Boxing News
Boxing at the Olympics: Day Four Results – Split Decision Loss for Team USA in Men’s 51kg Competition
Boxing at the Olympics: Day Four Results – Split Decision Loss for Team USA in Men’s 51kg Competition
The 2024 Paris Olympics are underway, and boxing is again at the leading international sporting event.
Big Fight Weekend will be covering the action as it unfolds, so be sure to return to the site each day for the daily result recap. To watch the boxing live, fight fans in the United States can watch on Peacock. Discovery+ will have the action for those in the United Kingdom (and a few other territories) while CBC Gem will do so in Canada. Click here for the full boxing schedule. Also, check out our recap from day three of boxing at the Olympics.
Below are the results for the fourth day of boxing at the Olympics.
Boxing at the Olympics: Day Four Results
Session One
Billal Bennama (France) won on points against Roscoe Hill (United States). While two judges saw the men’s 51kg for Hill, the other three had it for Bennama.
Alejandro Claro Fiz (Cuba) won on points against Michael Douglas da Silva Trindade (Brazil). All five judges had the men’s 51kg fight in favour of Claro Fiz.
Rafael Lozano Serrano (Spain) won on points against Yusuf Chothia (Australia). While one judge had the men’s 51kg clash in favour of Chothia, the other four saw the action for Lozano Serrano.
Cristian Javier Pinales (Dominican Republic) won on points against Tuohetaerbieke Tanglatihan (Kazakhstan). All five judges had the men’s 80kg contest for Pinales.
Gabrijel Veočić (Croatia) won on points against Hussein Iashaish (Jordan). All five judges had the men’s 80kg bout in favour of Veočić.
Read More: Boxing at the Olympics: Day One Results
Stanimira Petrova (Bulgaria) won on points against Huang Hsiao-wen (Chinese Taipei). While one judge saw the women’s 54kg fight for Hsiao-wen, the other four had it for Petrova.
Yuan Chang (China) won on points against Jennifer Lehane (Ireland). All five judges had the women’s 54kg clash in favour of Chang.
Widad Bertal (Morocco) won on points against Jutamas Jitpong (Thailand). While two judges had the women’s 54kg contest in favour of Jitpong, the other three had it for Bertal.
Sitora Turdibekova (Uzbekistan) won on points against Marcelat Sakobi (Democratic Republic of Congo). While two judges had the women’s 57kg bout in favour of Sakobi, the other three had it for Turdibekova.
Esra Yıldız Kahraman (Türkiye) won on points against Marine Fatoumatta Colette Camara (Mali). All five judges had the women’s 57kg fight for the Turkish boxer.
Session Two
Yunior Alcántara Reyes (Dominican Republic) won on points against Nijat Huseynov (Azerbaijan). All five judges had the men’s 51kg clash in favour of Alcántara Reyes.
Patrick Chinyemba (Zambia) won on points against Amit Panghal (India). While one judge had the men’s 51kg contest for Panghal, the other four had it for Chinyemba.
David de Pina (Cape Verde) won on points against Thitisan Panmot (Thailand). While one judge had the men’s 51kg boutin favour of Panmot, the other four had it for de Pina.
Nurbek Oralbay (Kazakhstan) won on points against Callum Peters (Australia). While two judges had the men’s 80kg fight for Peters, the other three had it for Oralbay.
Murad Allahverdiyev (Azerbaijan) won on points against Abdelrahman Abdelgawwad (Egypt). All five judges had the men’s 80kg clash in favour of Allahverdiyev.
Read More: Boxing at the Olympics: Day Two Results Including Big Upset in Men’s 92kg Division
Pang Chol-mi (North Korea) won on points against Nigina Uktamova (Uzbekistan). All five judges had the women’s 54kg contest in favour of Chol-mi.
Hatice Akbaş (Türkiye) won on points against Tiana Echegaray (Australia). All five judges had the women’s 54kg bout in favour of Akbaş.
Enkhjargal Munguntsetseg (Mongolia) won on points against Lenuta Lacramioara Perijoc (Romania). While one judge had the women’s 54kg fight for the Romanian, the other four saw it for Munguntsetseg.
Alyssa Mendoza (United States) won on points against Mijgona Samadova (Tajikistan). While two judges saw the women’s 57kg clash in favour of Samadova, the other three had it for Mendoza.
Nesthy Petecio (The Philippines) won on points against Jaismine Lamboria (India). All five judges had the women’s 57kg contest in favour of Petecio.
Session Three
Saken Bibossinov (Kazakhstan) won on points against Samet Gümüş (Türkiye). All five judges had the men’s 51kg for Bibossinov.
Hasanboy Dusmatov (Uzbekistan) won on points against Juanma López de Jesús (Puerto Rico). All five judges had the men’s 51kg fight in favour of Dusmatov.
Oleksandr Khyzhniak (Ukraine) won on points against Pylyp Akilov (Hungary). While one judge had the men’s 80kg clash a draw, the other four had it for Khyzhniak.
Wanderley de Souza Pereira (Brazil) won on points against Cedrick Belony-Duliepre (Haiti). All five judges had the men’s 80kg contest in favour of Pereira.
Turabek Khabibullaev (Uzbekistan) won on points against Eumir Marcial (The Philippines). All five judges had the men’s 80kg contest in favour of the Uzbek fighter.
Read More: Introducing the Team USA Boxing Squad for the 2024 Paris Olympics
Arlen López Cardona (Cuba) won on points against Kaan Aykutsun (Türkiye). All five judges had the men’s 80kg fight in favour of López.
Im Ae-ji (South Korea) won on points against Tatiana Regina De Jesus Chagas (Brazil). While one judge had the women’s 54kg clash in favour of Chagas, the other four had it for Ae-ji.
Yeni Marcela Arias Castañeda (Colombia) won on points against Preeti Pawar (India). While two judges had the women’s 54kg contest in favour of Pawar, the other three had it for Arias.
Xu Zichun (China) won on points against Irma Testa (Italy). While two judges had the women’s 57kg fight for Testa, the other three had it for Zichun.
Julia Szeremeta (Poland) won on points against Omailyn Carolina Alcala Segovia (Venezuela). While one judge had the women’s 57kg fight in favour of Segovia, the other four had it for Szeremeta.
Currently writing out of Toronto, Canada, Saadeq first became a boxing fan while living in Doha, Qatar. Looking to become more involved in the sport, he began writing about boxing and has had work published in outlets such as Seconds Out and Boxing Social. He looks forward to continue covering boxing on Big Fight Weekend.