Sarjubala Devi through to quarters; Manoj Kumar and Shiva Thapa bow out of Asian Games boxing

Sarjubala Devi defeated Madina Ghaforova 5-0 in a bout which was more gruelling than what the score-line might suggest.
Indian boxer Sarjubala Devi (Photo | Boxing Federation Twitter)
Indian boxer Sarjubala Devi (Photo | Boxing Federation Twitter)

JAKARTA: Former world silver-medallist Sarjubala Devi advanced to the quarterfinals but Manoj Kumar and Shiva Thapa went out after pre-quarterfinal losses in the Asian Games boxing competition here today.

Sarjubala, competing in the flyweight 51kg category, defeated Tajikistan's Madina Ghaforova 5-0 in a bout which was more gruelling than what the score-line might suggest.

Manoj went out after being bested by Kyrgyzstan's Abdurakhman Abdurakhamanov in the welterweight 69kg category, while Shiva spent less than a minute in the ring before referee stopped the contest in favour of China's Jun Shan in the lightweight 60kg category.

"This is boxing, this is sport, even the best have bad days, and today we had a bad day for men. I am glad for Sarjubala and hopefully, the boys will also have a better day tomorrow," Indian boxing's High Performance Director and men's chief coach Santiago Nieva told PTI.

Sarjubala, the reigning national champion, was up against a sprightly opponent and took a while to find her bearings in the bout.

The diminutive Manipuri, after being rattled a bit in the opening three minutes, came back strongly in the next two, hitting straight and hitting hard to get the judges' unanimous nod.

Earlier, two-time Commonwealth Games medallist Manoj was outwitted by Abdurakhamanov in both ring-craft and precision.

The Indian's punches lacked in power and he also struggled to find his way through Abdurakhamanov's shell guard in the first two rounds.

The Kyrgyz boxer dropped his guard in the final three minutes but dominated with his aggressive approach to come out trumps.

In the evening session, Shiva, a three-time Asian Championships medallist and a world championships bronze-winner, faced two knockdowns before the bout was awarded to Shan in the first round itself.

"He got hit by a powerful right and that proved to be it. But he has to bounce back, the best of the best face such things. Everyone who loses should have the strength to bounce back, that's most important," Nieva said.

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