Five Indians in final, four fetch bronze at Mongolian boxing tourney

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

World silver-medallist (57kg) and were among the five Indian boxers to enter the finals, while four others, including (60kg), signed off with bronze medals in the Cup in today.

Those who made the final along with Sonia and Mandeep were Lovlina Borgohain (69kg), a gold-medallist at earlier this year, (49kg), and (56kg).

Ending with bronze medals were Shiva, debutant Vanhmlimpuia (75kg), Ashish (64kg), and (48kg), a direct entrant into the last-four stage owing to the small size of the women's draw.

While Shiva lost a closely-contested bout to Battumur Misheelt, Bina was out-punched by Korean Ashish too lost to a Mongolian in Uranchmeg Munkh-Erdene, while Vanhmlimpuia was beaten by Iran's Mousavi Seyedshahin.

Sonia, a two-time world, and Asian championships silver-medallist defeated Tiantian Zhao of in a split decision. The Indian looked off-colour in the opening round, which Zhao dominated with her well-connected right hooks.

However, Sonia staged a strong recovery in the second and third rounds, drawing from her huge reservoir of experience to fetch a favourable verdict in the end. She will face local favourite Tumurkhuyag Bolortuul in the summit clash.

Lovlina, in contrast, dominated from the very start, taking good advantage of her opponent Enkhbaatar Erdenetuya's sluggish foot movement.

The Indian punched at will, her jabs connecting powerfully. The Assam-boxer will now square off against Chinese Taipei's in her summit clash.

In the men's draw, Mandeep, a former silver-medallist, was up against local challenge Tsend-Ayush Otgon-Erdene. The Indian was way superior when it came to hitting impactful punches and was also helped by a warning to Otgon-Erdene for excessive bending.

Shiva, on the other hand, fought out a messy slugfest with Misheelt. The former world bronze-winner and three-time Asian-medallist Indian connected better but could not find get the nod from the judges, who were split in their verdict favouring the crowd favourite.

In the evening session, Himanshu claimed a scrappy 3-2 win over Thailand's Samaek Saehan in the semifinal to enter the final, where he will be up against Iran's

Etash, in contrast, ensured that the judges had no doubt in awarding the bout to him against Mongolian Tsgaanbaatar Munkhbaatar. The Manipuri youngster displayed sharp reflexes and struck powerfully to fetch a unanimous verdict into the final.

Kazakhstan's Baltiyev Abdukhaul awaits him in the summit clash tomorrow.

Ashish and Vanhmlimpuia gave their all in their respective bouts but fell short when it came to getting judges' nod.

Bina was beaten in a unanimous verdict by Korean Kim Kum Sun, undone by lack of power in her punches and the longer reach of her opponent.

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

First Published: Sat, June 23 2018. 17:35 IST