Roy Jones Jr gets 1988 Olympic gold medal from the man who beat him

  • Korean rival returns Jones’ 1988 medal in surprise

  • Park Si-hun: ‘It belongs to you’ at Florida reunion

  • Bout’s judging remains infamous Olympic scandal

Roy Jones Jr has been handed the Olympic gold medal he was controversially denied in 1988 in an extraordinary act of sportsmanship by the South Korean fighter who beat him.

Hall of Fame boxer Jones shared a video on Wednesday from two years ago that showed Park Si-hun visiting the American’s ranch in Pensacola, Florida to present him with the light middleweight gold medal.

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France’s female boxers are banned from world championships due to genetic sex test delay

  • French federation calls exclusion ‘a profound injustice’

  • World Boxing insists it warned all competitors of policy

French female boxers have been barred from competing at the inaugural World Boxing Championships in Liverpool after failing to meet a deadline for a genetic sex test that the French boxing federation (FFBoxe) said was incompatible with French law.

World Boxing, which issued a list of competitors for Thursday’s opening rounds with no French entrants included, said it would not comment on individual cases but added it had warned all federations of the policy.

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Imane Khelif ‘has right to appeal’ over gender tests but will miss world championships

  • Olympic boxing body stands firm over new testing rules

  • Gold medalist has appealed to Cas over eligibility bar

Imane Khelif has the right to appeal against World Boxing’s decision barring her from events unless she undergoes genetic sex testing but the Algerian has not entered the world championships in Liverpool, the World Boxing president, Boris van der Vorst, has said.

World Boxing, which will oversee the tournaments at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, introduced mandatory sex testing for all boxers in its competitions in May, less than a year after Khelif and Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting won gold in Paris amid a gender-eligibility row.

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Imane Khelif appeals to Cas over World Boxing’s genetic sex test decision

  • Algerian won Olympic welterweight gold in Paris

  • Taiwan’s Lin to miss upcoming world championships

Imane Khelif has appealed to the court of arbitration for sport over World Boxing’s decision to bar the 26-year-old from its events without a preliminary genetic sex test.

A court statement said an appeal was filed by Khelif on 5 August seeking to overturn a decision by World Boxing blocking the Algerian’s participation in the Box Cup in Eindhoven or any World Boxing event until a genetic sex test had taken place.

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Joe Bugner obituary

British heavyweight boxer who twice took on Muhammad Ali and beat Henry Cooper in 1971

Joe Bugner, who has died aged 75, twice went the distance with the great Muhammad Ali – the second time in a failed 1975 world title challenge – and also lost to the fearsome Joe Frazier in an epic contest. But the British sporting public never loved him in the way of heavyweight boxers such as Frank Bruno, Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury.

Perhaps he was never forgiven for defeating Henry Cooper at Wembley, three days after his 21st birthday in March 1971, by the narrowest of margins in a points decision that remained a subject of controversy for decades to come.

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Former British heavyweight Joe Bugner, who twice took on Muhammad Ali, dies aged 75

  • Bugner was a British, Commonwealth and European champion

  • BBBoC announces Bugner’s death at care home in Brisbane

Joe Bugner, the British heavyweight who went the distance with boxing legends Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier in the 1970s, has died aged 75, it has been announced.

Bugner twice held the British and Commonwealth heavyweight titles and was a three-time European heavyweight champion, holding all three for the first time when defeating Henry Cooper in 1971.

More details to follow

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Moses Itauma should take ‘baby steps’ before fighting Usyk, warns Amir Khan

  • British heavyweight destroyed Dillian Whyte

  • Khan thinks Joseph Parker a good option for youngster

Moses Itauma should continue to steadily build his journey through the heavyweight ranks rather than risk getting hurt by taking a showdown with Oleksandr Usyk “too early”, according to the former unified light-welterweight world champion Amir Khan.

The Chatham southpaw Itauma extended his perfect record through 13 professional fights with an impressive first-round knockout of his British rival Dillian Whyte in Riyadh on Saturday. The 20-year-old’s devastating performance against the former WBC interim heavyweight champion Whyte, 37, led to Tyson Fury claiming that Itauma would beat the undisputed world heavyweight champion, Usyk.

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Moses Itauma stuns Dillian Whyte with devastating first-round knockout

  • Winner extends perfect record and closer to world title shot

  • Veteran sent crashing to canvas within two minutes

Moses Itauma blew away Dillian Whyte with a devastating first-round knockout in their all-British heavyweight clash in Riyadh. The 20-year-old extended his perfect record through 13 professional fights as he sent veteran Whyte sprawling to the canvas inside two minutes.

The 37-year-old Whyte, a former WBC interim heavyweight champion, was not given any time to settle as Itauma – who had been made to wait in the ring by a delayed walk-in from his British rival – immediately went on the front foot.

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Japan boxing authorities toughen up safety measures after deaths of two fighters in two days

The Japan Boxing Commission will crack down on rapid dehydration to ‘make weight’, which experts say makes the brain susceptible to bleeding

Boxing authorities in Japan will introduce stricter safety measures after the sport was left in shock by the deaths this month of two boxers competing in the same event.

Officials from the Japan Boxing Commission (JBC) told reporters this week the changes would include pre-bout urine tests, tougher rules on rapid weight loss and improvements in ringside medical services.

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‘Irreparable loss’: Two Japanese boxers on same card die from brain injuries

  • Hiromasa Urakawa passes days after Shigetoshi Kotari died

  • Pair had been injured in fights at same event in Tokyo on 2 August

Two Japanese boxers have died days after suffering brain injuries in separate fights on the same card, boxing associations and media reports said.

Shigetoshi Kotari died on Friday and Hiromasa Urakawa on Saturday after being injured in their fights at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo on 2 August, Japanese media said.

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Claressa Shields eases past Lani Daniels to defend undisputed heavyweight title

  • Shields wins on points before 15,366 in Detroit

  • Defends undisputed women’s heavyweight title

  • Daniels offers some resistance but is outclassed

Claressa Shields retained her undisputed women’s heavyweight championship with a commanding unanimous decision over Lani Daniels on Saturday night at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit.

The judges scored the bout 100-90, 99-91 and 99-91 in favor of Shields, who improved to 17-0 (3 KOs). It marked the third straight main event appearance in Detroit for the 30-year-old Flint native and two-time Olympic gold medalist, who remains the only boxer in the four-belt era to become an undisputed champion in three different weight classes.

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