2001 Women's World Amateur Boxing Championships

2001 Women's World Amateur Boxing Championships
LocationScranton, Pennsylvania
DatesOctober 21-27, 2001

The 2001 Women's World Amateur Boxing Championships was an international women's boxing competition hosted by the United States from October 21 to 27 2001 in Scranton, Pennsylvania. The competition was the first women’s world amateur boxing championships.[1][2]

Results

Bronze medals are awarded to both losing semi-finalists.

2001 World Women's Boxing Championship
Weight Gold Silver Bronze
45 kg Yelena Sabitova Maria Norozenik Camelia Negrea Kim Peturson
48 kg Hülya Şahin Mary Kom Jamie Behl Carina Moreno
51 kg Simona Galassi Tammy DeLaforest Katrin Enoksson Diana Ungureanu
54 kg Yelena Karpecheva Audrey Garcia Wendy Broad Renate Medby
57 kg Zhang Maomao Henriette Birkeland Jeannine Garside Alexandra Matheus
60 kg Crystelle Samson Tatyana Chalaya Teuta Cuni Amber Gideon
63.5 kg Frida Wallberg Myriam Lamare Cristina Cerpi Donna Mancuso
67 kg Irina Sinetskaya Natalie Brown Melanie Horne Tristan Whiston
71 kg Ivett Pruzsinszky Not awarded Nurcan Çarkçı Irina Smirnova
75 kg Anna Laurell Anita Ducza Svetlana Andreyeva Guo Shuai
81 kg Olga Domouladzhanova Viktoria Kovacs Tanya Fowler Faye Jacobs-Hollins
90 kg Devonne Canady Mária Kovács Mariya Reingard Selma Yağcı

[3]

  • 71 Kg Drapeau Russian Natalya Kolpakova gain silver medals but disqualified and deprived of their silver medals in 2001 Women's World Amateur Boxing Championships, which were not transferred to other athletes.

Medal count table

2001 World Women's Boxing Championship
Pos Country Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Russia 4 1 2 7
2

Sweden

2 2 4
3 Hungary 1 4 5
4 Canada 1 1 7 9
5 United States 1 3 4
6 Turkey 1 2 3
7 China 1 1 2
7= Italy 1 1 2
9 France 2 2
10 Norway 1 1 2
11 India 1 1
11= Jamaica 1 1
13 Romania 2 2
14 Denmark 1 1
14= Moldova 1 1
14=

New Zealand

1 1
Total 12 11 24 47

References

  1. ^ Dashper, Katherine; Fletcher, Thomas; Mccullough, Nicola (25 July 2014). Sports Events, Society and Culture. Routledge. p. 90. ISBN 9781134053278 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ "Women's boxing is in safe hands with the new generation after fighting its way back from a sordid past". Independent.co.uk. 27 March 2017. Archived from the original on 2022-05-01. Retrieved 12 May 2017.
  3. ^ "Documents Archive - AIBA" (PDF). AIBA. Retrieved 12 May 2017.