Beleaguered Olympic boxing has a new look in Paris: Gender parity, but the smallest field in decades

Beleaguered Olympic boxing has a new look in Paris: Gender parity, but the smallest field in decades
USA Boxing head coach Billy Walsh has been an ardent supporter of the women’s sport ever since he coached Katie Taylor of his native Ireland to a gold medal in the Olympic debut of women’s boxing in London, and he says the addition of three women’s weight classes in Paris is “fantastic.” (AP)
Short Url
Updated 19 July 2024
Follow

Beleaguered Olympic boxing has a new look in Paris: Gender parity, but the smallest field in decades

Beleaguered Olympic boxing has a new look in Paris: Gender parity, but the smallest field in decades
  • 12 years after women’s boxing made its Olympic debut with just 36 fighters in three weight classes in London, the sport likely has achieved gender parity, reaching the overall Olympic movement’s goal
  • The 248 fighters in Paris are a shadow of the Olympic-record 432 who participated in Seoul in 1988, and it’s even down sharply from the 289 boxers who participated in Tokyo

PARIS: Boxing is already on the Olympic ropes after an epic fight between its banished governing body and the IOC. Although the sport has been a staple of Olympic programs for over a century, it could be dropped before the Los Angeles Games if big changes in governance don’t happen in the next year.

The fights are still on in Paris this month, but this Olympic tournament will look like nothing fans have seen in decades — for better in some ways, and probably for worse in others.

Twelve years after women’s boxing made its Olympic debut with just 36 fighters in three weight classes in London, the sport likely has achieved gender parity, reaching the overall Olympic movement’s goal. Give or take a few last-minute additions or dropouts, half of the 248 boxers in Paris will be women fighting in six weight classes.

But this milestone was reached by sharply cutting the number of male boxers in an overall field that will be the smallest for Olympic boxing since 1956. While there will be 23 more women fighting in Paris than in Tokyo three years ago, there will also be a whopping 63 fewer men, and they’re fighting in only seven weight classes — the fewest since 1908.

In fact, Paris will have dozens fewer boxers than in every other Games in the 21st century. The 248 fighters in Paris are a shadow of the Olympic-record 432 who participated in Seoul in 1988, and it’s even down sharply from the 289 boxers who participated in Tokyo.

USA Boxing head coach Billy Walsh has been an ardent proponent of the women’s sport ever since he coached Katie Taylor of his native Ireland to a gold medal in London, and he says the addition of three women’s weight classes in Paris is “fantastic.”

Walsh still recognizes the drawbacks to the sport’s growth when it comes up against the IOC’s typically firm cap on total Olympic participants. It’s rare to add more athletes to a traditional Olympic sport, particularly while the IOC is adding trendy new sports to each Games.

“It is sad in a sense for the men,” said Walsh, who competed for Ireland in the Seoul Olympics in 1988. “Because when I boxed, they had 12 (men’s) weight divisions. They went down to 10, and then down to eight, and now we’re down to seven.”

In Rio de Janeiro eight years ago, 250 men had the career-defining honor of being Olympic boxers. That number has been halved just eight years later, with 124 men competing at three fewer weights than in Rio.

Men’s boxing in Paris will have its fewest weight classes since 1908 in London, where the second boxing tournament in the modern Olympics was contested at just five weights. Three years earlier in Tokyo, men’s boxing already dropped to eight weight classes for the first time since 1948.

That means there is no longer an Olympic weight class between 71 kilograms (156 pounds) and 80 kilograms (176 pounds). Professional middleweights fight at 160 pounds, and super middleweights weigh in at 168 pounds, but any fighter who couldn’t go down or up to the Olympic limits was out of luck.

That’s a concern to Walsh and many others around the sport. The elimination of weight classes encourages fighters to stretch the limits of their bodies to see if they can fit into a less-than-ideal weight class for qualification — and that can lead to mismatches up and down the scales.

“When we’ve narrowed down the numbers, it’s also put a big gap in the weight divisions,” Walsh said. “There’s so much gap now. There’s a reason why there are (weight classes). It’s because of the power of the punch. These guys are hurting you. There’s damage you can do. If some guy is barely making the welterweight division, he’s got 10 kilos he has to put on, and the other guy is coming down from four or five kilos above that, it’s a lot of power in the punch. It’s a combat sport, and people do get hurt, do get injured. I worry about that.”

