WORLD ELITE WOMEN’S CHAMPIONSHIPS DRAW

Ceire Smith will get Ireland’s campaign at the 11th World Elite Women’s Championships underway in Siberia tomorrow.

The Cavan flyweight meets Australia’s Taylah Robertson for a place in the last 16 in Ulan-Ude.

Cork’s Christina Desmond, a European Elite bronze medallist, meets England’s current Commonwealth champion Sandy Ryan in the last 32 on Friday.

Michaela Walsh, the No. 5 seed in Ulan-Ude, is in against Mali feather on Saturday, followed by Amy Broadhurst versus German light Maya Kleinhans on Sunday.

Team Ireland participated in the opening ceremony for the 11th edition of the tournament this afternoon.

Boxing begins at 11am tomorrow morning (Irish time). Smith will be in the ring at approximately 11.30am.

Desmond is in action at approximately 12.30pm (Irish time) on Friday.

Click here for Day 1 & 2 schedule.

Ulan-Ude is seven hours ahead of Ireland.

Click here for live stream.

 

World Women’s Elite Championships Ulan-Ude, Siberia, Russia

October 3

Last 32

51kg: Ceire Smith (Ireland) v Taylah Robertson (Australia)

October 4

Last 32

69kg Christina Desmond (Ireland) v Sandy Ryan (England)

October 5

Last 32

57kg Michaela Walsh (Ireland) v Carmara Fatoumata (Mali)

October 6

Last 32

60kg Amy Broadhurst (Ireland) v Maya Kleinhans (Germany)

 

Irish squad

51kg Ceire Smith (Cavan)

57kg Michaela Walsh (Monkstown, Antrim)

60kg Amy Broadhurst (Dealgan)

69kg Christina Desmond (Fr Horgan’s)

High-Performance Director: Bernard Dunne

Head coach: Zaur Antia

Dimitry Dimitruk and Damian Kennedy

 

 

WORLD WOMEN’S ELITE C’SHIPS COUNTDOWN BEGINS

 

The draw for the 2019 World Women’s Elite Championships begins at 9am (Irish time) tomorrow morning in Ulan-Ude, Siberia.

It’s expected that 67 nations will go into the hat for the draw at the first World Women’s Elites in Russia since Podolsk 2005 where Katie Taylor and Alanna Murphy reached the quarter-finals.

The opening ceremony will also be held tomorrow with boxing slated to begin on Thursday at 6am (Irish time).

Ulan-Ude is seven hours ahead of Ireland.

 

The four-strong Irish squad of Ceire Smith, Michaela Walsh, Amy Broadhurst and Christina Desmond and staff arrived in Siberia last Friday following their training camp at the German Olympic Centre in Kienbaum.

The Irish quartet is competing in four – flyweight, featherweight, lightweight and welterweight – of the five Olympic weights for women at the 11th edition of the tournament.

The first Olympic qualifier will be in London next March.

Bernard Dunne, IABA High-Performance Director, said that the team is in top shape and eager to get into the ring in Ulan-Ude.

Russian coach Sofya Ochigava, a gold medalist at 52kg in Podolsk 14 years ago, believes the tournament will be a test for the host nation.

“I can also remember the successful result at the women’s world championship in 2005. Now the most important thing is to competently approach the tournament, psychologically set up and try to achieve a good result,” said Ochigava who beat Katie Taylor in the 2010 Usti Memorial in the Czech Republic but lost the 2011 and 2012 European, World and Olympic finals to the Bray woman.

 

 

11th World Women’s Elite Championships Ulan-Ude, Siberia, Russia

Irish squad 

51kg Ceire Smith (Cavan)

57kg Michaela Walsh (Monkstown, Antrim)

60kg Amy Broadhurst (Dealgan)

69kg Christina Desmond (Fr Horgan’s)

High-Performance Director: Bernard Dunne

Head coach: Zaur Antia

Dimitry Dimitruk and Damian Kennedy

IRELAND VERSUS GERMANY AWAY INTERNATIONALS

Image: Team Manager Emmet Colgan with seventeen of his twenty boxers for this weeks Schoolboy/schoolgirl Internationals against Germany in Leipzig, following their final training session at the High-Performance Gym at the National Boxing Stadium on Sunday.

