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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Exclusive by Sean Ingle

Up to 10 suspicious matches at 2016 Olympics, boxing investigation finds

The investigation has identified seven to 10 suspicious matches where bout manipulation is likely to have taken place.
The investigation has identified seven to 10 suspicious matches where bout manipulation is likely to have taken place. Photograph: Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images

A major investigation into boxing at the 2016 Olympic Games has identified seven to 10 suspicious matches where bout manipulation is likely to have taken place.

It is understood one of those fights involves the Irish boxer Michael Conlan, who lost on a hugely controversial split decision to Russia’s Vladimir Nikitin in a bantamweight quarter-final in Rio de Janeiro.

More details are expected on Thursday when Professor Richard McLaren, who conducted the 2016 probe into allegations of state-sponsored doping by the Russian Federation, will give a press conference in Lausanne to reveal details of the first stage of his investigation into amateur boxing.

McLaren and his team of investigators at Harod Associates have spent the last three months examining suspicious judging after a request by the amateur boxing’s governing body, Aiba, to look at corruption.

Rumours of alleged wrongdoing engulfed the 2016 Rio boxing tournament even before a punch was thrown – with the Guardian told that there was “no doubt” certain bouts in Rio would be “corrupted”.

Horrified senior officials within the sport also told this paper at the time that a cabal of officials were able to use their power to manipulate the judging system to ensure certain boxers would win.

When the tournament got under way, there was then widespread fury after a number of highly questionable decisions, with Conlan going as far as to blame Aiba of corruption “from the core right to the top” after his defeat.

“They’re fucking cheats,” he said at ringside. “They’re known for being cheats. Amateur boxing stinks from the core right to the top. It’s about whoever pays the most money.”

In 2017 Aiba permanently removed all of its so-called “five-star” judges from international competition and admitted “a concentration of decision-making power” and “an unwelcome axis of influence” affected its judging during the Rio Olympics. However, it said it had found no “active interference” in the results but accepted there had been a “detrimental impact on in-competition best practice”.

Ireland's Michael Conlan fights Russia's Vladimir Nikitin during a controversial bantamweight quarter-final at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
Ireland’s Michael Conlan (right) fights Russia’s Vladimir Nikitin during a controversial bantamweight quarter-final at the 2016 Olympics in Rio. Photograph: Jae C Hong/AP

Since then, Aiba has been suspended by the International Olympic Committee and there is growing fear in boxing circles that the sport could be kicked out of the 2024 Olympics.

However, amateur boxing’s governing body insists it has changed under the presidency of Umar Kremlev, who replaced Gafur Rakhimov – whose short tenure was dominated by him being on a US treasury department sanctions list as “one of Uzbekistan’s leading criminals”, which he disputed.

As part of its reforms Aiba has asked McLaren to look again at the 2016 Olympics as part of a three-part investigation into the sport, which the governing body hopes will help it return to the IOC fold.

But only last week the IOC warned it had ongoing concerns about judging in the sport at the Aiba youth World Championships and Asian Championships held earlier this year.

The IOC’s Executive Board also restated its “deepest concerns” with Aiba’s governance and reiterated its previous position that boxing’s place in Paris 2024 was in doubt.

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