The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Both boxers in gender eligibilit­y row assured of bronze medal

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LIN YU- TING beat Svetlana Kamenova Staneva of Bulgaria by a unanimous decision in a featherwei­ght quarter- final fight on Sunday to ensure Taiwan's third boxing medal at the Paris Olympics.

Lin and Algeria's Imane Khelif have been at the centre of a social media storm at the Games due to them being disqualifi­ed during the 2023 World Championsh­ips after falling foul of unspecifie­d Internatio­nal Boxing Associatio­n ( IBA) gender eligibilit­y rules.

“I know all of Taiwan's people are standing behind me and supporting me, and I will carry this energy to the end," Lin said after her win. “I received a lot of supporting messages. I did not read them because I shut down my social media platforms."

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee ( IOC) said on Sunday that the IBA tests carried out on the two fighters last year were illegitima­te and lacked credibilit­y.

“Those tests are not legitimate tests. The tests themselves, the process of the tests, the ad hoc nature of the tests are not legitimate," IOC spokespers­on Mark Adams told a press conference.

The boxing tournament in Paris is being organised by the IOC, which stripped the IBA of internatio­nal recognitio­n in 2023 over governance and finance issues.

On Friday, the Bulgarian Olympic Committee said it had voiced its concerns over the two boxers' presence at the tournament during a meeting with the IOC'S Medical and Scientific Commission on July 27.

In Sunday's bout, the taller Lin attempted to sit back and let her opponent come to her in the first round, a strategy which had mixed results as she was struck with a few big shots.

In the second round, double world champion Lin was more direct and took the fight to Staneva, who showed her frustratio­n by grappling Lin and pushing her on to the canvas.

With a 3- 0 lead heading into the final round, Lin once again tried to be evasive and found herself on the floor when she was accidental­ly tripped by Staneva, who held open the ropes for the Taiwanese boxer to exit the ring at the end of the fight.

Lin, who will face Turkey's Esra Yildiz in the semi- finals on Wednesday, is assured of a medal, adding to the efforts of compatriot­s Wu Shih- yi and Chen Nien- chin from Saturday.

In a statement released after the fight in support of Lin, the Taiwan Olympic Committee said it was "already clear" that the boxer was eligible for the Paris Olympics on the basis of the IOC'S rules.

"The delegation stands firmly by the athlete with full support and strongly condemns the malicious online abuse and personal attacks and calls for an immediate stop on those behaviours," it said.

Khelif enters semis

Algerian Khelif is also assured of at least bronze after winning her welterweig­ht quarter- f inal against Hungary's Luca Anna Hamori by unanimous decision on Saturday.

The debate over Khelif's and Lin's participat­ion in the tournament rocketed after the Algerian won her round- of- 16 bout i n 46 s e c o nds o n T hur s day, when her Italian opponent Angela Carini pulled out of the fight.

 ?? Reuters ?? Lin Yu- Tin ensured Taiwan’s third boxing medal at the Olympics.
Reuters Lin Yu- Tin ensured Taiwan’s third boxing medal at the Olympics.

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