Boxing at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Super heavyweight
Super heavyweight boxing at the Games of the XXIV Olympiad | |||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Chamshil Students' Gymnasium | ||||||||||||||||
Dates | 22 September – 2 October | ||||||||||||||||
Competitors | 17 from 17 nations | ||||||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||||||
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Boxing at the 1988 Summer Olympics | |
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Light flyweight | men |
Flyweight | men |
Bantamweight | men |
Featherweight | men |
Lightweight | men |
Light welterweight | men |
Welterweight | men |
Light middleweight | men |
Middleweight | men |
Light heavyweight | men |
Heavyweight | men |
Super heavyweight | men |
The men's super heavyweight event was part of the boxing programme at the 1988 Summer Olympics. The weight class allowed boxers of more than 91 kilograms to compete. The competition was held from 22 September to 2 October 1988. 17 boxers from 17 nations competed.[1]
Future world heavyweight champion 23-year-old Lennox Lewis of Canada defeated 21-year-old Riddick Bowe of the US in a controversial final.[2][failed verification]
Background
[edit]The super heavyweight event of the 1988 Olympics was weakened by the absence of a Cuban boxer. Teófilo Stevenson, a veteran three-time Olympic champion whose first Olympics were back in 1972, did not retire anticipating these Olympics.[3] He announced his retirement shortly after the Cuban government decided to boycott the Games. He was 36 years of age in 1988. In contrast, future finalists Lewis and Bowe were rather young, 23 and 21 years old respectively. Possible Cuban alternate Jorge Luis González, 24, had defeated both Bowe and Lewis at the 1987 Pan American Games.[4]
It was predicted that the gold medal would be contested between the North Americans Lennox Lewis and Riddick Bowe and Europeans Ulli Kaden and Alex Miroshnichenko.[1]
Medalists
[edit]Gold | Lennox Lewis Canada |
Silver | Riddick Bowe United States |
Bronze | Aleksandr Miroshnichenko Soviet Union |
Bronze | Janusz Zarenkiewicz Poland |
Results
[edit]The following boxers took part in the event:[1]
Rank | Name | Country |
---|---|---|
1 | Lennox Lewis | Canada |
2 | Riddick Bowe | United States |
3T | Aleksandr Miroshnichenko | Soviet Union |
3T | Janusz Zarenkiewicz | Poland |
5T | Kim Yu-hyeon | South Korea |
5T | Peter Hrivňák | Czechoslovakia |
5T | Ulli Kaden | East Germany |
5T | Andreas Schnieders | West Germany |
9T | Ali Al-Baluchi | Kuwait |
9T | Mohamed Hammad | Sudan |
9T | Petar Stoimenov | Bulgaria |
9T | Biko Botowamungu | Austria |
9T | Crispine Odera | Kenya |
9T | Aziz Salihu | Yugoslavia |
9T | Harold Arroyo | Puerto Rico |
9T | Ovwigbo Uba | Nigeria |
17T | Tshibalabala Kadima | Zaire |
First round
[edit]- Andreas Schnieders (FRG) def. Tshibalabala Kadima (ZAI), RSC-2
Second round
[edit]- Aleksandr Miroshnichenko (URS) def. Ali Al-Baluchi (KUW), 5:0
- Kim Yoo-Hyun (KOR) def. Mohamed Hammad (SUD), AB-1
- Peter Hrivnák (TCH) def. Petar Stoimenov (BUL), RSC-2
- Riddick Bowe (USA) def. Biko Botowamungu (AUT), KO-2
- Lennox Lewis (CAN) def. Chris Odera (KEN), RSC-2
- Ulli Kaden (GDR) def. Aziz Salihu (YUG), 5:0
- Janusz Zarenkiewicz (POL) def. Harold Arroyo (PUR), 5:0
- Andreas Schnieders (FRG) def. Ubola Ovvigbo (NGA), 5:0
Quarterfinals
[edit]- Aleksandr Miroshnichenko (URS) def. Kim Yoo-Hyun (KOR), 5:0
- Riddick Bowe (USA) def. Peter Hrivnák (TCH), RSC-1
- Lennox Lewis (CAN) def. Ulli Kaden (GDR), RSC-1
- Janusz Zarenkiewicz (POL) def. Andreas Schnieders (FRG), 3:2
Semifinals
[edit]- Riddick Bowe (USA) def. Aleksandr Miroshnichenko (URS), 5:0
- Lennox Lewis (CAN) def. Janusz Zarenkiewicz (POL), walk-over
Final
[edit]- Lennox Lewis (CAN) def. Riddick Bowe (USA), RSC-2
Bowe was the more effective fighter in the first round, landing 33 of 94 punches thrown (34%) while Lewis landed 14 of 67 (21%). In the first round the referee from East Germany gave Bowe two cautions for headbutts and deducted a point for a third headbutt. Commentator Ferdie Pacheco disagreed with the deduction, saying they did not hit heads. In the second round, Lewis landed several hard punches. The referee gave Bowe two standing eight counts and waved the fight off after the second one, even though Bowe seemed able to continue. Pacheco disagreed with the stoppage, calling it "very strange", but Marv Albert said Bowe took "a pounding."[5]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Boxing at the 1988 Seoul Summer Games: Men's Super Heavyweight". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
- ^ "The Seoul Olympics Boxing Ends in Controversy". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
- ^ "The champ retires at 55". Prisma world news review. 6 (9): 1. July 1988.
- ^ Agacino, Ricardo (September 1988). "Cuba and the US in the Ring". Cuba International (63): 45–46. ISSN 0011-2593.
- ^ "Lennox Lewis vs Riddick Bowe 88 Olympic Final". Retrieved 3 May 2017.