2011 European Amateur Boxing Championships

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2011 European Amateur Boxing Championships
Host cityAnkara
CountryTurkey
Dates17–24 June

The Men's 2011 European Amateur Boxing Championships was held in Ankara, Turkey from June 17 to June 24, 2011. It was the 39th edition of this biennial competition organised by the European governing body for amateur boxing, the EUBC.

Schedule[edit]

From 17 June–19 June the preliminaries were held, on June 20–21 the quarterfinals in all categories were held. The semifinals took place on June 23 with the finals at June 24.[1]

Seventeen-year-old Salman Alizadeh from Azerbaijan became the youngest gold medal winner in the European Boxing Championships since Mario Bianchini in 1930.[2]

Medal winners[edit]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Light Flyweight
(–49 kg)
 Salman Alizade (AZE)  Belik Galanov (RUS)  Georgi Andonov (BUL)

 Charlie Edwards (ENG)

Flyweight
(–52 kg)
 Andrew Selby (WAL)  Georgy Balakshin (RUS)  Alexander Riscan (MDA)

 Vincenzo Picardi (ITA)

Bantamweight
(–56 kg)
 Veaceslav Gojan (MDA)  Dmitriy Polyanskiy (RUS)  Razvan Andreiana (ROU)

 Furkan Ulaş Memiş (TUR)

Lightweight
(–60 kg)
 Fatih Keleş (TUR)  Domenico Valentino (ITA)  Vladimir Saruhanyan (ARM)

 Volodymyr Matviychuk (UKR)

Light Welterweight
(–64 kg)
 Ray Moylette (IRL)  Tom Stalker (ENG)  Vincenzo Mangiacapre (ITA)

 Heybatulla Hajialiyev (AZE)

Welterweight
(–69 kg)
 Fred Evans (WAL)  Mahamed Nurudzinau (BLR)  Adriani Vastine (FRA)

 Zaal Kvachatadze (GEO)

Middleweight
(–75 kg)
 Maxim Koptyakov (RUS)  Adem Kılıççı (TUR)  Dschaba Chositaschwili (GEO)

 Dmitro Mitrofanov (UKR)

Light Heavyweight
(–81 kg)
 Joe Ward (IRL)  Nikita Ivanov (RUS)  Imre Szellő (HUN)

 Hrvoje Sep (CRO)

Heavyweight
(–91 kg)
 Teymur Mammadov (AZE)  Tervel Pulev (BUL)  Bahram Muzaffer (TUR)

 Johann Witt (GER)

Super Heavyweight
(+91 kg)
 Magomed Omarov (RUS)  Roberto Cammarelle (ITA)  Mikheil Bakhtidze (GEO)

 Mihai Nistor (ROU)

Medal table[edit]

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia2406
2 Azerbaijan2013
3 Ireland2002
 Wales2002
5 Turkey1124
6 Moldova1012
7 Italy0224
8 Bulgaria0112
 England0112
10 Belarus0101
11 Georgia0033
12 Romania0022
 Ukraine0022
14 Armenia0011
 Croatia0011
 France0011
 Germany0011
 Hungary0011
Totals (18 entries)10102040

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Competition Schedule" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-08-15. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
  2. ^ "Azerbaijani Breaking New Record in European Championship History". Archived from the original on 2011-06-30. Retrieved 2011-06-27.

External links[edit]