IBA World Boxing Championships

The IBA Men's World Boxing Championships are biennial amateur boxing competitions organised by the International Boxing Association (IBA, previously known as AIBA), which is the sport governing body.[1][2] Alongside the Olympic boxing programme, they are the highest level of competition for the sport. The championships were first held for men in 1974.[3] Since 1989 the men's championships are held every odd year.

IBA World Boxing Championships
Statusactive
Genresports event
Date(s)varying
Frequencybiennial
Location(s)various
Inaugurated1974 (1974) (men)
2001 (2001) (women)
Organised byIBA

Weight classes

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Cuban Felix Savon is the most successful boxer in the World Amateur Boxing Championships (Men's editions) of all time having won 6 gold medals as a heavyweight.

As of 1 August 2021, men are grouped into 13 weight classes as follows:[4]

Editions

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Number Year Host Dates Venue Events Nations Boxers
1 1974   Havana, Cuba 17–30 August Coliseo de la Ciudad Deportiva 11 45 274
2 1978   Belgrade, Yugoslavia 6–20 May Pionir Sports Hall 11 41 219
3 1982   Munich, West Germany 4–15 May Olympiahalle 12 45 271
4 1986   Reno, United States 8–18 May Reno-Sparks Convention Center 12 38 235
5 1989   Moscow, Soviet Union 17 September – 1 October Olympic Stadium 12 43 236
6 1991   Sydney, Australia 14–23 November State Sports Centre 12 48 242
7 1993   Tampere, Finland 7–16 May Tampere Ice Stadium 12 53 270
8 1995   Berlin, Germany 4–15 May Deutschlandhalle 12 62 351
9 1997   Budapest, Hungary 18–26 October Budapest Sportcsarnok 12 67 350
10 1999   Houston, United States 15–29 August George R. Brown Convention Center 12 54 278
11 2001   Belfast, United Kingdom 3–10 June Odyssey Arena 12 67 334
12 2003   Bangkok, Thailand 6–13 July Nimibutr Stadium 11 68 338
13 2005   Mianyang, China 13–20 November Jiu Zhou Gymnasium 11 74 412
14 2007   Chicago, United States 23 October – 3 November UIC Pavilion 11 101 557
15 2009   Milan, Italy 1–12 September Mediolanum Forum 11 133 554
16 2011   Baku, Azerbaijan 22 September – 10 October Heydar Aliyev Sports 10 127 685
17 2013   Almaty, Kazakhstan 14–26 October Baluan Sholak Sports Palace 10 116 576
18 2015   Doha, Qatar 5–18 October Ali Bin Hamad al-Attiyah Arena 10 73 260
19 2017   Hamburg, Germany 25 August – 3 September Alsterdorfer Sporthalle 10 85 279
20 2019   Yekaterinburg, Russia 8–21 September Ekaterinburg Expo 8 78 365
21 2021   Belgrade, Serbia 25 October – 6 November Štark Arena 13 88 510
22 2023   Tashkent, Uzbekistan 30 April – 14 May Humo Arena 13 107 538
23 2025   Astana, Kazakhstan May 13

All-time medal table (1974–2023)

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Updated after the 2023 IBA Men's World Boxing Championships.

