Okoth ‘sorry’ for poor outing, says team picked ‘positives’
Boxer Nick Okoth during the team's training session at Moi International Sports Centre Kasarani in Nairobi on August 6, 2019. Kenya is preparing ahead of the All African Games to be held in Rabat, Morocco from August 16-31, 2019. Photo/Sportpicha/Citizen Digital.
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Kenya boxing national team captain Nick ‘Commander’ Okoth is 'sorry' for the dismal performance they registered at the world boxing championships in Belgrade, Serbia but says i despite the loss there are positives they picked from the competition.
The team failed to break the jinx of
not winning a medal in the championship for the last 43 years, the same city –
Belgrade – that Steve Muchoki and his compatriots registered Kenya’s most
impressive performance ever during the world championships in 1978.
“Despite receiving all possible
boxing honors and medals, I failed to win a medal at the Tokyo Olympics after
losing to Mongolia’s Erdenebatyn Tsendbaatar but I strongly believed I was
going to do well in Belgrade only to return empty handed again. I say sorry to
our Kenyan fans that had a lot of expectations from us after the Olympics. In
sports there is always a winner and a loser,” said the 39-year-old Okoth.
The national boxing team Hit Squad
jetted back into the country yesterday from the assignment which
ended last week in Belgrade, Serbia where Kenya failed to win even a single medal.
A total of 13 male boxers were
fielded in the 2021 AIBA Men's World Boxing Championships but fell in first
round defeats.
Cuban boxers were the most successful,
with three gold and two bronze medals, and they received the trophy of the 'best team'.
Japan, Kazakhstan, and the USA earned
two gold medals each, while Azerbaijan, France, the Russia Boxing Federation
Team (RBF), and Ukraine each claimed gold.
Twenty-five nations won at least one
medal at the major event.
For the first time ever, Albania,
Belgium, Iran, Scotland, Serbia, Trinidad & Tobago received medals for
their efforts during the Championships.
For the first time in history, the
winners in each weight category received significant prize money and solid
medals, as well as champions’ belts.
Gold medal winners took home Sh11.1
million. Silver and bronze medalists walked away with Sh5.5 million and Sh2.7
million respectively.
The AIBA Flag was passed from Serbia,
represented by team captain Vladan Babic, to AIBA Secretary-General Istvan
Kovacs who in turn gave it to Senior Vice-President of Uzbekistan Boxing Federation
Saken Polatov.
The next AIBA Men's World Boxing
Championships will take place in 2023 in Tashkent, Uzbekistan but before that
the women's world championships will be held in Istanbul, Turkey next month.

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