IABA WISHES SEAN CROWLEY A HAPPY BIRTHDAY

 

The Irish Athletic Boxing Association wishes Sean Crowley a happy birthday.

A long-serving Secretary of the Association, Sean turned 90 years young today.

Dom O’Rourke, President of the IABA, described him as one of the great and enduring stalwarts of Irish amateur boxing.

Fergal Carruth, CEO of the IABA, said that Sean had given exemplary service to amateur boxing over many decades and was one of the gentlemen of the sport.

Sean Crowley received a well-deserved standing ovation from officers and delegates at the Irish Athletic Boxing Association (IABA) Central Council meeting at the National Stadium in 2016
when he announced that he was hanging up his gloves as National Secretary.

The IABA stalwart, who boxed with the Fermoy BC and Thurles BC in his youth, admitted that it was an emotional decision.

A Cork man now living in Arklow, Sean Crowley served as National Secretary for almost twenty years under four IABA Presidents, Breandan O Conaire, Dominic O’Rourke, Tommy Murphy and Pat Ryan.

Sean Crowley was inducted into the IABA Hall of Fame for his service to boxing at the IABA Awards Dinner earlier this year at the Louis Fitzgerald Hotel.

Happy Birthday, Sean.

 

IRELAND’S FIRST OLYMPICS AND THE BOXING PARSON

 

Paris 1924

Tipperary’s Paddy Dwyer wrote Irish boxing into the history books after recording our inaugural win at the Olympic Games in 1924.

Ireland entered the Olympics for the first time independently at Paris 1924, and Dwyer, nicknamed Rocky, beat Great Britain’s Richard Basham in the preliminaries and followed that up with a favourable decision over Dutch welterweight Anton Cornelius.

He then KO’d Francois Stauffer (Switzerland) in round three of their quarter-final before being stopped in the third frame by Argentina’s Hector Eugen Mendez – who was beaten by John Delarge of Belgium in the final – in the last four.

Dwyer’s loss is officially recorded as a TKO3, but, according to reports, the Irish fighter had to retire with a deep gash in his forehead because of his opponent’s illegal use of his head.

The last-four finish would have been enough to have earned the man from the Premier County a bronze medal under today’s rules governing the awarding of Olympic silverware.

However, before the 1952 Games, losing semi-finalists had to box-off for bronze.

And Dwyer lost to Douglas Lewis (Canada) in the contest for third place on a walkover because of the injury.

Cork’s Willie “Boy” Murphy, a boxing coach in Clonmel, also recorded a win for Ireland at the 1924 Games, the Army middleweight beating Poland’s Jerzy Nowak before losing to Leslie Black of Canada in the quarter-finals.

The “Boy” was born in India to Cork and Waterford parents and claimed an Egyptian belt in the middleweight class when he was just 17.

Dwyer, Murphy, Myles McDonagh, Robert Hilliard, Mossy Doyle, PJ Kelleher and JC Kidley represented Ireland in the boxing event in Paris. Doyle was beaten by Jackie Fields, who was advised to change his name by his coach, as his real name, Jacob Finkelstein, didn’t sound “tough enough” for a boxer.

Fields, who has been confirmed as the youngest Olympic champion of all time aged 16 by the International Boxing Association, has been inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame and Jewish Boxing Hall of Fame.

Meanwhile, the middleweight final at the 1924 Games was not without controversy as Great Britain’s Harry Mallin, who had won gold at the 1920 Olympics in Antwerp, was beaten in the quarter-finals by Roger Brousse of France.

However, Brousse was disqualified on appeal after medical evidence suggested that Mallin had been bitten during their last-four clash. Mallin, who retired unbeaten as an amateur and never turned pro, then advanced to beat John Elliot, also of Great Britain, in the final. Nations could enter more that one boxer in each weight in Paris where the referee sat outside the ring on a high stool.

Kerry-native Hilliard was one of the more colourful characters with the Irish squad. The Irish Olympian and Trinity College student was the only non-army boxer with Team Ireland and almost ironically, and tragically, in that context he was the only one to fall in battle.

The Killarney-native and Irish Elite champion was, at varying times, a Church of Ireland pastor, Marxist, Atheist, journalist, boxer and soldier in his short life. He volunteered for the Connolly Column for the Spanish Civil War and died fighting for the International Brigades in 1937.

According to reports, Hilliard’s battalion suffered heavy casualties fighting Franco’s forces in the Battle of Rio Jarma on February 12, 1937, and Ireland’s first Olympic bantamweight died of his wounds five days later in a field hospital.

Nicknamed the “Boxing Parson”, Hilliard is namechecked in the Christy Moore song Viva la Quinca Brigada, a tribute to the men who fought in the Spanish Civil War.

