Jump to content

2015 European Amateur Boxing Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2015 European Amateur Boxing Championships
Host citySamokov
CountryBulgaria
Nations44
Dates8–15 August

The Men's 2015 European Amateur Boxing Championships were held in Samokov, Bulgaria from August 8 to August 15. It is the 41st edition of this biennial competition organised by the European governing body for amateur boxing, the EUBC.

44 nations took part in the competition, including Great Britain, who entered a united team for the first time - previously the constituent nations of England, Scotland and Wales each entered separately. Russia topped the medal table with 4 golds from 4 finals, while the unified British team won the most medals, 6, and reached the most finals, 5, although winning only 1 gold medal.

Schedule

[edit]
Date Round
8-11 August 2015 Preliminaries
12 August 2015 Quarterfinals
14 August 2015 Semifinals
15 August 2015 Finals

Medal winners

[edit]

The medal winners are:[1]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Light Flyweight
(–49 kg)
 Vasilii Egorov (RUS)  Harvey Horn (GBR)  Tinko Banabakov (BUL)

 Rufat Huseynov (AZE)

Flyweight
(–52 kg)
 Daniel Asenov (BUL)  Muhammad Ali (GBR)  Nandor Csoka (HUN)

 Kelvin de la Nieve (ESP)

Bantamweight
(–56 kg)
 Michael Conlan (IRL)  Qais Ashfaq (GBR)  Francesco Maietta (ITA)

 Aram Avagyan (ARM)

Lightweight
(–60 kg)
 Joseph Cordina (GBR)  Otar Eranosyan (GEO)  Enrico Lacruz (NED)

 Elian Demitrov (BUL)

Light Welterweight
(–64 kg)
 Vitaly Dunaytsev (RUS)  Pat McCormack (GBR)  Dean Walsh (IRL)

 Evaldas Petrauskas (LTU)

Welterweight
(–69 kg)
 Eimantas Stanionis (LTU)  Pavel Kastramin (BLR)  Clarence Goyeram Bojang (SWE)

 Youba Sissokho Ndiaye (ESP)

Middleweight
(–75 kg)
 Petr Khamukov (RUS)  Tomasz Jablonski (POL)  Kvachatadze Zaal (GEO)

 Salvatore Cavallaro (ITA)

Light Heavyweight
(–81 kg)
 Joe Ward (IRL)  Peter Mullenberg (NED)  Hrvoje Sep (CRO)

 Joshua Buatsi (GBR)

Heavyweight
(–91 kg)
 Evgeny Tishchenko (RUS)  Igor Jakubowski (POL)  Tervel Pulev (BUL)

 Nikolajs Grisunins (LAT)

Super Heavyweight
(+91 kg)
 Filip Hrgović (CRO)  Florian Schulz (GER)  Mihai Nistor (ROU)

 Petar Belberov (BUL)

Medal table

[edit]

Below is the final medal table from the championships.[2] The table is led by Russia, with four gold medals. Great Britain, with six medals, won the most medals in total.

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia4004
2 Ireland2013
3 Great Britain1416
4 Bulgaria1045
5 Croatia1012
 Lithuania1012
7 Poland0202
8 Georgia0112
 Netherlands0112
10 Belarus0101
 Germany0101
12 Italy0022
 Spain0022
14 Armenia0011
 Azerbaijan0011
 Hungary0011
 Latvia0011
 Romania0011
 Sweden0011
Totals (19 entries)10102040

Qualification for the World Championships

[edit]

The event doubled as the second European qualification event for the World Championships, and the top six in each division qualified a quota place for their nation - in effect, all four medalists, and the following quarter-finalists, who were listed 5th and 6th by virtue of having been beaten by the eventual finalists.[3]

49 kg

52 kg

56 kg

60 kg

64 kg

69 kg

75 kg

81 kg

91 kg

+91 kg

References

[edit]