Fewer overall fighters means smaller teams for many nations — and fewer chances to win gold, even for the traditional powers of the sport.

The US, which has won the most total medals and gold medals in Olympic history, qualified eight fighters for Paris under a challenging new qualification system administered by the IOC task force overseeing the tournament. The American team will have fewer fighters than Australia — which had an extraordinarily easy path to Paris under the new system — Brazil, Ireland or modern amateur boxing powers Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan.

Cuba, which ranks right behind the US in Olympic achievements, improbably will have only five fighters in Paris after two men failed to clinch a spot during the final qualifying tournament. Cuba also has no women on its team for the fourth straight Olympics, even though the nation belatedly lifted its internal ban on the women’s sport in late 2022.

Yet the small Cuban delegation includes two-time gold medalists Arlen Lopez and Julio Cesar La Cruz. They’ll both try to join Hungary’s Laszlo Papp and fellow Cubans Teofilo Stevenson and Felix Savon as the only three-time Olympic boxing champions.

The smaller field will lead to a different kind of competition in Paris: Fewer bouts with higher stakes. That could be exciting, particularly when fresher fighters move into the medal rounds, which will be held at the famed Roland Garros tennis complex.

Many fighters only need to win two bouts to clinch an Olympic medal, including every man fighting at heavyweight and super heavyweight. Both of those divisions have only 16 competitors, and no weight class in Paris has more than 22 fighters.

The tournament won’t even run for the entire Olympiad: For the first time in decades, boxing competition will conclude one day before the closing ceremony.

“It’s going to be different, that’s for sure,” Walsh said. “But it will be exciting.”
 


Sam Morsy hoping success with Ipswich in Premier League will lead to Egypt recall

Sam Morsy hoping success with Ipswich in Premier League will lead to Egypt recall
Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Sam Morsy hoping success with Ipswich in Premier League will lead to Egypt recall

Sam Morsy hoping success with Ipswich in Premier League will lead to Egypt recall
  • The 32-year-old midfielder has not played for his country since winning his ninth international against Tunisia last September

Sam Morsy may have fulfilled a dream of playing in the Premier League, but the Egyptian will not rest on his laurels as he looks to return to the international fold.

The Ipswich Town captain has not played for his country since last September, winning his ninth cap against Tunisia.

But Morsy has not given up hope, despite being overlooked for the Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers against Cape Verde and Botswana in September.

The 32-year-old midfielder knows his best chance of a recall to Hossam Hassan’s side is to prove his worth in the top flight against some of the world’s best players.

“There’s not a better league in world football to show what I can do,” said Morsy, who led Ipswich to successive promotions from League One and the Championship.

“If I can do well at this level, it will probably be quite hard for the Egypt manager to leave me out.

“Of course I want to play for Egypt again — that’s always my ambition. Unfortunately I didn’t get called up to this squad for September, but look, you don’t want to be too greedy.

“I want to enjoy my time here with Ipswich and I’ll be ready when called upon.”

Wolverhampton-born Morsy, who qualifies for Egypt through his father Mekawy, made his national team debut in 2016 against Guinea.

He was part of Egypt’s World Cup squad for the 2018 finals in Russia, making an appearance against Uruguay.

And Morsy has targeted another appearance on football’s biggest stage when Canada, Mexico and the US host the tournament in 2026.

“Of course it’s a dream to play in the next World Cup,” he told Arab News exclusively. “I played in the 2018 one and it was a really proud moment and I’d love to get the opportunity again.

“But there’s a lot of time and a lot of work to get there. I will keep working hard and see what happens.”

Morsy has certainly worked hard to reach the top flight, having spent most of his career in the lower leagues at clubs such as Port Vale, Chesterfield, Wigan, Middlesbrough and then Ipswich.

And he has strived to improve even more by taking advice from Egypt and Liverpool hero Mohamed Salah.

“Mohamed’s an amazing guy,” said Morsy. “He’s always helped me, given me loads of advice, always an ear to listen to.

“I’ve quizzed him on many many things and he was always helpful, as he is now.

“I ask loads of things, technical things, physical things, recovery things and he is always on hand to help, like he is with all the national team. He’s just a fantastic human being.”

Salah and Liverpool ruined Ipswich’s return to the Premier League after a 23-year absence with a 2-0 opening-day league win.

That was followed by a 4-1 loss at an Erling Haaland-inspired Manchester City.

