Gaurav, Vikas, Manish in semis, Mary in final; Sarita, Pinki crash out (Boxing Roundup)

IANS  |  Gold Coast 

Indian boxers Gaurav Solanki, Yadav and Kaushik entered the semi-finals while M.C. stormed into the final, even as and crashed out of the 21st here on Wednesday.

Gaurav defeated of in a unanimous 5:0 verdict in the quarter-finals of the men's flyweight (52 kilogram) category while coasted to an easy win over of in the 75kg category. also advanced, defeating Calum French of England in 60kg.

In women's category, veteran Indian star M.C. defeated of

Gaurav came up with an impressive performance against three-time champion of to claim a well-deserved victory.

also registered a comfortable 5:0 victory over of in the last eight stage.

The duo thus confirmed another couple of medals to the Indian tally as every in the last-four stage is assured of a spot on the podium.

Gaurav will fight Vidanalange of in the semi-finals on Friday. Bandara outclassed Thabo Molefe of 4:1 in another quarter-final on Wednesday.

The last edition's bronze medallist, Reece McFadden of Scotland, and of will meet in the other flyweight semi-final.

In the quarter-finals, McFadden outclassed Pakistan's 5-0 while Irvine defeated of 4:1.

Up against the vastly more experienced Keama, Gaurav delivered a composed, technically superior performance.

The Indian youngster had a lot of power in his punches and used his reflexes and a high to thwart his experienced south paw opponent.

Gaurav landed more scoring punches in a frenetic opening period, thus taking the early advantage.

The second round followed a similar script with Gaurav penetrating Keama's defence with powerful jabs on several occassions.

Keama came out swinging in the third and last period in an effort to reduce the gap, but Gaurav did well to retaliate in an effective manner and take a well-deserved victory.

Later, coasted to an easy win over Muziyo.

The African adopted an attacking approach right from the start and responded by staying just outside his reach and using a higher than usual.

The 2014 bronze medallist fought well on the counter, regularly finding the gaps and it did not come as a surprise when all the five judges ruled in his favour.

In other bout, also entered the semi-finals.

overpowered Calum French of England by a unanimous 5:0 verdict.

was seemed solid right from the start but soon, his opponent started counter-attacking. At one stage, the duo threw everything at each other and in the process Kaushik fought without a up. But at the end, it was the Indian who proved superior and assured another medal for

In women's 48kg category, Mary's experience and superior technique stood her in good stead as she carved out a unanimous 5:0 verdict against the veteran Sri Lankan fighter.

The 39-year-old Anusha gave a good account of herself against the five-time world champion Indian before falling short in the end.

Both boxers were a bit cautious in the opening round, trying to gauge each other although Mary managed to land several punches.

Although the Lankan had the height and reach advantage, Mary used a low and used her reflexes and feet movement to take the advantage.

Both boxers were equally matched in the second round before the tempo picked up in the third as Mary picked up the points with a steady barrage of punches.

However, -- another star in the Indian women's squad -- fell short in the 60kg category, going down to Australia's in the quarter-finals.

Sarita did well to trouble her opponent with superior technique and excellent movements throughout the fight and it came as surprise of sorts when the judges decided to award a unanimous 5:0 verdict in favour of the Australian.

Sarita dominated the opening round, attacking right from the start while the Australian had a more defensive approach.

The tempo picked up in the second round as Anja tried to match Sarita's pace and aggression. The Indian used her superior technique and experience in her attempt to outpunch her opponent, but Anja did well to give her a tough challenge.

Both boxers came out fighting in the third round. Anja used her superior height and strong left jabs in her attempt to keep the Indian at bay.

Later in the day, went down fighting to of England in the women's 51kg category.

Pinki, a bronze medallist from the 2014 CWG, lost 2-3 after a hard-fought contest that went down to the fire.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, April 11 2018. 17:26 IST