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Asian Amateur Boxing Championships

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The Asian Amateur Boxing Championships is the highest competition for boxing amateurs in Asia. The first tournament took place in 1963, hosted by Bangkok, Thailand.

Men's editions

Edition Year Host city Champion Ref.
1 1963 Thailand Bangkok, Thailand Japan Japan (3 G)
2 1965 South Korea Seoul, South Korea South Korea South Korea (8 G)
3 1967 Dominion of Ceylon Colombo, Ceylon South Korea South Korea (4 G)
4 1970 Philippines Manila, Philippines South Korea South Korea (5 G)
5 1971 Iran Tehran, Iran Iran Iran (3 G)
6 1973 Thailand Bangkok, Thailand Thailand Thailand (5 G)
7 1975 Japan Yokohama, Japan Japan Japan (6 G)
8 1977 Indonesia Jakarta, Indonesia Iran Iran (4 G)
9 1980 India Bombay, India South Korea South Korea (3 G)
10 1982 South Korea Seoul, South Korea South Korea South Korea (7 G)
11 1983 Japan Okinawa, Japan South Korea South Korea (6 G)
12 1985 Thailand Bangkok, Thailand South Korea South Korea (7 G)
13 1987 Kuwait Kuwait, Kuwait South Korea South Korea (8 G)
14 1989 China Beijing, China South Korea South Korea (7 G)
15 1991 Thailand Bangkok, Thailand Thailand Thailand (6 G)
16 1992 Thailand Bangkok, Thailand South Korea South Korea (6 G)
17 1994 Iran Tehran, Iran Kazakhstan Kazakhstan (5 G)
18 1995 Uzbekistan Tashkent, Uzbekistan Kazakhstan Kazakhstan (6 G)
19 1997 Malaysia Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Thailand Thailand (4 G)
20 1999 Uzbekistan Tashkent, Uzbekistan Uzbekistan Uzbekistan (7 G)
21 2002 Malaysia Seremban, Malaysia Uzbekistan Uzbekistan (5 G)
22 2004 Philippines Puerto Princesa, Philippines Kazakhstan Kazakhstan (3 G)
23 2005 Vietnam Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Pakistan Pakistan (3 G)
24 2007 Mongolia Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia Uzbekistan Uzbekistan (3 G)
25 2009 China Zhuhai, China China China (3 G)
26 2011 South Korea Incheon, South Korea China China (2 G)
27 2013 Jordan Amman, Jordan Kazakhstan Kazakhstan (7 G)
28 2015 Thailand Bangkok, Thailand Kazakhstan Kazakhstan (5 G)
29 2017 Uzbekistan Tashkent, Uzbekistan Uzbekistan Uzbekistan (9 G)

Women's editions

Edition Year Host city Champion
1 2001 Thailand Bangkok, Thailand North Korea North Korea (5 G)
2 2003 India Hissar, India North Korea North Korea (6 G)
3 2005 Taiwan Kaohsiung, Taiwan India India (7 G)
4 2008 India Guwahati, India China China (6 G)
5 2010 Kazakhstan Astana, Kazakhstan Kazakhstan Kazakhstan (4 G)
6 2012 Mongolia Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia China China (5 G)
7 2015 China Wulanchabu, China China China (6 G)
8 2017 Vietnam Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam China China (4 G)

Combined editions

All-time medal table

1994–2024

Edition Year Host city Champion
30 2019 Thailand Bangkok, Thailand China China (6 G)
31 2021 United Arab Emirates Dubai, United Arab Emirates Kazakhstan Kazakhstan (8 G)
32 2022 Jordan Amman, Jordan Kazakhstan Kazakhstan (6 G)
33 2024 Thailand Chiang Mai, Thailand Uzbekistan Uzbekistan (10 G)
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Uzbekistan663740143
2 Kazakhstan643956159
3 Thailand21133266
4 South Korea16212966
5 China15202762
6 India11222760
7 Mongolia10104464
8 Iran8123454
9 Philippines8102038
10 Pakistan63817
11 Tajikistan451726
12 Jordan27918
13 Chinese Taipei231621
14 Syria231015
15 North Korea22610
16 Japan171321
17 Kyrgyzstan162532
18 Vietnam15511
19 Turkmenistan13812
20 Malaysia1023
21 Indonesia0426
 Ukraine (Guest)021113
22 Afghanistan0112
23 Iraq0044
24 Kuwait0033
25 Lebanon0022
 Sri Lanka0022
27 Cambodia0011
 Myanmar0011
 Saudi Arabia0011
 United Arab Emirates0011
Totals (30 entries)242235457934

See also

References

  1. "South Korea Wins Title". The New York Times. Associated Press. 4 July 1982. ProQuest 424387960. Retrieved 29 December 2024 – via ProQuest.

External links


Asian Amateur Boxing Championships
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Women
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