ALL 286 BOXERS NOW QUALIFIED FOR RIO

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The Olympic Games Tripartite Commission today awarded its male invitation places for August’s Olympics.

Invitation places are reserved for nations with an average of eight or fewer athletes at the previous two Olympics.

Boxers from Fiji, Jordan, Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu and Zambia received invitations to complete the line up for boxing at the 31st Olympiad.

The three invitation places for women have already been awarded to Micronesia, Central Africa and Panama.

All 286 boxers – 250 male and 36 female – that compete at each Games have now qualified for the 2016 Olympics

Katie Taylor, Paddy Barnes, Brendan Irvine, Michael Conlan, David Olover Joyce, Steven Donnelly, Michael O’Reilly and Joe Ward will represent Irish boxing in Rio.

CORK BOXING LAUDS OLYMPIAN MICHAEL ROCHE

Sydney 2000

Sydney 2000

LEESIDE boxing legend Michael Roche, an Olympian and five-time Irish senior champion, was honoured recently for his outstanding contribution to his chosen sport at a Cork Boxing Breakfast.

The attendance at Clancy’s Restaurant included his family, friends, former internationals, club colleagues and well-known members of the Cork boxing fraternity.

The President of the Cork County Boxing Board (CCBB), Michael O’Brien, chaired proceedings and welcomed all.

“Today the world of Cork boxing is paying tribute to a true champion, said O’Brien.

“Michael Roche has left Cork a magnificent legacy of achievement. He is a product of the famed Sunnyside club and we are privileged to have an opportunity today to reflect on his remarkable and illustrious career.”

Representing the City, Cllr. Mick Nugent, the deputy Lord Mayor , said: “I’m delighted to be associated with this special tribute to a fellow Northsider.

“Michael is a great ambassador for boxing and for sport. He was an international who had style and class and he’s a fantastic role model.”

Tim O’Sullivan, President of the Cork Ex Boxers Association (CEBA), said Roche was a stand out example to  every young athlete on Leeside. “He was dedicated and committed. He set his targets and achieved his goals,” stressed the CCBB chief.

The great Gordon Joyce hailed the multiple Irish senior champion as a man inspired by tunnel vision, adding that he was a boxer who was always destined to go to the top.

World middleweight contender Gary “Spike” O’Sullivan revealed that Roche was one of his heroes who had always encouraged him to keep going.

Michael Roche

Michael Roche

Dan O’Connell, one of the great administrators of Irish boxing, said Roche’s success will always be reflected on with warmth and pride.

Prior to his participation at the Sydney Olympics, Roche was a seasoned international and had, as a light middleweight, won four Irish senior titles. He claimed his fifth and final senior belt a year after the Olympics.

The Sunnyside BC man won five in a row at 71kg in 1997/98/99/2000 and 2001. On the night he won his last belt, another Irish boxing legend, Ken Egan, claimed his first senior title at middleweight.

Roche qualified for Sydney through the Chemistry Cup in Germany and has the distinction of being the only Irish boxer at the 27th Olympiad.

He was the third boxer to represent the Sunnyside club at four separate Olympics. Kieran Joyce lined out at Los Angeles 1984 and Seoul 1988, Paul Buttimer at Barcelona 1992 and Roche at the 2000 Games.

Roche was accompanied on his journey down under  by Willie O’Leary and four members of CEBA at the turn of the century. This group subsequently became known as the “Sydney gang.”

Reflecting on his experience at the Olympics, which he described as unforgettable,Roche said he believes he probably wouldn’t have been in Sydney at all only for his employer Pfizer, who had no hesitation giving him the time off work he needed to pursue his Olympic dream.

Meanwhile, the  President of the Loughmahon BC, Conal Thomas, who sponsored the recent Boxing Breakfast, made a presentation of a silver salver to the Sydney Olympian to mark his outstanding contribution.

Thomas said: “Michael Roche is a true legend of Leeside sport. He achieved much from a glittering career. He set standards and led by example and above all gave hope to every young Cork boxer for generations to come.”

Roche was visibly moved at the Boxing Breakfast and said he wished to thank his wife Lorraine who, he said, had made great sacrifices as he pursued his demanding career.