But Morsy said he and Ipswich — who host Fulham on Saturday at Portman Road — can only learn from facing English football’s finest.

“Playing in this league and against the best players is definitely what I’ve always dreamed of — that’s the level you want,” he said.

“In any walk of life really you want to push yourself and test yourself. This is the best these last two league games, especially the game against Manchester City.

“It’s against the best in the world, people we watch every week and there’s loads of things for us to work on and improve on.

“We want to have a good season. Last season we got promoted and that’s a good thing, but what we can do this time, who knows?

“We don’t want to put a ceiling on it. Always your first goal is to remain in the division, but we want to be competitive and win a lot of games.”


Local talents compete alongside international stars on historic first day of Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters

Local talents compete alongside international stars on historic first day of Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters
Updated 32 min 53 sec ago
Follow

Local talents compete alongside international stars on historic first day of Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters

Local talents compete alongside international stars on historic first day of Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters
  • The World Snooker Tour’s new major championship officially got underway in Riyadh on Friday
  • Round 1 saw 7 Saudi players in action alongside snooker legend Jimmy White, former world champion Ken Doherty, and women’s world No. 1 Mink Nutcharut

RIYADH: The inaugural Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters kicked off on Friday, as the World Snooker Tour’s new major championship was hosted at the Green Halls in Riyadh.

As the biggest international ranking event in WST history and the first-ever staged in the Kingdom, the Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters represents the start of a new era for professional snooker locally and internationally. Running until Sept. 7, this year’s edition welcomes 144 of the world’s best players with the title and world ranking points on offer.

Dr. Nasser Al-Shamri, president of the Saudi Billiards and Snooker Federation, said: “This historic event is already presenting never-before-seen opportunities for our talent and fans across the Kingdom. We’re delighted that they can finally experience and be a part of such a prestigious tournament right here in Saudi Arabia. The Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters marks a new era for snooker nationwide and across the region — and it’s an exciting time for everyone connected with the sport.”

Round 1 of action saw 62 players — including seven from the Kingdom — competing across 31 matches.

Tipped to be one of Saudi Arabia’s future snooker stars, 14-year-old Ziyad Al-Qabbani made his first WST appearance on home soil against 2023 World Junior Champion Stan Moody from England. While falling short in his maiden ranking event match, Al-Qabbani — the youngest player in the tournament — revealed it was a dream come true to play against high-caliber players and that he looks forward to his future in the sport.

Elsewhere on Day 1, women’s world No. 1 Mink Nutcharut from Thailand progressed to the second round with a 4-2 win over Libya’s Kusai Hamed. Her encounter highlighted the opportunities for female professionals to compete in major tournaments. Snooker legend Jimmy White and former world champion Ken Doherty were also in action.

Meanwhile, Najla Al-Naimi, the Saudi Billiards and Snooker Federation-registered referee, became the first woman to officiate a professional match in the Kingdom.

The Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters is part of a partnership between the Saudi Arabian Ministry of Sport and the Saudi Billiards and Snooker Federation to develop the game nationally and regionally over the next decade.

Ranking alongside the sport’s “Triple Crown” events — the Masters, UK Championship, and World Championship — should elevate the status of the Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters to one of the most prestigious tournaments in snooker.

The Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters continues on Saturday with 32 matches locked in across Round 2, broadcast in 200 countries to a global audience exceeding 500 million.


Sabalenka wins latest-starting match in US Open history that finally begins after midnight

Sabalenka wins latest-starting match in US Open history that finally begins after midnight
Updated 31 August 2024
Follow

Sabalenka wins latest-starting match in US Open history that finally begins after midnight

Sabalenka wins latest-starting match in US Open history that finally begins after midnight
  • The runner-up last year in Flushing Meadows eventually finished off the victory at 1:48
  • Sabalenka and Alexandrova were kept on Ashe, finally getting on the court after defending champion Novak Djokovic was shocked by No. 28 seed Alexei Popyrin in four sets

NEW YORK: Aryna Sabalenka finally got rolling after a bad beginning to the latest-starting match in US Open history, regrouping to beat No. 29 Ekaterina Alexandrova 2-6, 6-1, 6-2 early Saturday to reach the fourth round.

The No. 2 seed didn’t get underway until 12:07 a.m. and had dropped the first set barely a half-hour later. But she seized control early in the second set, winning 10 straight games to open a 5-0 lead in the third.