“Bob Hilliard was a Church of Ireland pastor; From Killarney’ cross the Pyrenees he came.”
.
Scotland-born James’ Tancy’ Lee, an army instructor and former British champion, was Irish head coach at the Paris Olympics.

Ireland’s chief seconds, given that most of his squad were army men, said his job was to “teach men to fight without bullets.”

Paddy “Rocky’ Dwyer died in 1948 in Thurles. A plaque was erected to the first Irish boxer to reach an Olympic semi-final on Limekill Lane in 2002. Rocky finished in 4th spot at the 1924 Games.

Twenty-seven nations, represented by 181 boxers, competed across eight weight categories in the boxing event at the 1924 Olympiad.

The USA finished on top of the medals table after claiming two gold, two silver and two bronze medals in the boxing ring in the French capital.

All of Ireland’s athletes at the 1924 games received participation medals.

Team Ireland didn’t win any medals in the ring in 1924, but the men of 1924 left their calling card. Ireland was now an Olympic boxing nation.

 

Paris 1924 (July 15/21)

Flyweight: Michael “Myles” McDonagh (Army)
Lost to Ruperto Bieta (Spain) Pts

Bantamweight: Robert Hilliard (Trinity College BC)
Lost to Benjamin Pertuzzo (Argentina) Pts

Featherweight: Mossy Doyle (Army)
Lost to eventual gold medallist Jackie Fields (USA) Pts

Lightweight: PJ Kelleher (Army)
Lost to Ben Rothwell (USA) KO2

Welterweight: Paddy Dwyer (Army)
Beat Richard Basham (Britain) Pts
Beat Anton Cornelius (Holland) Pts
Beat Francois Stauffer (Switzerland) KO3
Lost to Hector Eugen Mendez (Argentina) TKOI3

Bronze medal Box-Off
Lost to Douglas Lewis (Canada) W/O

Middleweight: Willie ‘Boy’ Murphy (Army)
Beat Jerzy Nowak (Poland) KO1
Lost to Leslie Black (Canada) Pts

Light-heavyweight: John Kidley (Army)
Lost to eventual bronze medallist Sverre Sorsdal (Norway) TKO1

Head coach
Tancy Lee

OVER 100 BOXERS QUALIFIED FOR TOKYO

Over 100 male and female boxers have qualified for Tokyo 2021.

Please see below attachment for qualified boxers.

Boxing2020 – List of qualified boxers as of March 25

The Games were scheduled for this July but will now take place next year, probably next summer, in Tokyo after being postponed because of the coronavirus.

The African and Asia/Oceania qualifiers are completed, while the European qualifiers were partially completed in London last week with 16 of the 77 berths secured before the 43-nation competition was suspended because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Ireland, courtesy of Irish captain Brendan Irvine, claimed one of those places in the flyweight class.

The European qualifiers, when they do resume at a date to be confirmed, will recommence where they stopped, with Kellie Harrington, Michaela Walsh, Dean Gardiner, Kiril Afanasev, Michael Nevin, George Bates, Aidan Walsh, Aoife O’Rourke and Emmet Brennan still in play.

Irvine is also slated to meet Spain Gabriel Escobar, who has also qualified, in the quarter-finals with at least bronze up for grabs.

As things stand, over two-thirds of the European qualifiers, the entire Americas qualification event and the final world qualifier in Paris have yet to be decided before the dust settles on the boxing road to Tokyo.

286 boxers – 186 males and 100 females – will compete at the Games.

TOKYO 2020 POSTPONEMENT

 

 

Thomas Bach, President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), believes that the Olympic flame will be the light at the end of the tunnel.

The IOC and Japanese government announced yesterday that Tokyo 2020 has been postponed until next year because of the coronavirus pandemic health threat across the globe.

The move marks the first time the Olympics have been postponed since WW2.

No exact date has been confirmed for the 32nd Olympiad but the Games are expected to go ahead in the summer of next year.

“We want this Olympic flame to be a light at the end of the tunnel. This is why we will work hard now to undertake this extremely challenging task,” said Bach.

Meanwhile, 112 boxers, including Irish captain Brendan Irvine, have qualified through the completed African and Asia/Oceania qualifiers and the partially completed European event in London.

Antrim flyweight and Rio 2016 Olympian Irvine punched his ticket in London on Monday week last hours before organisers announced that the 43-nation tournament was suspended after three days of competition because of Covid-19.

16 of the 77 Olympic berths available in London were secured. The tournament will resume where it stopped at a date to be confirmed.

The Americas qualifiers, scheduled to begin in Buenos Aires this weekend, were deferred because of the coronavirus and the final World qualifier scheduled for Paris will be completed at a date to be determined.

286 boxers – 186 males and 100 females – will be between the ropes in eight weights classes for men and five for women at Tokyo 2021.