Lovlina one win away from Olympic medal
Boxer Borgohain barges into quarters
Tokyo, July 27: Indian boxer Lovlina Borgohain (69kg) advanced to the quarterfinals in her debut Olympic appearance, defeating German veteran Nadine Apetz in a closelyfought last-16 stage bout here on Tuesday. Borgohain, the lone Indian boxer in action on the day, prevailed 3-2 over her rival who is 12 years her senior. Both the boxers were making their Games debut and the Indian became the first from her nine-strong team to make the quarterfinal stage.
The 23-year-old showed great poise in a tense contest to triumph by the thinnest of margins. She claimed all three rounds on split points.
The 35-year-old Apetz was the first German woman to qualify for a boxing event at the Olympics. She is a twotime world championship bronze-medallist, a former European champion and is pursuing a PhD in neuroscience.
“There was no point in being too offensive, Lovlina was smart enough to keep the score ticking by hitting on counterattack,” national women’s coach Mohammed Ali Qamar said. Borgohain is a two-time World and Asian championships bronze-medallist.
Tokyo, July 27: Indian boxer Lovlina Borgohain (69kg) advanced to the quarterfinals in her debut Olympic appearance, defeating German veteran Nadine Apetz in a closelyfought Last 16 stage bout here on Tuesday.
Borgohain, the lone Indian boxer in action on the day, prevailed 3-2 over her rival who is 12 years her senior. Both the boxers were making their Games debut and the Indian became the first from her nine-strong team to make the quarterfinal stage.
The 23-year-old showed great poise in a tense contest to triumph by the thinnest of margins. She claimed all the three rounds on split points.
The 35-year-old Apetz was the first German woman to qualify for a boxing event at the Olympics. She is a twotime world championship bronze-medallist, a former European champion and is pursuing a PhD in neuroscience.
“There was no point in being too offensive, Lovlina was smart enough to keep the score ticking by hitting on counterattack,” national women’s coach Mohammed Ali Qamar said.
Borgohain is a two-time World and Asian championships bronze-medallist. On July 30, Borgohain will face Chinese Taipei’s Nien-Chin Chen, who is seeded fourth and a former world champion.
The Indian had lost to her in the 2018 world championship semifinal in a 1-4 verdict.
A win in the upcoming contest would assure Borgohain of at least a bronze medal at the megaevent.
Chen was also a silvermedallist at the 2019 Asian Championships and defeated Italy’s Angela Carini 3-2 in her pre-quarterfinal bout.
The Indian youngster, hailing from Assam, was the aggressor in the opening round before she changed strategy to play the waiting game, drawing Apetz in to punish her on counter-attack.
The plan worked out just fine despite the German’s well-placed jabs often troubling Borgohain.
Borgohain relied mostly on her left hooks to keep the slender edge.
The Guwahati-based boxer had started out as a kick-boxer before Assamese coach Padam Boro steered her towards boxing. —