Boxers meet in the early hours of Thursday morning at 03:15 (Wednesday night/Thursday morning) at Dublin Airport, Terminal 1.

They must arrive in their Irish tracksuits with their Red boxing gear – vest + shorts, red headguards, gloves (for pad work), gumshields (not red, partially red or orange) wraps, groin guards or chest protectors and a small towel.

All their essential boxing items must be kept in their 8KG carry on bag.

All other items of clothing, toiletries and travel accessories, need to be put in their suitcase (max 20KG) which is placed in the hold of the plane. All team members travelling should bring a European 2-pin adaptor for their phones and other electronic devices to charge.

Boxers must bring their passport and their club boxing record book (if not already handed in at training). Boxers who have boxed at the Europeans don’t require a club book, as they will box on their International record book.

Flights to and from Germany will be with Lufthansa and the boxers will return to Ireland on Sunday night, October 6th at 22:35.

Current European Schoolboy champion Adam Olaniyan will captain Ireland in Germany.

Irish squad

Female

36KG Abbie Convery (Jobstown)
48KG Shauna Riordan (Sliabh Luachra)
50KG Carleigh Irving (Illies G.G)
52KG Nora Jackman (Paulstown)
54KG Georgia McGovern (Drimnagh)
64KG Emma Keating (Paulstown)

Male

36KG Martin McDonagh (Avona)
38KG Patsy Joyce (Olympic Mullingar)
40KG Roy Colgan (Avona)
42KG Paul Fitzgerald (Corinthians)
44KG Danny O’Reilly (St.Pauls W/ford)
46KG Anton Genockey (Docklands)
48KG Ben Dempsey (Achill)
50KG Daragh Lawlor (Mayfield)
52KG Padraig Stapleton (Monkstown)
54KG Ryan Connolly (Setanta Kildare)
56KG Lee McEvoy (Avona)
60KG Bobbi Flood (Cabra)
65KG James Maguire (Holy Family Drogheda)
80KG Adam Olaniyan (Jobstown)

Coach/team manager: Emmet Colgan

Coaches: Martin Donovan, Kathleen Meli, Nicole Meli

R&J: Mick Gill

TRAINING NOTICE FOR THIS SUNDAY AT STADIUM

 

 

All boxers must bring their passports and boxing record books to training this Sunday.

Ireland will have a final training session at the National Stadium gym this Sunday, September 29, ahead of two away meetings with Germany.

Training begins at 11am on Sunday and runs until 3.30pm.

Ireland’s 20-strong team meet Germany in two underage internationals in the Leipzig area on October 4 and 5. The team travel on October 3 and return on October 6.

Please scroll down for full squad and staff.

 

 

Irish squad

Female

36KG Abbie Convery (Jobstown)
48KG Shauna Riordan (Sliabh Luachra)
50KG Carleigh Irving (Illies G.G)
52KG Nora Jackman (Paulstown)
54KG Georgia McGovern (Drimnagh)
64KG Emma Keating (Paulstown)

Male

36KG Martin McDonagh (Avona)
38KG Patsy Joyce (Olympic Mullingar)
40KG Roy Colgan (Avona)
42KG Paul Fitzgerald (Corinthians)
44KG Danny O’Reilly (St.Pauls W/ford)
46KG Anton Genockey (Docklands)
48KG Ben Dempsey (Achill)
50KG Daragh Lawlor (Mayfield)
52KG Padraig Stapleton (Monkstown)
54KG Ryan Connolly (Setanta Kildare)
56KG Lee McEvoy (Avona)
60KG Bobbi Flood (Cabra)
65KG James Maguire (Holy Family Drogheda)
80KG Adam Olaniyan (Jobstown)

Coach/team manager: Emmet Colgan

Coaches: Martin Donovan, Kathleen Meli, Nicole Meli

R&J: Mick Gill

 

 

IRELAND AT THE WORLD ELITE CHAMPIONSHIPS

 

Today marks the 30th anniversary of Michael Carruth’s bronze medal win at the 1989 AIBA World Elite Championships in Moscow.