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Cuba813830149
2  Russia28212675
3  Kazakhstan18162256
4  United States [a]18131950
5  Soviet Union15111743
6  Uzbekistan14172152
7  Bulgaria881935
8  Ukraine7121130
9  Romania751729
10  Azerbaijan751224
11  France671730
12  Italy641525
13  Germany462535
14  China32914
15  Hungary31610
16  Turkey241117
17  South Korea23813
18  Puerto Rico [a]2136
19  Japan2125
20  East Germany181524
21  Yugoslavia161017
22  Mongolia15713
23  England14914
24  Ireland13913
  Poland13913
26  Brazil13610
27  Thailand1359
28  Armenia12912
29  Georgia12811
30  Russian Boxing Federation [b]1225
31  Nigeria1135
32  Kenya1102
33  Morocco1023
34  Uganda1012
35  Venezuela05611
36  Belarus03710
37  Philippines0336
38  Finland0325
39  North Korea0257
40  Algeria0224
  Netherlands0224
42  India01910
43  Canada0145
44  Lithuania0134
45  Argentina0123
Thailand Boxing Federation [c]0123
  Wales0123
48  Croatia0112
  Ecuador0112
50  West Germany0066
51  Australia0055
  Egypt0055
  Spain0055
54  Sweden0044
  Tajikistan0044
56  Czech Republic0033
57  Dominican Republic0022
  Mexico0022
  Norway0022
  Serbia and Montenegro0022
  Slovakia0022
62  Albania0011
  Belgium0011
  Cameroon0011
  Colombia0011
  Costa Rica0011
  Czechoslovakia0011
  Denmark0011
  Ghana0011
  Great Britain0011
  Iran0011
  Jordan0011
  Kyrgyzstan0011
  New Zealand0011
  Pakistan0011
  Panama0011
  Scotland0011
  Serbia0011
  Trinidad and Tobago0011
Totals (79 entries)248246496990
Notes
  1. ^ a b 1986 silver medalists Luis Román Rolón (48 kg, Puerto Rico) and Loren Ross (81 kg, United States) were disqualified for doping and stripped of their medals, which were not transferred to other athletes.
  2. ^ At the 2021 championships, in accordance with a ban by WADA and a decision by CAS, Russian boxers were not permitted to use the Russian name, flag, or anthem. They instead participated as the Russian Boxing Federation and under the Russian Olympic Committee flag.
  3. ^ At the 2021 championships, in accordance with a ban by WADA, Thai boxers participated as the Thailand Boxing Federation, under the AIBA flag.

Multiple gold medalists

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Boldface denotes active amateur boxers and highest medal count among all boxers (including these who not included in these tables) per type.

Rank Boxer Country Weights From To Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Félix Savón   Cuba 91 kg 1986 1999 6 1 7
2 Julio César La Cruz   Cuba 81 kg / 92 kg 2011 2021 5 1 6
3 Juan Hernández Sierra   Cuba 67 kg 1991 1999 4 1 5
4 Lázaro Álvarez   Cuba 56 kg / 60 kg / 57 kg 2011 2019 3 2 5
5 Serafim Todorov   Bulgaria 54 kg / 57 kg 1989 1995 3 1 4
Zou Shiming   China 48 kg / 49 kg 2003 2011 3 1 4
7 Francisc Vaștag   Romania 67 kg / 71 kg 1989 1995 3 1 4
8 Roberto Balado   Cuba +91 kg 1989 1993 3 3
Andy Cruz   Cuba 64 kg / 63 kg / 63.5 kg 2017 2021 3 2
Adolfo Horta   Cuba 54 kg / 57 kg / 60 kg 1978 1986 3 3
Mario Kindelán   Cuba 60 kg 1999 2003 3 3
Magomedrasul Majidov   Azerbaijan +91 kg 2011 2017 3 3
Sofiane Oumiha   France 60 kg 2017 2023 3 3
Odlanier Solís   Cuba 91 kg / +91 kg 2001 2005 3 3
Teófilo Stevenson   Cuba +81 kg / +91 kg 1974 1986 3 3

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "AIBA World Boxing Championships". AIBA.org. International Boxing Association (AIBA). Archived from the original on 31 March 2016. Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  2. ^ "AIBA Women's World Boxing Championships". AIBA.org. International Boxing Association (AIBA). Archived from the original on 26 March 2016. Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  3. ^ "AIBA Boxing History – AIBA". AIBA. Archived from the original on 25 November 2018. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  4. ^ "AIBA increases number of weight categories for boxers". AIBA. 5 July 2021. Archived from the original on 2 October 2021. Retrieved 2 October 2021.