, despite their refusal to attempt to send women to the Games in this sport. Three of their gold medallists repeated their achievements of 2016.

The most memorable moment of the Tokyo Games came when world champion Ukrainian Oleksandr Khyzhniak, in the midst of dominating his opponent Hebert Conceicão throughout the men’s middleweight final, suddenly lost concentration and was floored by the Brazilian. Khyzhniak got back to his feet but was so unsteady that the referee had no choice but to end the fight.

The general view was that Watanabe had presided over a boxing tournament that, for once, was relatively free of the controversies that had dogged the Olympic Games for decades and was widely praised for his efforts.

Events

Event Status Date Participants NOCs
Flyweight (48-52 kilograms), Men Olympic 26 July – 7 August 2021 27 27
Featherweight (52-57 kilograms), Men Olympic 24 July – 5 August 2021 27 27
Lightweight (57-63 kilograms), Men Olympic 25 July – 8 August 2021 29 29
Welterweight (63-69 kilograms), Men Olympic 24 July – 3 August 2021 23 23
Middleweight (69-75 kilograms), Men Olympic 26 July – 7 August 2021 25 25
Light-Heavyweight (75-81 kilograms), Men Olympic 25 July – 4 August 2021 22 22
Heavyweight (81-91 kilograms), Men Olympic 24 July – 6 August 2021 17 17
Super-Heavyweight (>91 kilograms), Men Olympic 24 July – 8 August 2021 17 17
Flyweight (48-51 kilograms), Women Olympic 25 July – 7 August 2021 26 26
Featherweight (54-57 kilograms), Women Olympic 24 July – 3 August 2021 21 21
Lightweight (57-60 kilograms), Women Olympic 27 July – 8 August 2021 21 21
Welterweight (64-69 kilograms), Women Olympic 24 July – 7 August 2021 18 18
Middleweight (69-75 kilograms), Women Olympic 25 July – 8 August 2021 16 16
289 (187/102) 81 (69/50)

Medals

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Flyweight, Men Galal YafaiGBR Carlo PaalamPHI Ryomei Tanaka
Saken Bibosinov
JPN
KAZ
Featherweight, Men Albert BatyrgaziyevROC Duke RaganUSA Lázaro Álvarez
Samuel Takyi
CUB
GHA
Lightweight, Men Andy CruzCUB Keyshawn DavisUSA Hovhannes Bachkov
Harry Garside
ARM
AUS
Welterweight, Men Roniel IglesiasCUB Pat McCormackGBR Aidan Walsh
Andrey Zamkovoy
IRL
ROC
Middleweight, Men Hebert ConceiçãoBRA Oleksandr KhyzhniakUKR Eumir Marcial
Gleb Bakshi
PHI
ROC
Light-Heavyweight, Men Arlen LópezCUB Ben WhittakerGBR Loren Alfonso
Imam Khatayev
AZE
ROC
Heavyweight, Men Julio César la CruzCUB Muslim GadzhimagomedovROC Abner Teixeira
David Nyika
BRA
NZL
Super-Heavyweight, Men Bakhodir DzhalolovUZB Richard TorrezUSA Frazer Clarke
Kamshybek Kunkabayev
GBR
KAZ
Flyweight, Women Stoyka KrastevaBUL Buse Naz ÇakıroğluTUR Tsukimi Namiki
Huang Hsiao-Wen
JPN
TPE
Featherweight, Women Sena IrieJPN Nesthy PetecioPHI Karriss Artingstall
Irma Testa
GBR
ITA
Lightweight, Women Kellie HarringtonIRL Beatriz FerreiraBRA Mira Potkonen
Sudaporn Seesondee
FIN
THA
Welterweight, Women Busenaz SürmeneliTUR Gu HongCHN Lovlina Borgohain
Oshae Jones
IND
USA
Middleweight, Women Lauren PriceGBR Li QianCHN Nouchka Fontijn
Zemfira Magomedaliyeva
NED
ROC

Medal table

NOC Gold Silver Bronze Total
Cuba CUB 4 0 1 5
Great Britain GBR 2 2 2 6
ROC ROC 1 1 4 6
Brazil BRA 1 1 1 3
Türkiye TUR 1 1 0 2
Japan JPN 1 0 2 3
Ireland IRL 1 0 1 2
Bulgaria BUL 1 0 0 1
Uzbekistan UZB 1 0 0 1
United States USA 0 3 1 4
Philippines PHI 0 2 1 3
People's Republic of China CHN 0 2 0 2
Ukraine UKR 0 1 0 1
Kazakhstan KAZ 0 0 2 2
Armenia ARM 0 0 1 1
Australia AUS 0 0 1 1
Azerbaijan AZE 0 0 1 1
Chinese Taipei TPE 0 0 1 1
Finland FIN 0 0 1 1
Ghana GHA 0 0 1 1
India IND 0 0 1 1
Italy ITA 0 0 1 1
Netherlands NED 0 0 1 1
New Zealand NZL 0 0 1 1
Thailand THA 0 0 1 1