BARNES AND CONLAN IN ACTION IN LITHUANIA TOMORROW

 

Barnes and conlan

 

 

Rio 2016 Olympians Paddy Barnes and Michael Conlan, pictured, have received byes into the last-four of the 15-nation Socikas Invitational Tournament in Kaunas, Lithuania.

The Belfast pair will be in action at the 20th edition of the tournament tomorrow.

Barnes will meet either Gabriel Escobar (Spain) or Ervan Kakahani (Sweden) and Conlan will face either Veaceslav Goran (Moldovia) or Jose Kelvin (Spain).

 

Socikas Tournament Kaunas, Lithuania

May 19th S/Finals

52kg Paddy Barnes (Ireland) v Gabriel Escobar (Spain) or Ervan Kakahani (Sweden)

56kg Michael Conlan (Ireland) v Veaceslav Goran (Moldova) or Jose Kelvin (Spain)

 

Irish squad

 

Paddy Barnes (Holy Family)

Michel Conlan (Clonard

 

Team manager: Bernie Harold

Coaches: John Conlan and Jimmy Payne

WORLD WOMEN’S CHAMPIONSHIPS DRAW

 women's worlds

Katie Taylor will meet either Irma Testa of Italy or Sweden’s Agnes Alexisson in the last 32 at the AIBA World Women’s Championships and Olympic qualifiers in Astana, Kazakhstan.

Testa, who has qualified for Rio 2016, and Alexisson meet tomorrow with the winner advancing to face the Olympic champion who is aiming for her sixth successive title and a place at the Rio Olympics.

Kelly Harrington, meanwhile, has been drawn against Austeja Auciute in the 64kg class. Auciute, boxing out of the Finn Valley BC in Donegal, claimed five Irish titles and has also represented Ireland. She is now boxing for her native Lithuania.

Ceire Smith gets Ireland’s campaign underway tomorrow. Smith, Taylor and Christina Desmond are competing in the three Olympics weight classes for women.

QPPProud Sponsors of Ladies Irish Boxing

Click here for Thursday’s schedule and here for draw sheets.

AIBA World Women’s Championships Astana, Kazakhstan

May 19th (Last 64)
51kg Ceire Smith (Ireland) v Ingrit Valencia (Colombia)

May 20th (Last 32)
54kg Dervla Duffy (Ireland) v Diletta Cipallane (Italy)
57kg Moira McElliggot (Ireland) v Sati Burcu (Turkey)
64kg Kelly Harrington (Ireland) v Austeja Auciute (Lithuania)
75kg Christina Desmond (Ireland) v Khadija Mardi (Morocco)

May 21st (Last 32)
48kg Donna Barr (Ireland) v Kim Klavel (Canada)
60kg Katie Taylor (Ireland) v Irma Testa (Italy) or Agnes Alexisson (Sweden)

May 22nd (Last 16)
69kg Grainne Walsh (Ireland) v Hanna Solecka (Poland)

Irish squad

48kg Donna Barr (Twin Towns)

51kg Ceire Smith (Cavan)

54kg Dervla Duffy (Mulhuddart)

57kg Moira McElligot (St Michael’s Athy)

60kg Katie Taylor (Bray)

64kg Kelly Harrington (Glasnevin)

69kg Grainne Walsh (Sparticus)

75kg Christina Desmond (Fr Horgan’s)

Team manager: Anna Moore

Coaches: Zaur Antia, Eddie Bolger, Gerry Storey, Pat McDonagh

Physio: Molly Ryan

WORLD WOMEN’S CHAMPIONSHIPS COUNTDOWN BEGINS

Team Ireland and staff in Astana

Team Ireland and staff in Astana

The draw for the AIBA World Women’s Elite Championships and Olympic qualifiers will be made tomorrow morning after the general weigh-in in Astana, Kazakhstan.

Boxing begins on Thursday. Astana is five hours ahead of Ireland.

Seventy three nations have entered for the final Olympic qualifier for women for Rio 2016.

