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Indian Olympics Dream!!!!

How many medals will India win in London-2012

  • 0

    Votes: 27 16.4%
  • 1-3

    Votes: 34 20.6%
  • 4-7

    Votes: 76 46.1%
  • 8-10

    Votes: 15 9.1%
  • >10

    Votes: 13 7.9%

  • Total voters
    165
@Lurker why u said u cant understand how manoj lost 2nd round? Read my previous post in this thread.... i did told u that manjoy wont win because he was facing GB boxer.... This is the reason america, russia, japan, china, south korea etc etc dont send much boxer because they knew its not worth it as boxing are fixed by judges according to host wish.... Many over here said am wrong.... Well u know whats truth....

According to me 2nd and 3rd round went to manoj.... While match was already decided in first round when judges gave GB boxer 7 points....
 
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super power tally
US 24
China 24
India 1 silver - 2 bronze (good show)
 
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defently india will win this olympic minimum 2 gold (maximum 3) .are yaar we have 2 great boxer(mary kom-5 time world champ,vijendar and may be devendro silver or bronze ) and world champ.wrestler sushil kumar .
 
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'Magnificent Mary' takes to ring in women's boxing's Olympic debut - The Times of India

MaryKom.png


LONDON: Five-time world champion M C Mary Kom (51kg) would be India's lone flagbearer and a gold medal hope when women's boxing makes its historic Olympic debut in three weight categories on Sunday.

The 29-year-old Manipuri is the lone Indian woman boxer in fray at the mega-event after making the cut in the only qualifying tournament -- the World Championships in May earlier this year.

The mother-of-two, who is also a multiple-time Asian champion, will face Poland's Karolina Michalczuk -- a former bantamweight (54kg) world champion -- in her pre-quarterfinal bout on Sunday at 1830hrs (IST).

The Indian, who was made the face of International Boxing Association's campaign to get women's boxing included in Olympics, needs to win just two bouts to be assured of a medal and first up for her is Michalczuk.

Michalczuk, a 32-year-old, won a bronze medal at the World Championships this year.

"The critics and some of my well wishers still want me to prove myself after 12 years in this sport and after winning five World Championships," Mary Kom has stated.

"I have won my World Championships in 46 and 48kg. These weight categories are not in Asian or Olympic Games. Boxing was introduced in Asian Games only in 2010 and there I got a bronze in 51kg."

"Before that for over a decade I was fighting in lower weight categories. Here also I am in 51kg, I have no complaints. My critics may not know but I know what I have to do," Mary said.

The boxer has been forced to train without her American coach Charles Atkinson, who has been denied access to the Athletes Village as he does not have the International Boxing Association's 3 Star Certificate for coaches.

'Magnificent Mary', as she is called by the AIBA, will be taking the ring on Sunday with national coach Anoop Kumar by her side and her mother watching her from the stands for the first time in her career.

"I am told if I win two bouts I will be winning a medal. I am not taking things lightly. I am focused because like me, my opponents must also have her plans and strategies, let us not forget that," she has said.

If Mary Kom wins her opening bout, she will be up against Tunisia's Maroua Rahali, who has got a first-round bye.
 
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I made fun of Pakistan because what he said about India. Not once but twice

She is trying to be the chaudhary, the mother hen to Pakistanis while her own little Hong Kong has just one bronze.

Probably she is enjoying the success of the "locusts" vicariously. ;)

You missed superpower of Muslim world aka Pakistan.

0

^ this is his last post.

Quite odd. This is not about Pakistan the "fort of Islam" at all.
 
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No Indian protest after Manoj's Olympic ouster


Fuming they might be after medal hope Manoj Kumar's controversial ouster from the Olympic Games, but the Indian boxing team decided against filing a protest against the pre-quarterfinal loss.

Manoj (64kg) cried "cheating" as he exited from the Games ring after being distinctly unlucky in getting points in a bout won by British boxer Thomas Stalker 20-16 last night.

"It's a heartbreaking loss and the result was unfair but we will not protest because we don't want to be seen as bad losers," said an Indian boxing contingent member.

Manoj was left flummoxed after his bout and said, "It doesn't look fair because he was going in one direction and the scores 7-4 and 9-4 to him don't justify that.

"It doesn't look like an Olympic Games but more like a district competition because if it's Great Britain in the ring it doesn't matter who's against them. It's like a district competition where there's lots of cheating, cheating, cheating," the dejected Commonwealth Games gold-medallist added.

Stalker won the first round 7-4 and maintained his lead by winning the second round 9-5. The Indian then launched an all out attack in the third and last round which he claimed 7-4 but some debatable judging ultimately saw him leave the arena disappointed.

The Indian camp understandably was furious with the decision and strongly felt that Manoj was at the receiving end of some dubious point calls.

India's Cuban coach Blas Iglesias Fernandez said Manoj should have won the other two rounds as well as he fought in the same manner.

"The last round was 7-4 (to Kumar). Why no other rounds? All rounds were the same. It was very poor judging," he said.

On whether his boxer was "robbed", Fernandez said "I think so."

