logo
IABA World Boxing vote boosts Irish Olympic hopes

IABA World Boxing vote boosts Irish Olympic hopes

BBC News12-04-2025

Ireland's hopes of having boxers compete at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics moved a significant step closer on Saturday as the Irish Athletic Boxing Association [IABA] overwhelmingly voted in favour of submitting an application to join World Boxing.At an extraordinary general meeting [EGM] 116 out of the 117 clubs represented voted for constitutional reform which paves the way for international federation dual membership with the International Boxing Association [IBA] and World Boxing.The IABA, which governs amateur boxing in Ireland, had previously been solely affiliated to the IBA.The development comes after the International Olympic Committee's [IOC] executive board last month recommended the inclusion of boxing in the LA 2028 summer Olympics programme, having already provisionally granted recognition to World Boxing.The boxing competition at the Paris 2024 Games was run by the IOC after it had stripped the IBA of recognition in 2023 over its failure to implement reforms on governance and finance.The IOC had originally not included boxing on the initial LA 2028 schedule, having encouraged the sport's national federations to create a new global body.World Boxing, now with more than 80 national federations as members, was launched in 2023.The IOC said only athletes whose national federations were members of World Boxing by the time of the start of the qualification events for the 2028 Olympics could take part in Los Angeles.In October 2024, the IABA removed all references to the IBA from its constitution before the IABA chairperson Niall O'Carroll last month indicated that it would issue a 'Letter of Intent' to join World Boxing which would then be voted on at an EGM.
'Irish Boxing has spoken today'
Chair of IABA's Board of Directors, Niall O'Carroll, said: "Irish Boxing has spoken today, and has chosen to be able to plot its own course. "The removal of reference to IBA/AIBA in our constitution isn't about any one international federation, it's about clubs giving themselves the ability to choose. "They've exercised that right for the first time today, voting to also affiliate with World Boxing."O'Carroll added that the move would result in better opportunities for young boxers to plot their path to Olympic competition."The Olympics is the dream of every kid who walks in to any boxing club – but getting there needs high level international competition. "For the last few years, our clubs have been constrained in the federations that they can work with at a grassroots level on a club-to-club basis. Many of those federations were long-standing partners. "Those constraints have now been lifted, and our clubs, as well as our national teams, can travel to any federation in the world to train and compete. It's a huge day for clubs, and for our federation."Boxing has been Ireland's most successful Olympic sport, having won 19 of Team Ireland's 42 medals, including Kellie Harrington's unprecedented defence of her Tokyo 2020 gold at Paris 2024.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A dream come true – Euro 2022 winner Fran Kirby retires from England duty
A dream come true – Euro 2022 winner Fran Kirby retires from England duty

North Wales Chronicle

timean hour ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

A dream come true – Euro 2022 winner Fran Kirby retires from England duty

The 31-year-old retires on the eve of the Lionesses' upcoming European Championship campaign – which begins in July – and finishes her career with 77 caps and 19 goals. Kirby made her senior debut in August 2014 against Sweden and went on to represent England at four major tournaments, as well as featuring for Team GB at the Tokyo Olympics. She claimed bronze at the 2015 World Cup and started in all of England's games at Euro 2022, scoring two goals along the way as the Lionesses lifted their first major trophy on home soil with victory over Germany in the final at Wembley. Her last outing for England came from the bench during their 6-0 win over Portgual on Friday and she announced her decision following the team's 2-1 defeat by Spain on Tuesday. 'After being in the England team since I was 21, it's time to close that chapter of my life,' Kirby wrote on social media. 'I didn't ever want this day to come, but I cannot tell you how proud I am it happened. It's been the biggest honour to represent my country, one that I had only dreamt about as a young girl. 'I've played with incredible players, worked with some incredible managers, played in some amazing tournaments and have some irreplaceable memories. 'My journey has been full of ups and downs, setbacks and achievements. Enough has been said and written about those, but regardless of whatever was thrown at me, I want you all to know that every time I put on that England badge I gave 100 per cent. 'Every single call-up, I accepted my role and did whatever was needed for the team. I wanted England to win. I've always been there to help England win. Thank you @Lionesses ❤️ — Fran Kirby (@frankirby) June 3, 2025 'My mum had a dream of me representing my country and I'm so proud I was able to do that and play in front of you all. I will never, ever forget the noise when my name is read out at a stadium. 'I was first selected when I was playing in WSL 2, I played a part in the game-changing World Cup, winning bronze in 2015, creating some memories of a lifetime. 'Starting in every game and winning the Euros in 2022 was a dream come true, to be a part of change in women's football was one of the best experiences I could have ever imagined. 'Thank you to you all, for embracing me as a young girl from Reading who had a dream. I hope you all know, wearing that badge was the greatest honour. To every young girl that suffers setbacks, just remember you can. You can.' England confirmed that tributes will be paid to Kirby's international career at a Lionesses match after the summer. Boss Sarina Wiegman added: 'Fran has given so much to England and has been an inspiration to many for what she has achieved on and off the pitch. I have loved working with her, she is an amazing player and a great person. 'I fully understand her decision to say goodbye at this point in her wonderful career, and we will always be grateful for her incredible contribution to the team.'

Grand Slam Track investigating alleged abuse of Thomas
Grand Slam Track investigating alleged abuse of Thomas

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Grand Slam Track investigating alleged abuse of Thomas

Grand Slam Track is investigating the alleged abuse of three-time Olympic gold medallist Gabby Thomas at a meet in Philadelphia over the American sprinter posted on X, external on Monday to say that a man had followed her around the track and then shouted personal insults at her as she signed autographs for fans."Honestly the heckling is tolerable, it's following me around the stadium that's wild," Thomas, 28, wrote in a later added that "anybody who enables him online is gross".Responding to a previous Thomas post, a man shared a video of him heckling the sprinter at the starting line of the 200m, in which Thomas was narrowly beaten by Melissa Jefferson-Wooden, and said the result helped him win a bet."I made Gabby lose by heckling her. And it made my parlay win," he a statement to The Athletic, external, the event organisers said: "Grand Slam Track is conducting a full investigation into the reprehensible behaviour captured on video."We are working to identify the individual involved and will take appropriate action as necessary."We will implement additional safeguards to help prevent incidents like this in the future. Let us be clear, despicable behaviour like this will not be tolerated."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store