Twelve Olympics places, four in each weight, are up for grabs in the three Olympics weights – flyweight, lightweight and middleweight – for women.

The top four (the semi-finalists) qualify. A top four finish will also guarantee at least bronze.

Boxers that made the third and fourth place box-offs in the Continental qualifiers will also qualify for Rio if the athletes that achieved the qualification standard through the Continental route make the standard again in Astana.

In that case, the World places prevail and the Continental places kick back to the boxer(s) that reached the third and fourth place box-offs through at thir Continental qualifiers.

Katie Taylor won the third and four place box-off at the European qualifiers in Samsun, Turkey last month after beating Bulgaria’s Svetlana Staneva.

“I know I have to prepare for the World Championships now and this is the start of it,” said the Olympic champion after that win.

Ceire Smith, Taylor and Christina Desmond will represent Ireland in the Olympic weights in Astana.

Barys Arena tournamnet venue

Barys Arena tournamnet venue

Donna Barr, Dervla Duffy, Moira McElliggot, Kelly Harrington and Grainne Walsh will be aiming for medals at the 9th edition of the tournament since 2001.

Team Ireland have been in Astana since last Saturday in the countdown to the third last qualifier for women and men Rio 2016.

Taylor, the 2006,2008,2010,2012 and 2014 World Elite champion, will become the first woman in the history of the sport to win six successive titles if she finished on top of the 60kg podium in the Azeri capital.

Seven athletes have already qualifed for Rio in the each of the three Olympics weights. That number will increase to eleven in each class after Astana. The final three places – one in each weight – will be distributed throught the Tripartite Commission (invitation places).

36 women and 250 men compete at each Olympics.

 

 

9th World Women’s Championships & Olympic qualifiers Astana Kazakhstan, May 19/27

Irish squad

48kg Donna Barr (Twin Towns)

51kg Ceire Smith (Cavan)

54kg Dervla Duffy (Mulhuddart)

57kg Moira McElligot (St Michael’s Athy)

60kg Katie Taylor (Bray)

64kg Kelly Harrington (Glasnevin)

69kg Grainne Walsh (Sparticus)

75kg Christina Desmond (Fr Horgan’s)

Team manager: Anna Moore

Coaches: Zaur Antia, Eddie Bolger, Gerry Storey, Pat McDonagh

Physio: Molly Ryan

BOXING FEATURES IN NEW OLYMPIC EXHIBITION AT CROKE PARK

 

Michael Carruth is declared Olympic champion in 1992

Michael Carruth is declared Olympic champion in 1992

 

New exhibition opens at the GAA Museum in Croke Park

 

Ireland’s Olympians in boxing and sport were celebrated at the GAA Museum today at the opening of a new exhibition “Ireland’s Olympians” which celebrates the nation’s Olympic medalists, with a special emphasis on medal winners from 1924 when Ireland first competed as an independent nation.

Pat Ryan, IABA President, and Olympic champion Michael Carruth attended today’s exhibition. Both men outlined the significant contribution boxing has made to Irish Olympic sport since Ireland first entered the Olympics as an independent nation in 1924.

Given its historical connection with athletics, and with the Rio Games less than 100 days away, it was fitting that the GAA Museum in Croke Park showcases and celebrates the sportsmen and sportswomen who have represented Ireland and achieved success at Olympic level, providing us with iconic moments and countless memories.

The exhibition, which is supported by the Olympic Council of Ireland, features medals and memorabilia from many of Ireland’s 26 Olympic medalists, including the first medal won by Ireland post-independence. This was won by Jack B. Yeats at the 1924 Paris Games and was awarded in the Arts & Literature Category for his painting “The Liffey Swim”.

The silver medal is on loan for the duration of exhibition from the National Gallery of Ireland.

Given Ireland’s boxing success at the Olympics, it is no surprise that items from the various boxers dominate the exhibition, including the first boxing medal won by John McNally in Helsinki in 1952 to Michael Carruth’s boxing gold medal won in 1992. The most recent boxing medals from London 2012 are included, most notably the gold medal won by Katie Taylor.