The runner-up last year in Flushing Meadows eventually finished off the victory at 1:48, tied for the second-latest ending to a women’s match at the US Open, and advanced to face No. 33 seed Elize Mertens on Sunday.

“I was happy that I was able to stay focused, no matter what, and I was able to turn around this match,” Sabalenka said.

The previous latest start to a women’s match at the US Open was exactly at midnight on Sept. 2, 1987, with Gabriela Sabatini going on to beat Beverly Bowes 6-3, 6-3.

The night session at Arthur Ashe Stadium began more than an hour after its usual 7 p.m. starting time following Frances Tiafoe’s victory over Ben Shelton in the afternoon that lasted 4 hours, 3 minutes.

Under a new late-night match policy the tournament debuted this year, the tournament referee can move any match that hasn’t gone on by 11:15 p.m.. Instead, Sabalenka and Alexandrova were kept on Ashe, finally getting on the court after defending champion Novak Djokovic was shocked by No. 28 seed Alexei Popyrin in four sets.

A US Tennis Association spokesman said tournament officials kept the Grandstand available in the event they wanted to move the Sabalenka-Alexandrova match. A decision was going to be made by the end of the fourth set of the Djokovic-Popyrin match.

Sabalenka said her desire was to remain on Ashe, though she would prefer it be in the opener of the night session and put the men second.

The bigger problem was the quick start by Alexandrova, who broke Sabalenka’s serve twice in the first set.

“She just crushed it. She played so well,” Sabalenka said.

But once Sabalenka broke for a 3-1 lead in the second set, she got going quickly from there to wrap it up earlier than the latest end of a women’s match, when Maria Sakkari finished off Bianca Andreescu at 2:13 a.m. on Sept. 6, 2021.

Sabalenka hoped to be in bed by 4 a.m. and sleep as long as she could.

“Technically, I did my practice session today, so I’m good for tomorrow, right?” she joked. “Can I just tell my team that? It’s 2 a.m.; we count it like today.”


Bangladesh opt to bowl against Pakistan in second Test match in Rawalpindi

Bangladesh opt to bowl against Pakistan in second Test match in Rawalpindi
Updated 31 August 2024
Follow

Bangladesh opt to bowl against Pakistan in second Test match in Rawalpindi

Bangladesh opt to bowl against Pakistan in second Test match in Rawalpindi
  • Pakistan have included left-arm Mir Hamza and leg-spinner Abrar Ahmed in the squad
  • Persistent rain in Rawalpindi washed out the opening day of the series-deciding match

ISLAMABAD: Bangladesh won the toss and opted to bowl against Pakistan in the second Test match at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said on Saturday, after persistent rain washed out the opening day of the series decider.
Bangladesh are ahead in the two-match series following their historic 10-wicket win at the same venue last week when Pakistan were bowled out for an embarrassing 146 in the second innings on the fifth and final day.
“Bangladesh win the toss and opt to bowl first in the second Test,” the PCB announced in a social media post.


Bangladesh have made one change to the playing eleven that featured in their historic victory in the first Test as pacer Taskin Ahmed came in to replace unfit Shoriful Islam while Pakistan released pacer Shaheen Shah Afridi and named another left-arm bowler Mir Hamza along with leg-spinner Abrar Ahmed in the 12-man squad.
Both teams are in the bottom half of the World Test Championship standings, with Bangladesh on number seven and Pakistan on number eight, just above last-place West Indies.
Embattled Pakistani squad has lost four Test matches in a row since Shan Masood was elevated as captain last year. The team has not won a home Test since beating South Africa in December 2021.
The four Test matches against New Zealand and Australia were drawn.

Playing XIs:

Bangladesh: Shadman Islam, Zakir Hasan, Najmul Hossain Shanto (capt), Mominul Islam, Mushfiqur Rahim, Litton Das (wk), Shakib Al Hasan, Mehidy Hasan Miraz, Taskin Ahmed, Hasan Mahmud, Nahid Rana
Pakistan: Abdullah Shafique, Saim Ayub, Shan Masood (capt), Babar Azam, Saud Shakeel, Mohammad Rizwan (wk), Salman Ali Agha, Abrar Ahmed, Mir Hamza, Mohammad Ali, Khurram Shahzad, Naseem Shah


Scottie Scheffler leads by 4 at East Lake as Morikawa and Schauffele try to keep it close

Scottie Scheffler leads by 4 at East Lake as Morikawa and Schauffele try to keep it close
Updated 31 August 2024
Follow

