The Asian Age

Lovlina one win away from Olympic medal

Boxer Borgohain barges into quarters

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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. —

 ??  ?? India’s Lovlina Borgohain (in blue) in action against Germany’s Nadine Apetz during their women’s welterweig­ht (64-69kg) round of 16 bout at the Tokyo Olympics on Tuesday.
India’s Lovlina Borgohain (in blue) in action against Germany’s Nadine Apetz during their women’s welterweig­ht (64-69kg) round of 16 bout at the Tokyo Olympics on Tuesday.
 ?? AFP ?? India’s Lovlina Borgohain (in blue) fights with Nadine Apetz of Germany during their women’s welterweig­ht (64-69kg) bout at Kokugikan Arena in Tokyo on Tuesday. —
AFP India’s Lovlina Borgohain (in blue) fights with Nadine Apetz of Germany during their women’s welterweig­ht (64-69kg) bout at Kokugikan Arena in Tokyo on Tuesday. —

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