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IBA World Boxing Championships

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The AIBA World Boxing Championships[1] and the AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships[2] are biennial amateur boxing competitions organised by the International Boxing Association (AIBA), which is the sport governing body. Alongside the Olympic boxing programme, it is the highest level of competition for the sport. The championships was first held in 1974 Havana, Cuba as a men's only event and the first women's championships was held over 25 years later in 2001. Formerly known as the World Amateur Boxing Championships and the Women's World Amateur Boxing Championships, the men's and women's competitions are held separately and since 2006 the biennial championships have been held in alternating years.

The number of weight categories was reduced from twelve to eleven in 2003 with the removal of the light middleweight division (−71 kg). In 2011 the weight categories went down to ten with the removal of the featherweight division (−57 kg)

Men's Editions

Italian Roberto Cammarelle won the World Amateur Boxing Championships in 2007 and 2009 as a super heavyweight.
Number Year Host Dates
1 1974 Cuba Havana, Cuba August 17–30
2 1978 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Belgrade, Yugoslavia May 6–20
3 1982 West Germany Munich, West Germany May 4–15
4 1986 United States Reno, United States May 8–18
5 1989 Soviet Union Moscow, Soviet Union September 17 – October 1
6 1991 Australia Sydney, Australia November 14–23
7 1993 Finland Tampere, Finland May 7–16
8 1995 Germany Berlin, Germany May 4–15
9 1997 Hungary Budapest, Hungary October 18–26
10 1999 United States Houston, United States August 15–29
11 2001 United Kingdom Belfast, United Kingdom June 3–10
12 2003 Thailand Bangkok, Thailand July 6–13
13 2005 China Mianyang, China November 13–20
14 2007 United States Chicago, United States October 23 – November 3
15 2009 Italy Milan, Italy September 1–12
16 2011 Azerbaijan Baku, Azerbaijan September 22 – October 10
17 2013 Kazakhstan Almaty, Kazakhstan October 14–26
18 2015 Qatar Doha, Qatar October 5–18
19 2017 Germany Hamburg, Germany August 25 – September 3
20 2019 Russia Sochi, Russia TBD
21 2021 India New Delhi, India TBD

All Time Medal Table (1974–2015)

1  Cuba 71 32 25 128
2  Russia 22 20 20 63
3  Soviet Union 16 12 17 45
4  United States 16 9 16 41
5  Kazakhstan 10 10 14 34
6  Bulgaria 8 8 18 34
7  Romania 7 5 17 29
8  Italy 6 2 14 22
9  Ukraine 5 12 11 28
10  Uzbekistan 5 10 15 30
11  Azerbaijan 5 4 8 17
12  Germany 4 6 24 34
13  France 3 6 13 22
14  China 3 1 9 13
15  Hungary 3 1 6 10
16  Turkey 2 3 11 16
17  South Korea 2 3 7 12
18  Puerto Rico 2 2 3 7
19  East Germany 1 8 15 24
20  Yugoslavia 1 6 10 17
21  Mongolia 1 4 4 9
22  Poland 1 3 9 13
23  Thailand 1 3 5 9
24  Ireland 1 2 9 12
25  England 1 2 4 7
26  Brazil 1 2 3 6
27  Armenia 1 1 3 5
 Georgia 1 1 3 5
 Nigeria 1 1 3 5
30  Kenya 1 1 0 2
31  Morocco 1 0 2 4
32  Uganda 1 0 1 2
33  Venezuela 0 5 6 11
34  Finland 0 3 2 5
35  Belarus 0 2 6 8
36  North Korea 0 2 5 7
37  Philippines 0 2 3 5
38  Algeria 0 2 2 4
 Netherlands 0 2 2 4
40  Canada 0 1 4 5
 Great Britain 0 1 4 5
42  Lithuania 0 1 3 4
43  Argentina 0 1 2 3
 Japan 0 1 2 3
 Wales 0 1 2 3
46  Croatia 0 1 1 2
47  West Germany 0 0 6 6
48  Egypt 0 0 5 5
49  Sweden 0 0 4 4
50  Australia 0 0 3 3
 Czech Republic 0 0 3 3
 India 0 0 3 3
 Tajikistan 0 0 3 3
54  Norway 0 0 2 2
 Slovakia 0 0 2 2
 Serbia and Montenegro 0 0 2 2
57  Czechoslovakia 0 0 1 1
 Costa Rica 0 0 1 1
 Denmark 0 0 1 1
 Ghana 0 0 1 1
 Mexico 0 0 1 1
 New Zealand 0 0 1 1
 Pakistan 0 0 1 1
 Panama 0 0 1 1
 Spain 0 0 1 1
Total 204 204 408 816

Women's Editions

Number Year Host Dates
1 2001 United States Scranton, United States November 24 – December 2
2 2002 Turkey Antalya, Turkey October 21–27
3 2005 Russia Podolsk, Russia September 26 – October 2
4 2006 India New Delhi, India November 18–23
5 2008 China Ningbo, China November 22–29
6 2010 Barbados Bridgetown, Barbados September 10–18
7 2012 China Qinhuangdao, China May 21 – June 3
8 2014 South Korea Jeju City, South Korea November 13–25
9 2016 Kazakhstan Astana, Kazakhstan May 19–27
10 2018 India New Delhi, India TBD
11 2019 Turkey Trabzon, Turkey TBD

All Time Medal Table (2001–2016)

1  Russia 21 9 23 53
2  China 14 11 16 41
3  India 8 6 14 28
4  North Korea 7 7 7 21
5  Canada 7 2 16 25
6  United States 6 9 17 32
7  Turkey 5 5 12 22
8  Kazakhstan 5 3 6 14
9  Ireland 5 1 1 7
10  Italy 4 3 3 10
11  Hungary 3 5 11 19
12  Ukraine 3 5 10 18
13  France 3 3 4 10
14  Sweden 3 2 6 11
15  England 1 6 2 9
16  Romania 1 4 8 13
17  Poland 1 3 6 10
18  Philippines 1 2 7 10
19  Bulgaria 1 1 2 4
20  Belarus 1 1 0 2
21  Brazil 1 0 2 3
22  Great Britain 1 0 1 2
23  Panama 1 0 0 1
24  Norway 0 3 1 4
25  Argentina 0 2 2 4
26  Azerbaijan 0 2 1 3
27  Denmark 0 1 5 6
28  Netherlands 0 1 3 4
 Thailand 0 1 3 4
30  Australia 0 1 2 3
 Greece 0 1 2 3
32  Jamaica 0 1 0 1
 Switzerland 0 1 0 1
34  Finland 0 0 3 3
35  Egypt 0 0 2 2
36  Chinese Taipei 0 0 1 1
 Germany 0 0 1 1
 Japan 0 0 1 1
 Moldova 0 0 1 1
 New Zealand 0 0 1 1
 South Korea 0 0 1 1
 Tajikistan 0 0 1 1
 Tunisia 0 0 1 1
Total 103 102 206 411

See also

References

  1. ^ "AIBA World Boxing Championships". AIBA.org. International Boxing Association (AIBA). Retrieved 2016-03-27.
  2. ^ "AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships". AIBA.org. International Boxing Association (AIBA). Retrieved 2016-03-27.