Germany at The 2000 Summer Olympics - Boxing

Boxing

Men's Flyweight (51 kg)

  • Vardan Zakaryan
    • Round 1 — Lost to Wijan Ponlid of Thailand (did not advance)

Men's Featherweight (57 kg)

  • Falk Huste
    • Round 1 — Defeated Joni Turunen of Finland
    • Round 2 — Lost to Ricardo Juarez of United States (did not advance)

Men's Lightweight (60 kg)

  • Norman Schuster
    • Round 1 — Lost to Patrick López of Venezuela (did not advance)

Men's Light Welterweight (63.5 kg)

  • Kay Huste
    • Round 1 — Defeated Victor Hugo Castro of Argentina
    • Round 2 — Lost to Sven Paris of Italy (did not advance)

Men's Welterweight (67 kg)

  • Steven Küchler
    • Round 1 — Defeated Yovanny Lorenzo of Dominica
    • Round 2 — Lost to Dorel Simion of Romania (did not advance)

Men's Light Middleweight (71 kg)

  • Adnan Ćatić
    • Round 1 — Defeated Dilshod Yarbekov of Uzbekistan
    • Round 2 — Defeated Richard Rowles of Australia
    • Quarterfinal — Lost to Jermain Taylor of United States (did not advance)

Men's Heavyweight (91 kg)

  • Sebastian Köber
    • Round 1 — Bye
    • Round 2 — Defeated Magomed Aripgadjiyev of Azerbaijan
    • Quarterfinal — Defeated Mark Simmons of Canada
    • Semifinal — Lost to Félix Savón of Germany — Bronze medal

Men's Super Heavyweight (+91 kg)

  • Cengiz Koç
    • Round 1 — Bye
    • Round 2 — Lost to Alexis Rubalcaba of Cuba (did not advance)

Read more about this topic:  Germany At The 2000 Summer Olympics

Famous quotes containing the word boxing:

    ... to paint with oil paints for the first time ... is like trying to make something exquisitely accurate and microscopically clear out of mud pies with boxing gloves on.
    Brenda Ueland (1891–1985)

    I can entertain the proposition that life is a metaphor for boxing—for one of those bouts that go on and on, round following round, jabs, missed punches, clinches, nothing determined, again the bell and again and you and your opponent so evenly matched it’s impossible not to see that your opponent is you.... Life is like boxing in many unsettling respects. But boxing is only like boxing.
    Joyce Carol Oates (b. 1938)