1997 World Amateur Boxing Championships - Medal Winners

Medal Winners

Event 1 ! Gold 2 ! Silver 3 ! Bronze
Light Flyweight
(– 48 kilograms)
Maikro Romero
Roel Velasco
Rudolf Dydi

Daniel Petrov

Flyweight
(– 51 kilograms)
Manuel Mantilla
Ilfat Riazapov
Omar Andrés Narváez

Bulat Jumadilov

Bantamweight
(– 54 kilograms)
Raimkul Malakhbekov
Waldemar Font
Soner Karagöz

Aram Ramazyan

Featherweight
(– 57 kilograms)
István Kovács
Falk Huste
Sayan Sanszat

Rusinelson Hardy

Lightweight
(– 60 kilograms)
Aleksander Maletin
Tumentsetseg Uitumen
Koba Gogoladze

Shin Eun-Chul

Light Welterweight
(– 63,5 kilograms)
Dorel Simion
Paata Gvasalia
Tonton Semakala

Lukáš Konecný

Welterweight
(– 67 kilograms)
Oleg Saitov
Sergiy Dzindziruk
Juan Hernández Sierra

Marian Simon

Light Middleweight
(– 71 kilograms)
Alfredo Duvergel
Yermakhan Ibraimov
Ercüment Aslan

Adrian Diaconu

Middleweight
(– 75 kilograms)
Zsolt Erdei
Ariel Hernández
Dirk Eigenbrodt

Jean-Paul Mendy

Light Heavyweight
(– 81 kilograms)
Aleksandr Lebziak
Frédéric Serrat
Isael Alvarez

Stephen Kirk

Heavyweight
(– 91 kilograms)
Félix Savón
Mike Hanke
Tue Bjørn Thomsen

Giacobbe Fragomeni

Super Heavyweight
(+ 91 kilograms)
Georgi Kandelaki
Alexis Rubalcaba
Sergei Liakhovich

Paolo Vidoz

World Amateur Boxing Championships
Men's
  • Havana 1974
  • Belgrade 1978
  • Munich 1982
  • Reno 1986
  • Moscow 1989
  • Sydney 1991
  • Tampere 1993
  • Berlin 1995
  • Budapest 1997
  • Houston 1999
  • Belfast 2001
  • Bangkok 2003
  • Mianyang 2005
  • Chicago 2007
  • Milan 2009
  • Baku 2011
  • Astana 2013
Women's
  • Scranton 2001
  • Antalya 2002
  • Podolsk 2005
  • New Delhi 2006
  • Ningbo 2008
  • Bridgetown 2010
  • Qinhuangdao 2012
  • Canada 2014
Youth
  • Guadalajara 2008
  • Baku 2010

Read more about this topic:  1997 World Amateur Boxing Championships

Famous quotes containing the word winners:

    The two real political parties in America are the Winners and the Losers. The people don’t acknowledge this. They claim membership in two imaginary parties, the Republicans and the Democrats, instead.
    Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. (b. 1922)