In Your Corner, IABA’s Strategic Plan 2024-2028

IABA is launching the Strategic Plan 2024-2028, In Your Corner, today, as Irish Boxing prepares to celebrate its Olympic centenary.

Development of this strategy was driven by members and included an online member consultation, in October-November 2023 and 7 in-person member consultation workshops at locations throughout the Association, between November and February. Consultations also took place with key stakeholders, such as SportNI, Sport Ireland, and the Olympic Federation of Ireland.

  • IABA’s Strategic Plan, In Your Corner, encompasses the period up to LA 2028, and key elements are:
  • Provision for the reform of the Association’s internal architecture
  • A High Performance Youth and Juniors Pathway, from grassroots to the top of the Olympic podium
  • Ambitious targets for member, club and coach growth
  • Redevelopment of the home of Irish Boxing, the National Stadium
  • Identifying and actioning funding streams, to better support the development of our sport.
  • Working to ensure Irish Boxing has visibility in the media outside the Olympic cycle

In Your Corner is Irish Boxing’s most ambitious strategic plan to date, a plan in which we safeguard our heritage, and shape our legacy – not only as Ireland’s most successful Olympic sport, but as the heart of the communities in which our clubs are rooted.

This plan is published as IABA approaches the 100th anniversary of Irish Boxing’s participation in the Olympic Games, having qualified a team of 10 – the largest since Rome 1960. Our sport remains Ireland’s most successful Olympic Sport, winning 18 of Ireland’s 35 medals. Half of Irish Boxing’s Olympic medals have been won in an extraordinary 20-year period of international success. Our ability to contest and achieve on the international stage, relative to the size of our Association, is virtually unmatched. This talent must be supported and protected at every level through our High Performance Programme.  In Your Corner includes a High Performance Youth & Junior Pathway process, and Coaching and R&J skill-building to ensure we can build, even further, on the international stage.

Chair of IABA’s Board of Directors, Niall O’Carroll, says” As our community evolves, the Association must further develop to meet the changing needs of the Irish Boxing Family. This includes streamlining structure, creating more and better skill building opportunities for members in every kind of role in our community – from boxer, to youth and club leadership, regional and national leadership. We must invest in our community to ensure it meets the needs members have shared with us, but also allows us to open the doors of our sport to wider society and grow the number of clubs, boxers – competitive and non-competitive, coaches, R&Js and boxing administrators.”

Niall O’Carroll adds “We have many challenges to face at home and internationally. Our Association cannot continue to rely solely on our funders to finance our future development. Revenue streams must be identified and secured for investment in our sport, our visibility in the media should no longer be tied only to our remarkable Olympic success, and we must invest in technologies to better serve our community. We must also decide where our future, internationally, lies. That decision is within the sole gift of our members.”

Interim CEO John Nangle says “Our Association would not exist without the thousands of people who give, relentlessly, of their time to their clubs, their boxers, and to local, regional and national competition. This strategy was created by the Boxing Community for the Boxing Community, and their support of it ensure a bright and certain future for our sport.”

John adds “Key elements of this strategy include be a needs analysis of clubs, the recruitment of staff in membership services management roles, and the implementation of a CRM that will best serve the needs of our members. We’ll also be seeking an academic partner to conduct long over-due research in to the profound benefits boxing clubs have within their communities. This is an exciting time.”

The creation of this far-reaching four-year plan was a highly collaborative process in which all members of the Boxing Community could engage in a range of in-person, remote and online settings. Each member of the Boxing Community who participated in this partnership process brought with them an intimate knowledge of our sport and invaluable sign-posting of our path forward, together.

Notes

Development of this strategy, over a period of 6 months included:

  • Establishment of a Steering Group, comprised of members, staff and Board of Directors representatives.
  • An online member consultation
  • 6 in-person member consultation workshops at locations throughout the Association
  • Consultation workshops with staff, funders and external stakeholders.

In Your Corner was developed with the facilitation of Maeve Buckley of Leading Sport

Paris 2024

The team is in taper camp at the Olympic Village, preparing for the draw, which takes place at 6pm today.