Three decades after the Irish women’s team – who arrived in Russia yesterday for the World Women’s Elites which begin in Siberia next Thursday –  Carruth became the second Irish boxer after Tommy Corr to medal at this level.

Boxing at light-welter, the Dubliner beat Khaliu Rahilov of France and Kipper Kelp of the USA en route to the semi-finals where he lost to eventual silver medallist Andreas Otto of East Germany for a place in the 64kg final.

Three years later, the Drimnagh BC southpaw beat Otto, who was then representing a unified Germany following the fall of the Berlin Wall, in the last eight en route to gold at Barcelona 1992.

“I can’t believe that on the 28th of September it will be 30 years since I won that bronze medal. What a team I had with me,” Carruth told Irish Boxing Legends.

Carruth, Roy Nash, Joe Lowe, Joe Lawlor and current American head coach Billy Walsh, who is also in Siberia this week for the World Women’s Elites, represented Ireland at Moscow 1989 which was the first major tournament to use the computer scoring system.

Former IABA President Brendan O Conaire, Mickey Hawkins and Tommy Kelleher worked Ireland’s corner.

A few weeks after Carruth won bronze, the Republic of Ireland beat Malta 2-0 to qualify for the World Cup for the first time at Italia 90. Tipperary won the All-Ireland hurling title and Cork the All-Ireland football Championships.

Overall, Irish male and female boxing have won 21 World Elite medals at the World Elites.

Katie Taylor secured our first gold in 2006 in India and it took ten years for the world to figure out how to loosen her grip on the 60kg title as the Bray lightweight went on to add another four gold medals and a bronze to her collection.

Michael Conlan claimed Ireland’s first male title on the Persian Gulf in 2015 and ended up being hailed as “Michael of Arabia” by one Irish newspaper and  Kellie Harrington brought the lightweight belt back to Ireland from New Delhi last year.

Irish female boxing is lying in 7th position in the all-time Worlds table with 8 medals – 6 gold, 1 silver and 1 bronze.

Irish male boxing occupies joint 23rd position with Poland in the all-time pecking order with 13 medals – 1 gold, 3 silver, 9 bronze.

Taylor (6), Harrington (2), Joe Ward (3) and John Joe Nevin (2) have medalled more than once at the World Elites.

Meanwhile, Ceire Smith, Michaela Walsh, Amy Broadhurst and Christina Desmond will be aiming to increase Ireland’s haul in Ulan-Ude, Siberia.

The squad arrived in Siberia yesterday following their training camp at the German Olympic Centre in Kienbaum and are putting the finishing touches to their preparations ahead of next Wednesday draw at the 11th edition of the tournament.

It’s expected that 67 nations will go into the hat for the draw.

(Images: Michael Carruth celebrates winning Olympic gold. Michael Carruth with Kellie Harrington, Eric Donovan and Mick Dowling and Irish team and a Siberian welcoming committee yesterday)

 

 

 

IRELAND AT WORLD ELITE MEN’S AND WOMEN’S ELITES CHAMPIONSHIPS

1982 West Germany
71kg Tommy Corr Bronze

1989 Russia
64kg Michael Carruth Bronze

1993 Finland
51kg Damaen Kelly Bronze

1997 Hungary
81kg Stephen Kirk Bronze

2001 Belfast
69kg James Moore Bronze

2006 India
60kg Katie Taylor Gold

2008 China
60kg Katie Taylor Gold

2009 Italy
54kg John Joe Nevin Bronze

2012 Barbados
60kg Katie Taylor Gold

2011 Azerbaijan
56kg John Joe Nevin Bronze

2012 China
60kg Katie Taylor Gold

2013 Kazakhstan
75kg Jason Quigley Silver
81kg Joe Ward Bronze

2014 South Korea
60kg Katie Taylor Gold

2015 Qatar
56kg Michael Conlan Gold
81kg Joe Ward Silver
75kg Michael O’Reilly Bronze

2016 Kazakhstan
64kg Kellie Harrington Silver
60kg Katie Taylor Bronze

2017 Germany
81kg Joe Ward Silver

2018 India
60kg Kellie Harrington Gold