National coach Gurbaksh Singh Sandhu said "My athlete was extraordinary. You saw for yourself what happened."

The Indians have been at the wrong side of judging at the ongoing Games, losing a protest filed against Sumit Sangwan's (81kg) close first-round exit.

Later, Vikas Krishan (69kg) was ousted despite being declared a winner initially after his American opponent won an appeal against his triumph.

The matter is now in the Court of Arbitration but the chances of anything happening in the Indian's favour appear remote ahead of the last-eight stage starting Tuesday.


No Indian protest after Manoj's Olympic ouster - The Times of India


BOXING THE BIGGEST JOKE OF LONDON-2012 :tdown:
 
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No Indian protest after Manoj's Olympic ouster


Fuming they might be after medal hope Manoj Kumar's controversial ouster from the Olympic Games, but the Indian boxing team decided against filing a protest against the pre-quarterfinal loss.

Manoj (64kg) cried "cheating" as he exited from the Games ring after being distinctly unlucky in getting points in a bout won by British boxer Thomas Stalker 20-16 last night.

"It's a heartbreaking loss and the result was unfair but we will not protest because we don't want to be seen as bad losers," said an Indian boxing contingent member.

Manoj was left flummoxed after his bout and said, "It doesn't look fair because he was going in one direction and the scores 7-4 and 9-4 to him don't justify that.

"It doesn't look like an Olympic Games but more like a district competition because if it's Great Britain in the ring it doesn't matter who's against them. It's like a district competition where there's lots of cheating, cheating, cheating," the dejected Commonwealth Games gold-medallist added.

Stalker won the first round 7-4 and maintained his lead by winning the second round 9-5. The Indian then launched an all out attack in the third and last round which he claimed 7-4 but some debatable judging ultimately saw him leave the arena disappointed.

The Indian camp understandably was furious with the decision and strongly felt that Manoj was at the receiving end of some dubious point calls.

India's Cuban coach Blas Iglesias Fernandez said Manoj should have won the other two rounds as well as he fought in the same manner.

"The last round was 7-4 (to Kumar). Why no other rounds? All rounds were the same. It was very poor judging," he said.

On whether his boxer was "robbed", Fernandez said "I think so."

National coach Gurbaksh Singh Sandhu said "My athlete was extraordinary. You saw for yourself what happened."

The Indians have been at the wrong side of judging at the ongoing Games, losing a protest filed against Sumit Sangwan's (81kg) close first-round exit.

Later, Vikas Krishan (69kg) was ousted despite being declared a winner initially after his American opponent won an appeal against his triumph.

The matter is now in the Court of Arbitration but the chances of anything happening in the Indian's favour appear remote ahead of the last-eight stage starting Tuesday.


No Indian protest after Manoj's Olympic ouster - The Times of India


BOXING THE BIGGEST JOKE OF LONDON-2012 :tdown:

actually london olympics is biggest joke...

No Indian protest after Manoj's Olympic ouster


Fuming they might be after medal hope Manoj Kumar's controversial ouster from the Olympic Games, but the Indian boxing team decided against filing a protest against the pre-quarterfinal loss.

Manoj (64kg) cried "cheating" as he exited from the Games ring after being distinctly unlucky in getting points in a bout won by British boxer Thomas Stalker 20-16 last night.

"It's a heartbreaking loss and the result was unfair but we will not protest because we don't want to be seen as bad losers," said an Indian boxing contingent member.

Manoj was left flummoxed after his bout and said, "It doesn't look fair because he was going in one direction and the scores 7-4 and 9-4 to him don't justify that.

"It doesn't look like an Olympic Games but more like a district competition because if it's Great Britain in the ring it doesn't matter who's against them. It's like a district competition where there's lots of cheating, cheating, cheating," the dejected Commonwealth Games gold-medallist added.

Stalker won the first round 7-4 and maintained his lead by winning the second round 9-5. The Indian then launched an all out attack in the third and last round which he claimed 7-4 but some debatable judging ultimately saw him leave the arena disappointed.

The Indian camp understandably was furious with the decision and strongly felt that Manoj was at the receiving end of some dubious point calls.

India's Cuban coach Blas Iglesias Fernandez said Manoj should have won the other two rounds as well as he fought in the same manner.

"The last round was 7-4 (to Kumar). Why no other rounds? All rounds were the same. It was very poor judging," he said.

On whether his boxer was "robbed", Fernandez said "I think so."

National coach Gurbaksh Singh Sandhu said "My athlete was extraordinary. You saw for yourself what happened."

The Indians have been at the wrong side of judging at the ongoing Games, losing a protest filed against Sumit Sangwan's (81kg) close first-round exit.

Later, Vikas Krishan (69kg) was ousted despite being declared a winner initially after his American opponent won an appeal against his triumph.

The matter is now in the Court of Arbitration but the chances of anything happening in the Indian's favour appear remote ahead of the last-eight stage starting Tuesday.


No Indian protest after Manoj's Olympic ouster - The Times of India


BOXING THE BIGGEST JOKE OF LONDON-2012 :tdown:

actually london olympics is biggest joke...
 
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