Team and bios are available here

FAQs on scheduling, the draw, seeding and how to watch, available here

Requests for #TeamIreland via OFI Head of Communications, Heather Boyle heather@olympicsport.ie // +353 87 337 1954

About IABA

Formed in 1911, the Irish Athletic Boxing Association is the governing body for boxing on the island of Ireland. IABA is home to more than 350 clubs and 17,000 members. Over 80% of our membership is under the age of 18. The IABA operates from the National Stadium in Dublin, the only purpose-built amateur boxing stadium in the world.

In Your Corner: IABA Strategic Plan, 2024-2028

Paris 2024: Dean Clancy to open Team Ireland’s Olympic account.

63.5kg Dean Clancy makes his Olympic debut, and heralds Ireland’s Olympic boxing centenary when he steps in to the field of play at the North Paris Arena this afternoon.

He takes on Jordan’s Obada Alkasbeh in Round of 32 action. He’s in the ring in Bout 8 of the Afternoon Session. That session begins at 2.30pm, Irish time, and Dean’s ringwalk is forecast for 4.20pm.

Alkasbeh, is a Rio 2016 Olympian, who exited at the Round of 32 stage. He qualified for Paris at the 1st Olympic World Qualifier in Milan, following three wins. Most recently, he contested the 2024 Asian Games but exited at preliminaries stage.

Team Ireland Boxing at this Olympic Games is the largest since Rome of 1960. Only Australia (12) & Uzbekistan (11) will have more boxers in Paris. Team Ireland is one of only 3 countries to have qualified a woman at all weights – an extraordinary achievement, given Paris is only the fourth Olympic cycle at which women may box.

Day One – July 27th, Round of 32

Boxing Schedule

Boxing from July 27th to August 3rd takes place at the North Paris Arena. Boxing from August 4th to 10th takes place at Roland Garros. August 5th is a rest day at the tournament.

Morning sessions begin at 10am, Irish time.

Afternoon sessions begin at 2.30pm, Irish time

Evening sessions begin at 7pm, Irish time.

July 27th Round of 32: W54kg, W60kg, M63.5kg & M80kg.

July 28th Round of 32: W50kg, W66kg, M57kg, M71kg, M92kg % M92+kg.

July 29th Last 16 in M63.5, 92 & 92+kg, and W60kg

July 30th Last 16 in M51 & M80kg, and W54 & W57kg

July 31st Last 16 M57 & 71kg, and W75kg, plus QF of W60kg

August 1st QF of M63.5 & 92kg, last 16 W50 & 66kg, QF of W54kg

August 2nd QF of M51, 80 & +92kg, and last 16 W57kg

August 3rd QF of M57 & 71kg, and W50 & 66kg, SF of W60kg

August 4th SF of M51, 63.5, 80 & 92kg,QF W57 & 75kg, SF of W54kg

August 5th rest day

August 6th SF of M71kg, SF W50 & 66kg, and W60kg final

August 7th SF M92+kg & W57kg, Finals of M63.5 & 80kg

August 8th SF M57kg & W75kg, Finals M51kg and W54kg

August 9th Finals of M71 & 92kg, Finals of W50 & 66kg

August 10th Finals of M57 & 92+kg, Finals of  W57 & 75kg

Draws

All draws are available here and here

Watch

RTE will have significant coverage of the Games on RTE 2, RTE Player, online, on Radio and through the RTE app. Full details are available here

The full Games streaming service for all sports is here:

https://www.discoveryplus.com/ie/olympics/sport/boxing

Team Ireland Boxing

Athletes:

Kellie Harrington (Dublin) Women’s 60kg

Aidan Walsh (Belfast) Men’s 71kg

Aoife O’Rourke (Castlerea) Women’s -75kg

Daina Moorehouse (Bray) Women’s -50kg

Dean Clancy (Sligo) Men’s 63.5kg

Grainne Walsh (Tullamore) Women’s -66kg

Jude Gallagher (Newtownstewart, Co. Tyrone) Men’s -57kg

Jennifer Lehane (Ashbourne, Co. Meath) Women’s -54kg

Jack Marley (Sallynoggin, Dublin) Men’s -92kg

Michaela Walsh (Belfast) Women’s -57kg

Staff:

Tricia Heberle – Performance Director & Team Leader

Zauri Antia – Head Coach

Damian Kennedy – Coach

Lynne McEnery – Coach

James Doyle – Coach

Jim Clover – Doctor

Lorcan McGee – Physio

Paula Fitzpatrick – Physiologist

IABA Paris Ambassadors attend Team Ireland reception & boxing at the North Paris Arena

IABA’s #Paris2024 Ambassadors, Anna Moore and Nicky White, with our Chair Niall O’Carroll, were honoured to attend a TeamIreland reception at the Embassy of Ireland, Paris, this morning.

Hosted by Ireland’s Ambassador to France, Niall Burgess and attended by An Taoiseach Simon Harris and Minister Catherine Martin, the event honoured friends of family of Ireland’s Olympians.

Also in attendance was the President of the Olympic Federation of Ireland Sarah Keane, and its CEO, Peter Sherard, Sport Ireland’s Chief Executive Una May and boxing families, including 57kg Jude Gallagher’s father, John of Two Castles Olympic BC.

Anna and Nicky were the only Olympic sport representatives formally presented to the Taoiseach.

This afternoon, the Ambassadors and Chair attend boxing at the North Paris Arena, where Dean Clancy opened Team Ireland’s account. The decision didn’t go Dean’s way, but the Ambassadors were able to meet members of the team not boxing today – 50kg Daina Moorehouse and 54kg Jennifer Lehane.

On Sunday, the Ambassadors and Chair will attend all three sessions of boxing at the North Paris Arena, to watch 71kg Aidan Walsh, 66kg Grainne Walsh and 92kg Jack Marley open their Paris accounts.

100 years of Irish Olympic Boxing: the team of Tokyo 2020.

There’s under 24 hours to go until the first bell at Paris 2024, and the advent of Irish Boxing’s Olympic centenary.

We’ve celebrated every Irish Olympic Boxing team since Paris 1924 – and today, we honour the team of Tokyo 2020.

This extraordinary team includes 4 members preparing to make their Paris debut: defending lightweight champion, Kellie Harrington, Tokyo bronze medalist, Aidan Walsh, and Tokyo Olympians Aoife O’Rourke and Michaela Walsh.

The team also included Brendan Irvine, who became a double Olympian, and now pro-boxers, Kurt Walker and Emmet Brennan.

Team Ireland Boxing’s High Performance Director, Tricia Heberle, was Team Ireland Chef de Mission for Tokyo 2020.

Aidan suffered an agonising ankle injury on celebrating his quarter final win over Mervin Clair (Mauritius), and had to give a semi-final walkover.

Kellie came from behind to beat Brazil’s Beatriz Ferreira on a unanimous decision in the lightweight final at the Kokugikan Arena. Ferreira, walking down the Irish champion, took the first round 3-2, courtesy of hooks and uppercuts with Harrington beginning the find her range near the end of the round. But the second round was all about Harrington, with the 2018 World Elite champion holding her composure and getting her timing and range spot on to take the frame on all five cards.

Ferreira, the 2019 World gold medalist. continued chasing Harrington in the third but the new Olympic champion kept picking off her shots en route to a famous win after a masterclass in the second and third rounds.

Harrington joined Michael Carruth and Katie Taylor as one of three Irish boxers to win Olympic gold.