Scottie Scheffler leads by 4 at East Lake as Morikawa and Schauffele try to keep it close

Scottie Scheffler leads by 4 at East Lake as Morikawa and Schauffele try to keep it close
  • At stake for Scheffler is a chance to win the FedEx Cup and its $25 million prize, which he failed to do as the top seed each of the past two years
  • Scheffler’s lone mistake was going bunker-to-bunker on the par-4 13th and missing an 8-foot par putt

ATLANTA : Scottie Scheffler put on another clinic from tee-to-green at East Lake on Friday for a 5-under 66 and a four-shot lead at the Tour Championship that didn’t seem as big as it looked.

Collin Morikawa and Xander Schauffele had something to do with that.

In a second round that brought a sense of urgency for those chasing the No. 1 player in golf, Morikawa responded with nine birdies, two on the final two holes after a 93-minute storm delay, for an 8-under 63.

Schauffele finished with a pair of 12-foot putts — one for par, one for birdie, both feeling just as important as the other — for a 64.

“This course right now with how firm the greens are, it’s a ball-striking type deal where you have to be in the fairways and hit your number, and he’s been killing everyone at that all year,” Schauffele said. “I know he’s not going to let up, so there’s only one way to get him.”

Morikawa has laid out a plan for the week. Still, he was seven shots back to start the day and has seen enough of Scheffler this year to know what to expect.

“He’s going to continue to make birdies,” Morikawa said. “He’s driving it really, really well here and you’re giving yourself enough wedges to make some scoring opportunities out there. For me, it’s just bringing energy and just kind of staying alive out there.”

They still have their work cut out for them.

Scheffler is the No. 1 seed in the FedEx Cup and began the finale with a two-shot lead. He also is playing as well as he has all year, and those immediately behind him in the FedEx Cup were not at their best in the opening round. That accounted for Scheffler having a seven-shot lead at the start of the day.

He returned from the storm delay with a pair of birdies over his final three holes and reached 21-under par. Morikawa was at 17 under and Schauffele was another shot behind.

No one else was closer than nine shots to Scheffler.

At stake for Scheffler is a chance to win the FedEx Cup and its $25 million prize, which he failed to do as the top seed each of the past two years. But he looks more comfortable on an East Lake course that has been overhauled — “This is not the same course,” he said when he arrived Monday for his first look — and everyone has a big task chasing him.

Scheffler began the round with a 7-iron that he thought was going to leave him a 20-foot look at birdie, except that it caught the wrong side of the ridge and rolled off the green, down a severe slope and settled 90 away against a collar of rough.

He holed a 20-foot par putt, a good start that sent him on his way. Even with Morikawa and Schauffele scoring early, Scheffler still led by six shots early on the back nine until he made his first bogey in 29 holes and Morikawa chipped in for birdie, a two-shot swing.

Morikawa had four birdies in a five-hole stretch around the turn, only to see his tee shot to the 11th bounce hard and roll off the back of the green, leading to bogey. But he recovered well enough, particularly with his two closing birdies.

Schauffele, who started the tournament two shots behind as the No. 2 seed, lost ground with a 70 on the first day. He sorted out most of his swing issues and had a bogey-free day.

Scheffler tried not to get caught up in his seven-shot lead — a product of his 65 on Thursday and the next five players behind him in the FedEx Cup doing no better than 69 — though it was unusual to see a six-shot lead on the front nine on a Friday.

“Today was a day where I had a big lead, but there was a huge group of guys right there, so obviously some guys are going to play pretty well,” Scheffler said. “But I did a good job of staying in my own world out there and put up a good round of golf.”

He went out in 32. Morikawa and Schauffele had to keep making birdies just to keep this from turning into a runaway. Scheffler’s lone mistake was going bunker-to-bunker on the par-4 13th and missing an 8-foot par putt.

Scheffler is driving it so well — he missed only three fairways — that he didn’t have more than a 7-iron into a par 4 and is setting a tough target for everyone to chase.

Adam Scott (67), Wyndham Clark (67) and Sahith Theegala (66) were nine shots behind. Sam Burns, Scheffler’s best friend on tour, birdied his last two holes for a 68 and lost so much ground he stopped looking at the leaderboard. He was 10 shots behind.

“He’s the best golfer on the planet. He’s really good with leads,” Burns said. “It’s not a great thing for us.”