With his son Shane proudly smiling, Roche, in a moment of poignant reflection amid a standing ovation, said he was sure that the spirit of his late parents, who were in Sydney to support their son at the 2000 Olympics, was present on a day when Cork boxing rolled out the red caret for its modest hero.

ireland's Rio Olympians with Irish coaches Zaur Antia and John Conlan

ireland’s Rio Olympians with Irish coaches Zaur Antia and John Conlan

Ireland’s only boxer at the 2000 Olympics also wished the 2016 squad the very best of luck in Rio.

“We have a strong squad. They are very experienced at winning medals at the top level and I would be confident that they will once again do the nation proud,” said the five-time Irish Elite champion.

IRELAND WIND UP TRAINING CAMP WITH RUSSIA

 

ireland's Rio Olympians with Irish coaches Zaur Antia and John Conlan

Ireland’s Rio Olympians with Irish coaches Zaur Antia and John Conlan

 
 

281 of the 286 boxers that compete at each Olympics have now qualified for Rio 2016 following the completion of the final qualifiers in Vargas, Venezuela last weekend.

The final five places, invitations, for men will be distributed via the Tripartite Commission this weekend.

The three invitation berths for women have already been distributed. Micronesia’s Jennifer Cheing received an invitation in Katie Taylor’s lightweight class and Judit Mbougnade of Central Africa and Panama middleweight Atheyna Bylon got the flyweight and middleweight wild cards.

Eight of the 286 boxers slated to weigh-in at the 9,000 capacity Pavilion 6, the venue for boxing in Rio, next month are Irish.

Katie Taylor, Paddy Barnes, Brendan Irvine, Michael Conlan, David Oliver Joyce, Steven Donnelly, Michael O’Reilly and Joe Ward have qualified.

Barnes,shattering another record for Irish boxing, will be appearing in his third successive Olympics, while Taylor and Conlan are two-time Olympians.

Between them, Taylor, Barnes and Conlan have claimed one gold and three bronze medals from the Beijing 2008 and London 2012 Olympiads.

Ward,meantime,is the first Irish boxer to qualify for the Youth Olympics (Singapore 2010) and the Olympics.

Team Ireland finished up a training camp with Russia at the Institute of Sport in Dublin today and depart of Rio on July 19th.

“We had excellent sparring and training and Russia was very pleased with the camp. They leave tomorrow and we leave for Rio next week,” said Irish head coach Zaur Antia.

Team Ireland have lined up a ten-day training camp for Rio before entering the Olympic village on July 29th.

Boxing begins on August 6th in Rio. Click here for schedule.

EUROPEAN SCHOOLBOY CHAMPIONSHIPS 2016

2012 European Schoolboy champion Oliver McCarthy

2012 European Schoolboy champion Oliver McCarthy

Irish boxing will be aiming to maintain its proud tradition of having won medals at every European Schoolboy Championships since the inaugural tournament in Rome in 2003 at the 2016 edition of the Championships in Zagreb, Croatia later this month.

David Joyce secured Ireland’s first gold medal at this level thirteen years ago and Beijing and Rio 2008 and 2016 Olympians John Joe Joyce and David Oliver Joyce claimed bronze. Carl Frampton took home silver from the Eternal City. A young English prospect called Amir Khan won gold.

Ireland’s eleven gold medallists at this level are:  David Joyce (2003), Willie O’Reilly (2004), Stephen O’Reilly (2004), Michael O’Reilly (2007), Michael McDonagh (2007), John Joyce (2011), Oliver McCarthy (2012), James McGivern (2012), Michael Nevin (2012), Aaron McKenna (2013) and Jordan Myres (2013).

“We won two gold and Joe (Ward) took silver and we won quite a few bronze medals at the 2007 European Schoolboys in Portsmouth. It was a big tournament for us at the time and we had a strong team in England,” recalled Rio 2016 Olympian and AIBA World No. 2 ranked middleweight Michael O’Reilly.

Irish boxing has claimed 11 gold, 15 silver and 43 bronze medals from the European Schoolboy Championships since Rome 2003. Click here for all results.

The 2016 European Schoolboy Championships begin in Zagreb on July 24th.The Irish squad for Croatia will be ratified shortly.

Click here for invitation.