Team Ireland: Tokyo 2020

July 24th

Last 32
57kg Kurt Walker (Ireland) beat Jose Quiles (Spain) 5-0

July 25th

Last 32
81kg Emmet Brennan (Ireland) lost to Dilshod Ruzmetov (Uzbekistan) 0-5

July 26th
Last 32

52kg Brendan Irvine (Ireland) lost to Carlo Paalam (Philippines) 1-4

Last 16
57kg Michaela Walsh (Ireland) lost to Irma Testa (Italy) 0-5

July 27th
Last 16

69kg Aidan Walsh (Ireland) beat Albert Menque (Cameroon) 5-0

July 28th

Last 16

75kg Aoife O’Rourke (Ireland) lost to Qian Li (China) 0-5
57kg Kurt Walker (Ireland) beat Mirazizbek Mitzakhalilov (Uzbekistan) 4-1

July 30th
Last 16

60hk Kellie Harrington (Ireland) beat Rebecca Nicoli (Italy) 5-0

Quarter-final
69kg Aidan Walsh (Ireland) beat Mervin Clair (Mauritius) 4-1

August 1st

Quarter-final

57kg Kurt Walker (Ireland) lost to Duke Ragan (USA) 2-3

Semi-final

69kg Aidan Walsh (Ireland) lost to Pat McCormack (Great Britain) (W/O)

(Walsh sustains an ankle injury)

August 3rd

Quarter-final

60kg Kellie Harrington (Ireland) beat Imane Khelif (Algeria) 5-0

August 5th

Semi-final

60kg Kellie Harrington (Ireland) beat Sudaporn Sessondee (Thailand) 3-2

August 8th

Final

60kg Kellie Harrington (Ireland) beat Beatriz Ferreira (Brazil) 5-0

Check out the highlights of Tokyo 2020

Originally scheduled to take place from 24 July to 9 August 2020, the event was postponed to 2021 on 24 March 2020 due to the global COVID-19 pandemic, the first such instance in the history of the Olympic Games (several previous games had been cancelled but not rescheduled) However, the event retained the Tokyo 2020 branding for marketing purposes. It was largely held behind closed doors with no public spectators permitted due to the declaration of a state of emergency in the Greater Tokyo Area in response to the pandemic, the first and only Olympic Games to be held without official spectators. The Games were the most expensive ever, with total spending of over $20 billion.

The United States topped the medal table by both total golds (39) and total medals (113), with China finishing second by both respects (38 and 89). Host nation Japan finished third, setting a record for the most gold medals and total medals ever won by their delegation at an Olympic Games with 27 and 58. Great Britain finished fourth, with a total of 22 gold and 64 medals. The Russian delegation competing as the ROC finished fifth with 20 gold medals and third in the overall medal count, with 71 medals. Bermuda, the Philippines and Qatar won their first-ever Olympic gold medals. Burkina Faso, San Marino and Turkmenistan also won their first-ever Olympic medals.

Youthful, Urban, and Gender-Equal

The Tokyo 2020 Games showcased the evolution of the Olympic programme, introducing new sports and events that strengthened the timeless appeal of the Olympic Games for a new generation. Tokyo 2020’s 339 events in 33 sports—the most in Olympic history—included the Olympic debut of sports such as skateboarding, sport climbing, surfing and karate, as well as events such as BMX freestyle and 3×3 basketball.

IABA Paris Ambassadors depart for the City of Light.

IABA’s Paris Ambassadors, Anna Moore and Nicky White, are en route to the City of Light with Chair of our Board, Niall O’Carroll.

Anna Moore of St. Francis BC, was crowned the Mammy of Irish Boxing by Kellie Harrington following her Tokyo win.

Nicky, Chair of Ballagh BC, is former IABA President, an IABA Hall of Fame inductee, and the recipient of an IABA Services to Boxing Award. He is the current President of Wexford County Board

Anna, Nicky and Niall will attend cultural events while in Paris, and also travel to the North Paris Arena, to watch #TeamIreland‘s Dean Clancy, Jack Marley Aidan Walsh and Grainne Walsh contest their opening Olympic bouts.

Niall O’Carroll says “It’s a great honour to travel with Anna and Nicky to the Paris 2024 Olympic Games – their decades-long commitment to boxing is nothing short of remarkable. Anna and Nicky, and the thousands of others in clubs throughout the Association who give relentlessly of their time, skill and knowledge, are the lifeblood of our sport. I’m looking forward to sitting in the stands of the North Paris Arena with them, as we witness our historic Paris team begin their Olympic campaign”

Check out our Seconds Out: Stories of Irish Boxing profile of Anna: