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Boxing at the Olympics: Day Five Results Including Fight Ended by Bloody Cut

Boxing at the Olympics: Fight Ended by Cut Among Day 5 Results

Boxing News

Boxing at the Olympics: Day Five Results Including Fight Ended by Bloody Cut

Photo credit: Leo Reynolds

Boxing at the Olympics: Day Five Results Including Fight Ended by Bloody Cut

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 four of boxing at the Olympics.

Below are the results for the fifth day of boxing at the Olympics.

Boxing at the Olympics: Day Five Results

Session One

Abdumalik Khalokov (Uzbekistan) won on points against Nebil Ibrahim (Sweden). All five judges had the men’s 57kg bout for Khalokov.

José Quiles Brotons (Spain) won on points against Makhmud Sabyrkhan (Kazakhstan). While one judge had Sabyrkhan winning the men’s 57kg fight, the other four had it for Quiles Brotons.

Rami Mofid Kiwan (Bulgaria) won on points against Shannan Davey (Australia). All five judges had the men’s 71kg contest in favour of Mofid Kiwan.

Omari Jones (United States) won on points against Kan Chia-Wei (Chinese Taipei). All five judges had the men’s 71kg clash in favour of Jones.

Li Qian (China) won on points against Hergie Bacyadan (The Philippines). All five judges had the women’s 75kg for Qian.

Read MoreBoxing at the Olympics: Day One Results

Lovlina Borgohain (India) won on points against Sunniva Hofstad (Norway). All five judges had the women’s 75kg fight in favour of Borgohain.

Caitlin Parker (Australia) won on points against Citlalli Vanessa Ortíz (Mexico). All five judges had the women’s 75kg contest in favour of Parker.

Khadija Mardi (Morocco) won on points against Chantelle Jordan Reid (Great Britain). While two judges saw the women’s 75kg clash in favour of Jordan Reid, the other three had it for Mardi.

Yang Wenlu (China) won on points against Natalia Shadrina (Serbia). While two judges saw the women’s 60kg for Shadrina, the other three had it for Wenlu.

Session Two

Carlo Paalam (The Philippines) won on points against Judge Gallagher (Ireland). All five judges saw the men’s 57kg fight in favour of Paalam.

Charlie Senior (Australia) won on points against Vasile Usturoi (Belgium). While one judge had the men’s 57kg contest in favour of Usturoi, the other four had it for Senior.

Jahmal Harvey (United States) won on points against Luiz Gabriel Oliveira (Brazil). While two judges had the men’s 57kg clash in favour of Oliveira, the other three had it for Harvey.

Asadkhuja Muydinkhujaev (Uzbekistan) won on points against Omar Elawady (Egypt). All five judges had the men’s 71kg bout in favour of Muydinkhujaev.

Nikolai Terteryan (Denmark) won on points against Makan Traore (France). While one judge saw the men’s 71kg fight in favour of Traore, the other four had it for Terteryan.

Read MoreBoxing at the Olympics: Day Two Results Including Big Upset in Men’s 92kg Division

Zeyad Eashash (Jordan) won on points against Sewon Okazawa (Japan). While two judges saw the men’s 71kg contest in favour of Okazawa, the other three had it for Eashash.

Cindy Ngamba (Refugee Olympic Team) won on points against Tammara Thibeault (Canada). While two judges had the women’s 75kg bout in favour of Thibeault, the other three had it for Ngamba.

Davina Michel (France) won by points against Baison Manikon (Thailand). All five judges had the women’s 75kg clash in favour of Michel.

Wu Shih-yi (Chinese Taipei) won on points against María José Palacios Espinoza (Ecuador). While one judge had the women’s 60kg fight in favour of Espinoza, the other four had it for Shih-yi, who is now guaranteed to win a bronze medal at least.

Kellie Harrington (Ireland) won on points against Angie Paola Valdés Pana (Colombia). All five judges had the women’s 60kg contest in favour of Harrington, who is now guaranteed to win a bronze medal at least.

Session Three

Munarbek Seitbek Uulu (Kyrgyzstan) won on points against Saidel Horta (Cuba). Just 27 seconds into round three, a clash of heads opened a cut by Horta’s right eye, causing the fight to go to the scorecards. The judge’s totals included their scores for rounds one, two and whatever had transpired in the third. While two judges had the men’s 57kg bout in favour of Horta, the other three had it for Uulu.

Shudai Harada (Japan) won on points against Yilmar Gonzalez (Colombia). All five judges had the men’s 57kg fight in favour of Harada.

Javier Ibanez Diaz (Bulgaria) won on points against Aider Abduraimov (Ukraine). All five judges had the men’s 57kg bout in favour of Diaz.

Lewis Richardson (Great Britain) won on points against Vakhid Abbasov (Serbia). While two judges had the men’s 71kg clash in favour of Abbasov, the other three had it for Richardson.

Nishant Dev (India) won on points against Jose Gabriel Rodriguez Tenorio (Ecuador). While two judges had the men’s 71kg contest in favour of Tenorio, the other three had it for Dev.

Read MoreBoxing at the Olympics: Day Three Results Including Round One Knockout

Marco Verde (Mexico) won on points against Tiago Muxanga (Mozambique). While two judges had the men’s 71kg fight in favour of Muxanga, the other three had it for Verde.

Atheyna Bylon (Panama) won on points against Valentina Khalzova (Kazakhstan). While one judge had the women’s 75kg bout in favour of Khalzova, the other four had it for Bylon.

Elżbieta Wójcik (Poland) won on points against Aoife O’Rourke (Ireland). While two judges had the women’s 75kg clash for O’Rourke, the other three had it for Wójcik.

Beatriz Ferreira (Brazil) won on points against Chelsey Heijnen (The Netherlands). All five judges had the women’s 60kg fight in favour of Ferreira, who is now guaranteed to win a bronze medal at least.

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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.

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