homesports NewsBoxers Nikhat Zareen, Amit Panghal, Sagar storm into finals

Boxers Nikhat Zareen, Amit Panghal, Sagar storm into finals

Nikhat stormed into the final of women's 50kg after outclassing England's Stubley Alfia Savannah 5-0. Panghal (51kg), too, displayed his class as he reached his second consecutive CWG final.

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By PTI Aug 7, 2022 3:58:19 PM IST (Updated)

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Boxers Nikhat Zareen, Amit Panghal, Sagar storm into finals
Reigning world champion Nikhat Zareen, Amit Panghal, and Sagar Ahlawat were among four Indian boxers who entered the finals of the Commonwealth Games here on Saturday. Nikhat stormed into the final of women's 50kg after outclassing England's Stubley Alfia Savannah 5-0. Panghal (51kg), too, displayed his class as he reached his second consecutive CWG final.

In the penultimate bout of the day, Sagar earned a unanimous 5-0 victory over Nigeria's Ifeanyi Onyekwere to reach the gold medal contest. Nitu Ghanghas (48kg) also remained on course for a gold in her maiden appearance.
But another debutant, Jaismine Lamboria (60kg), had to be content with a bronze as she went down to Gemma Paige Richardson of England via a 2-3 split verdict. Rohit Tokas managed also a bronze medal in the men's welterweight category after going down to Zambia's Stephen Zimba in the semi-final by a split decision.
Before that, India's Mohammed Hussamuddin too settled for a bronze after losing his men's 57kg category semifinal against Ghana's Joseph Commey 1-4. Nikhat started the semifinal on a confident note and dominated all three rounds to emerge the winner in the lop-sided bout.
As expected, the 26-year-old Indian was in lead after the opening round with all the five judges ruling it in her favour, and it went on similar lines in the ensuing two rounds. Panghal, who is vying to win the yellow metal after his silver in the last edition, came from behind to beat an aggressive Patrick Chinyemba of Zambia with a 5-0 unanimous decision win.
Nitu, on the other hand, prevailed over Canada's Priyanka Dhillon as she notched a RSC (Referee Stops Contest) win in the minimum weight category. Such was the 21-year-old Nitu's confidence that she played with an open guard, inviting her opponent to strike while using her straight jabs and combination punches to great effect. In the end, the referee had to end the contest.
In pursuit of their maiden gold medals, both the boxers will have to overcome local challengers in Kiaran Macdonald (men's flyweight) and Demie-Jade Resztan (women's minimum) in their respective finals on Sunday. "I know it would be tough, there would be loud cheers for him but I've to stay focused. Can't let it go this time," a determined Panghal, who lost to another Briton and Tokyo Olympics champion in Galal Yafai in 2018, told PTI.

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