Pooja Rani, Amit Panghal shine for India with gold in Asian Boxing Championship

Pooja Rani, who settled for silver in the 2012 edition, finally broke her jinx by winning the gold medal in the 2019 Asian Boxing Championship.

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Siddharth Vishwanathan
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Pooja Rani, Amit Panghal shine for India with gold in Asian Boxing Championship

Pooja Rani joined Amit Panghal as the other gold medal winner in the Asian Boxing Championship. (Image credit: Twitter)

Amit Panghal (52kg) picked up his second successive gold medal of the year, while Pooja Rani (81kg) finished on top among the women to bring a fine end to India's phenomenal campaign in the Asian Boxing Championships in Bangkok on Friday. India ended the event with 13 medals -- two gold, four silver and seven bronze medals --  in the tournament which was held simultaneously for men and women for the first time. Panghal, who won the Asian Games gold medal last year, defeated Korea's Kim Inkyu in a unanimous decision. He came into the tournament on the back of gold at the Strandja Memorial Tournament in February in Bulgaria. The 28-year-old Pooja, a silver medallist at the event in 2012, struck gold among the women by defeating China's Wang Lina. The Haryana-pugilist took to boxing against the wishes of her father, who relented after six months of pleadings by the boxer and her coaches in Bhiwani. She also has an Asian Games bronze medal, which she claimed in 2014. 

However, national champion Deepak Singh (49kg), Kavinder Singh Bisht (56kg) and Ashish Kumar (75kg) signed off with silver medals among the men after contrasting losses. In the women's draw, national champion Simrajit Kaur (64kg) ended with a silver medal.  The previous best by Indian men at this tournament was in 2009 when the team won a gold, two silver and four bronze and they equalled that performance this year. Shiva Thapa (60kg), Ashish (69kg) and Satish Kumar (+91kg) claimed bronze medals among the men this time. This was Panghal's maiden international competition since moving up to 52kg from the 49kg division earlier this year. Panghal had won a bronze in the 2015 edition of the event.

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Earlier, Deepak also put up a gutsy performance that failed to find favour with the judges. It was a bout in which both the boxers were mostly looking to counter-attack. Deepak's focus was getting his straight punches across, while Mirzahmedov looked to connect right hooks occasionally. The Indian was a clear winner in the opening round but Mirzahmedov came back strongly in the second.

The Uzbek turned a shade defensive in the last three minutes, which gave Deepak a chance to assert himself. However, the final outcome was in favour of the Uzbek, much to the surprise of the Indian camp. Later, Ashish went down to Kazakhstan's Tursynbay Kulakhmet in a unanimous decision.  In the women's finals, national champion Simranjit squared off against China's reigning world champion Dou Dan, before Pooja fought it out with Lina. Kaur took the ring first and lost in a unanimous decision to Dan. The Indian had her moments, especially in the second round, but was no match to Dan's counter-attacks. Rani was in action in the last Indian bout of the day and was grit personified in her battle against Lina.

She started rather slow but picked up momentum as the bout progressed to fetch a split verdict from the judges. Settling for bronze medals among the women were veteran former champion L Sarita Devi (60kg), last edition's silver-medallist Manisha (54kg), former junior world champion Nikhat Zareen (51kg) and world silver-medallist Sonia Chahal (57kg).

HIGHLIGHTS

  • This was Amit Panghal maiden gold in an international event in the 52kg.
  • Pooja Rani had secured silver in the 2012 Asian Boxing Championship.
  • Pooja Rani took to boxing against her father's wishes.
Boxing Pooja Rani Amit Panghal Asian Boxing Championship Kavinder Singh Bisht