Aussie boxer medals at World Boxing Championships

By John Coomer / Roar Guru

Super heavyweight boxer “Big Bad” Joe Goodall has won his quarter-final bout at the AIBA world amateur boxing championships in Hamburg, Germany overnight.

Brisbane-based Goodall trains out of the Stretton boxing gym along with Jeff Horn, under the watchful eye of Glenn Rushton.

The quarter-final win means that Goodall is guaranteed at least a bronze medal, the first medal Australia will have achieved at the men’s world championships since 1991.

Goodall will also be in the hunt to make history by winning a silver or gold medal if he can win his semi-final bout against a boxer from Azerbaijan. Australia has only ever won three medals at the men’s championships – all bronze.

So far at the tournament, the 25-year-old unseeded Goodall has upset the third-seeded Ukrainian and sixth-seeded Russian boxers in his division, as well as a fighter from Egypt. He’s a talented boxer who uses his 105kg, 193cm frame to his advantage.

Goodall has been one of Australia’s leading amateurs for several years, winning numerous national titles as well as a silver medal at the 2014 Glasgow Commonwealth Games. He took up boxing in 2009 after a hip injury ended his dreams of being an AFL footballer.

Goodall qualified for the Commonwealth Games after upsetting the favourite Willis Meehan at the national titles. Meehan is the son of former world-rated heavyweight Kali Meehan and has since turned pro. He is 5-0 and played briefly in the NRL with the Sydney Roosters.

Australia sent a team of eight boxers to the World Championships, but only Goodall will return with a medal – but it’s a major achievement just to qualify. Only 32 boxers are eligible for each weight division.

Australian boxers not only had to win the Australian title, they also had to win gold or silver at the Oceania Championships to qualify. The Oceania region includes 13 other countries in American Samoa, the Cook Islands, Micronesia, Fiji, Kiribati, Nauru, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Tahiti, Tonga, Vanuatu and Guam.

Goodall’s semi-final will most likely to be in the very early hours of Saturday morning Australian time.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2017-09-01T23:42:02+00:00

John Coomer

Roar Guru


Update - Joe went down in a close bout in his semi-final the early hours of Saturday morning, so will come home with a bronze medal. A great achievement, Australia's first boxing medal from the world championships since 1991.

AUTHOR

2017-08-30T23:15:32+00:00

John Coomer

Roar Guru


Thanks Jamie, any Australian achievement on the world stage should certainly be celebrated. Amateurs do it for the love of their sport, it's a long hard road, often with little publicity.

2017-08-30T22:25:35+00:00

Jamie Mills

Roar Rookie


Fantastic achievement. Hope he can score another win, but great result regardless. Thanks John for letting this news see the light of day.

AUTHOR

2017-08-30T21:23:45+00:00

John Coomer

Roar Guru


Yea I agree it does seem odd on the surface. And Roy and HG would love it too. In boxing tournaments (even at the Olympics), they give out two bronze medals, one to each semi-final loser. That's because it's a tournament format with automatic elimination when you lose. The two boxers who lose their respective semi-finals theoretically have both reached the same stage and so they are both judged as having finished equal third. They could have a bout between those two to determine one bronze medallist, but they don't. So Joe will get at least a bronze, but hopefully he'll have a win in the semi to put himself in the final for a chance at gold.

2017-08-30T13:47:36+00:00

R2k

Guest


Congratulations to him. I'll be honest I don't understand how making a semi final guarantees you a bronze medal though. How does that system work? Finally Roy and HG get their dream. A solid super heavyweight getting the wins.

2017-08-30T10:58:00+00:00

BigJ

Roar Guru


Good for him hope he gets the gold

2017-08-30T07:24:12+00:00

Neil

Guest


Glenn Rushton is the best trainer in the country hands down.

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