Like many other Irish-born athletes, Limerick’s John Flanagan competed for the United States and won gold in the hammer throw in 1900, 1904 and 1908. Flanagan went on to train a future Olympic hammer champion and double gold-medalist, Dr. Pat O’Callaghan.

An array of trophies won by Flanagan in the early 20th century are featured, as is the gold medal won by Tom Kiely of Tipperary in 1904 for the all-round championship – the forerunner of the modern decathlon. Like many athletes of that era, Kiely won many All-Ireland athletic championships held under the auspices of the GAA.

The exhibition also includes Ronnie Delany’s tracksuit top from 1956, John Treacy’s silver medal for the marathon in 1984 and the silver medal won by Cobh’s Sonia O’Sullivan at Sydney 2000. Ireland’s sailing success at the 1980 Moscow Olympics – the country’s first and, to date, only medal for an Olympic sailing event – is remembered with the silver medal won by David Wilkins and James Wilkinson.

Katie Taylor is declared Olympic champion in 2012

Katie Taylor is declared Olympic champion in 2012

Uachtarán Chumann Lúthchleas Gael Aogán Ó Fearghail said: “We are delighted, in conjunction with the Olympic Council of Ireland, to unveil this very special exhibition in the GAA Museum.

“It could hardly be more timely given the busy summer of sport that lies ahead and I am very pleased that the GAA Museum can add this latest offering to the long list of exhibitions it has hosted in recent times.

“The links between the GAA and Athletics – evident in our name – go back a long way and the overlap in those who have competed in our games and a host of Olympic sports, is  significant.

“Similarly, I know I speak on behalf of Cumann Lúthchleas Gael as a whole when I wish our competing athletes every success in Brazil and while wishing Pat Hickey and the IOC every success, I would also like to acknowledge their co-operation and assistance in making this exhibition possible.”

OCI President Pat Hickey said: “The OCI and the GAA have had a long and proud association stretching back to J.J. Keane, a former Chairman of the GAA Athletics Council, the founding President of the OCI and, in 1922, Ireland’s first International Olympic Committee member.

“The GAA’s outstanding “Ireland’s Olympians” exhibition is a fitting tribute to our shared sporting tradition. It is great to see so many of Ireland’s medal-winners helping to promote the Olympic Movement in Ireland by loaning their memorabilia.

“As Team Ireland prepares to send what could be our biggest ever delegation to Rio 2016, I hope that this exhibition will really inspire fans of the Olympic Games and Irish sport to get behind our athletes this summer.”

Ireland’s Olympians is now open at the GAA Museum, Croke Park and runs until Spring 2017.

 

 

Ireland Olympic Boxing Medals Winners

Helsinki 1952

Bantamweight John McNally (White City) Silver

Melbourne 1956

Welterweight; Fred Tiedt (South City) Silver

Flyweight: Johnny Caldwell (Immaculata) Bronze

Bantamweight: Freddie Gilroy (St John Bosco)  Bronze

Lightweight: Tony Byrne (Tredagh) Bronze

Tokyo 1964

Lightweight: Jim McCourt (Immaculata) Bronze

Moscow 1980

Flyweight: Hughie Russell (Holy Family) Bronze

Barcelona 1992

Welterweight: Michael Carruth (Drimnagh) Gold

Bantamweight: Wayne McCullough (Albert Foundry) Silver

Beijing 2008

Light-heavyweight: Ken Egan (Neilstown) Silver

Middleweight: Darren Sutherland (St Saviours) Bronze

Light-flyweight: Paddy Barnes (Holy Family) Bronze

London 2012

Lightweight: Katie Taylor (Bray) Gold

Bantamweight: John Joe Nevin (Cavan) Silver

Flyweight: Michael Conlan (St John Bosco) Bronze

Light-flyweight: Paddy Barnes (Holy Family) Bronze