Boxing at the 8th All Africa Games was held in Abuja, Nigeria from October 4-13, 2003. It served as a qualification tournament for the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. The number one and two earned a ticket for the Olympic tournament.
A total number of 182 fighters from 27 countries did participate in Abuja, Nigeria, with the host country (four gold, three silver, no bronze) as the overall-winner before Egypt (three gold, two silver, two bronze) and Algeria (two gold, one silver, four bronze). All the finalists got quotes for the 2004 Summer Olympics. Two more qualification tournaments followed afterwards on the African continent: in Casablanca, Morocco (January 15 to January 22, 2004) and in Gaborone, Botswana (March 15 to March 22, 2004).
EVENT | GOLD | SILVER | BRONZE |
---|---|---|---|
Light Flyweight (– 48 kilograms) | Suleiman Bilali Kenya | Endalkachew Kebede Ethiopia | Joseph Jermia Namibia Jolly Katongole |
Flyweight (– 51 kilograms) | Walid Cherif Tunisia | Paulus Ambunda Namibia | Mebarek Soltani Algeria Adebellahim Mohamed |
Bantamweight (– 54 kilograms) | Malik Bouziane Algeria | Nestor Bolum Nigeria | Lankwe Wilson Ghana David Munyasia |
Featherweight (– 57 kilograms) | Hadj Belkheir Algeria | Muideen Ganiyu Nigeria | Ayman Mohamed Egypt Daniel Tadele |
Lightweight (– 60 kilograms) | Ahmed Sadiq Nigeria | Bongani Mahlangu South Africa | Perel Rivan Cameroon Esayas Getaneh |
Light Welterweight (– 64 kilograms) | Davidson Emenogu Nigeria | Nasserredine Fillali Algeria | Davis Mwale Zambia Sadat Tebazaalwa |
Welterweight (– 69 kilograms) | Mohamed Hikal Egypt | Zakaria Nefzi Tunisia | Benamar Meskine Algeria Ellis Chibuye |
Middleweight (– 75 kilograms) | Ramadan Yasser Egypt | Hassan N'Dam N'Jikam Cameroon | Daniel Shisia Kenya Nabil Kassel |
Light Heavyweight (– 81 kilograms) | Ahmed Ismail Egypt | Isaac Ekpo Nigeria | Abdelhani Kenzi Algeria Sibiri Kabore |
Heavyweight (– 91 kilograms) | Emmanuel Izonritei Nigeria | Mohamed El-Sayed Egypt | Apostolos Eleftheriou South Africa Parfait Amougou |
Super Heavyweight (+ 91 kilograms) | Gbenga Oloukun Nigeria | Mohamed Aly Egypt | Carlos Takam Cameroon Gregorio Manuel |
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Nigeria competed in the 2003 All-Africa Games held at the National Stadium in the city of Abuja. It was the eighth time that the country had taken part in the games and expectations were high for the competitors as they were playing on home soil. 2003 was the second time that Nigeria hosted the games, as the 1973 All-Africa Games had been held in Lagos thirty years before. The country did extremely well and achieved a commanding first place in the medal table. The team left with a total of 240 medals, of which 85 were gold medals and 90 silver, a tally that remained unmatched until 2019.
Uganda competed in the 2003 All-Africa Games which took place at the National Stadium in the city of Abuja, Nigeria. Uganda sent a substantial delegation and entered thirty three events, some, like the women’s 100 and 200 metres, with more than one competitor. The team won five medals and came twenty-sixth in the final medal table. Dorcus Inzikuru won a silver medal in the women’s 5000 metres. The individual bronze medals were won by Ajambo Irene in weightlifting and the boxing team of Jolly Kotongole and Sadat Tebazalwa. In team events, the Ugandan women’s team were awarded a bronze medal in softball.
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Mali competed in the 2003 All-Africa Games held at the National Stadium in the city of Abuja, Nigeria. The country’s team won six medals and came joint twenty-third in the medal table. The country competed in the first women’s football tournament in the history of the Games, and came fourth. Bourama Mariko won a silver medal in karate, and the team gained four bronze medals in taekwondo.
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