By Patrick Vignal
BEIJING, Aug 25 (Reuters) - The wild celebrations that
followed China’s first two boxing titles could not hide the
fact the sport needs a few more rounds to become the
respectable member of the Olympic family it aspires to be.
Light-flyweight Zou Shiming and light-heavyweight Zhang
Xiaoping grabbed gold medals for the hosts to help shape them
into a top boxing nation after two weeks of action marred by a
strong dose of controversy over judging standards.
Boos from a small but raucous Irish contingent after Kenny
Egan lost to Zhang on Sunday served as a reminder there had
been constant criticism of the judging throughout the
competition.
International Boxing Association (AIBA) president Wu
Ching-kuo, who launched a bold set of reforms after being
appointed in 2006, notably changing the rules for assigning
referees and judges, acknowledged judging had been a problem.
“We have no doubt the refereeing and judging is clean,
honest and transparent but we need higher standards,” said Wu,
adding he wanted to bring younger officials into the 2012 Games
in London.
Wu faced another problem in Beijing when accusations from a
technical delegate prompted the ruling body to reveal it was
investigating possible attempts to manipulate the outcome of
bouts by members of the organisation or competition officials.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) was notified and
provided an independent observer to oversee the competition in
Beijing, which AIBA insisted had been fair.
Between meetings and news conferences in an effort to clear
the air, Wu had time to witness the emergence of China and the
rare sight of a Cuban team leaving Olympics without a title.
The superpowers of the sport, who had come to Beijing with
their least-experienced squad in years after a string of
defections, won eight medals but for the first time since the
1968 Games in Mexico they failed to land a gold.
“Our team is very young,” said Cuban bantamweight Yankiel
Leon, who lost to Mongolia’s Badar-Uugan Enkhbat in the final.
“It’s true that we haven’t won a gold medal but I’m not
aware of any problems with the team and I’m sure that in future
competitions we’ll be able to win many gold medals,” he said.
AIBA president Wu also watched exciting new faces such as
Ukraine’s Vasyl Lomachenko, the featherweight champion who
received the Val Barker trophy for the most outstanding boxer
of the tournament.
The classy 20-year-old said, however, that he intended to
turn professional “sooner or later”, meaning he is unlikely to
be around in 2012.
British coach Terry Edwards’s pre-Games prediction that
Britain could be the new Cuba did not quite materialise but his
team did win a gold, by middleweight James DeGale, and will be
ambitious on home soil in four years’ time.
The Americans, still struggling to come to terms with the
specificity of amateur boxing, will head to London on another
mission to redeem themselves after winning just one bronze, by
heavyweight Deontay Wilder, in their worst Olympic performance.
On another front, Wu said he wanted women’s boxing to be
introduced at the next Olympics and would submit a proposal to
the IOC.
(Editing by Ralph Gowling)