Jaismine, Minakshi clinch gold medals as India finish with best overseas performance -

Jaismine, Minakshi clinch gold medals as India finish with best overseas performance

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World Boxing Championships 2025

The performances in Liverpool, where our women boxers defeated some of the world’s best, underline that Indian boxing is on a decisive upward curve. In recent months, we have implemented athlete-first policies, and these results validate that approach. This success gives us the confidence to push ahead with further reforms and new initiatives to empower our athletes. These women boxers are our future Olympic champions-Ajay Singh, President, Boxing Federation of India 

 

Khel Today Bureau

Liverpool: Indian women boxers registered their best ever performance outside the country on the World championships stage as Minakshi and Jaismine Lamboria bagged the gold, Nupur clinched silver and Pooja Rani took the bronze in the 2025 edition at Liverpool on Sunday.

Jaismine opened India’s gold medal account with a thumping 4:1 victory over Paris Olympics silver medallist Julia Szeremeta of Poland in the women’s 57kg weight category and Minakshi (women’s 48kg) completed the tally with an identical 4:1 win over Nazym Kyzaibay of Kazakhstan, a three-time world champion and Paris Olympics bronze medalist.

Despite playing in their first-ever world championships final, both Minakshi and Jaismine showed no jitters against their more illustrious opponents and were in complete control through out the final.

Boxing Federation of India president Ajay Singh was understandably elated at the performance of the Indian boxers in Liverpool and said he was happy that the federation’s athlete first policy was bringing the desired results.

“The performances in Liverpool, where our women boxers defeated some of the world’s best, underline that Indian boxing is on a decisive upward curve. In recent months, we have implemented athlete-first policies, and these results validate that approach. This success gives us the confidence to push ahead with further reforms and new initiatives to empower our athletes. These women boxers are our future Olympic champions,” he said.

Nupur (women’s 80+kg) also came within striking distance of a gold when she took the fight to Poland’s Agama Kaczmarska, a multiple-time European championships medallist. But the experienced Pole managed to do enough to eke out a 3:2 verdict at the end of the three rounds.

Meanwhile, Pooja Rani earned a bronze medal after she went down 1:4 against Emily Asquith of England in the women’s 80kg semi-final. At the inaugural World Championships under the newly formed World Boxing, India’s women boxers registered a landmark performance.

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