Another Olympic medal for Ireland as Belfast boxer Aidan Walsh guaranteed at least bronze
A patient and composed Aidan Walsh guaranteed Ireland their first boxing medal of the Tokyo Olympic Games with a 4-1 win over Mauritian, Merven Clair in the Kokugikan Arena.
It brings to three the number of medals Ireland have won in the first week of competition, two in rowing and now the Belfast welterweight, who won his quarter-final largely in the first two rounds of the bout.
The 24-year-old, boxing in his first Olympics, raced to a smart start and for the first three minutes was by far the better boxer. The judges thought so too with all five awarding the Monkstown BC fighter the first round 10-9.
Walsh kept that tempo into the second round and although southpaw Clair came more into the bout with scoring shots, it was the Irishman who impressed most of the judges. It was a narrow second round but three of the five judges saw it in favour of Walsh, giving him the critical 2-0 lead he was looking for.
It was then desperation mode for the Mauritian, but it was Walsh who stepped up in the final stanza, with just one judge giving Clair the round. Walsh took the fight 29-28, 28-29, 30-27, 30-27, 30-27 and moves on to the semi-final where he meets Britainâs Pat McCormack for the prize of an Olympic final.
âItâs incredible, itâs amazing, itâs something that I dreamed of since I was no age,â said Walsh.
âThe same as Paddy Barnes, Michael Conlan, Hugh Russell, I was talking to Hugh Russell before I came out here and itâs amazing now that Iâm in the same situation that he was in. Obviously I want to go further. Itâs really, really good.â
Walsh follows a long successful tradition by becoming the ninth Belfast boxer to win a medal at the Olympic Games.
âIâm getting shivers here just thinking about it.â
The Irishman was also spoken to in the last round by the referee. But he stuck to the style that has proven so effective.
âHe told me to fight. Iâve been getting that my whole life so I have, people saying âfight, fight, fight, hurry up and moveâ,â said Walsh.
âIâve always had that style of moving. Iâm just now implementing more stuff while Iâm moving that the coaches are showing me and Iâm learning more and more styles and techniques and tactics while on the move whereas before I used to just move and not really do as much.
âNow Iâm growing as a fighter, Iâm not just going on the move, Iâm going backwards and going forwards and itâs great.â
Earlier, Kellie Harrington came through her first fight against Italian southpaw Rebecca Nicoli. The Dublin World Champion from 2018 cleverly negotiated her way through a tricky three rounds against the dedicated counter puncher.

In a cagey opening round Harrington kept her distance, scoring with the jab and the occasional combination against an opponent who rarely made an offensive move, preferring to try and score off Harringtonâs attacks.
But it was the Irish lightweight who landed the cleaner scoring blows with all five judges giving her the first round. The same choreography of sizing each other up continued into the second round, again Harrington fighting with patience and accuracy as the five judges favoured her for a 2-0 lead.
At that stage the Italian needed a stoppage in the third round. But the way Harrington was boxing that was not a likelihood. While the Chinese judge went with Nicoli in the third round, the other four judges saw Harrington as the unanimous winner.
âI feel good. I feel good to get started,â said Harrington. âWe arrived out here the 30th June and now it is the 30th July so we are a month out here.
âSo it was nice to get going today and get going in a good way. Happy days. I was just getting anxious (to get started). Itâs a long wait, itâs sticky, its warm, walking around the village.
âI didnât really walk around too much to be honest. You are not really seeing a whole lot you are seeing our apartment and the food hall. I am living in the food hall and for a boxer to be able to say they are living in the food hall is something else. This is a great journey but this is not the destination.
The Irish top seed now meets Algeriaâs Imane Khelifi on Tuesday August 3rd in a quarter-final medal fight.
GolfRory McIlroy and Shane Lowry both made big moves towards the medal positions in the menâs golf tournament on Friday.
McIlroy carded a round of 66 to get to seven under par and into a tie for fifth while Lowry joined him at that mark with a 65 with a number of players still to finish after another weather delay.

It was another hot and heavy day at Kasumigaseki Country Club where Mexicoâs Carlos Ortiz holds the lead at 10 under with six holes still to play in his second round.

McIlroy got off to a steady start with pars through the first five but then found his range with a birdie at the sixth before adding another at the Par 3 seventh and an eagle at the Par 5 eighth. The four-time Major winner was racing his way up the leaderboard and, while a bogey at the 11th slowed him down, he picked up further birdies at the 12th, 14th and 17th to get to eight under par. A disappointing bogey at the 18th put perhaps a slight blot on the round but it was a good dayâs work for McIlroy who has put himself right in the mix for a medal.
Indeed, Ireland could well have two real medal chances come Sunday after Lowry also flew through his first eight holes in four under par with birdies at the second, sixth, seventh and eighth. His only bogey of the round came at the ninth but he rolled in further birdies at the 13th, 14th and 16th to move into that tie for fourth. And it could have been even better for the Offalyman when he knocked his approach to the 17th in to a few feet but unfortunately couldnât convert the putt for birdie.
HockeyIreland 0 India 1
Ireland were beaten 1-0 by India in a rain delayed match in the Oi Stadium in Tokyo and now must rely on a performance against Britain in their final match of Pool A to secure a quarter-final place in the Olympics Games.

Ireland defended heroically but in the end looked like a tired team against the hard running Indians, who dominated both possession and territory throughout the match. The extent of that domination was 10 penalty corners in the first half and seven in the second half, none of which they were able to convert into goals.
It was a disappointing result for Ireland who had targeted the match for one of the two they needed to win to get fourth place in the pool and claim a spot among the last eight teams.
Britain, who Ireland play on Saturday in the final pool game, are the Olympic Champions from Rio, whereas India meet South Africa, who have not yet won any of their four matches and have conceded 15 goals.
From the off it was a defensive performance from Ireland, who nervously started against a high pressing Indian side. That paid off for India early with their first penalty corner coming after just eight minutes, which Sarah Torrans successfully blocked. That was to be a theme of the day, defending corners.
India earned five corners in the first quarter and five more in the second. That video analysis session is expected to be x-rated, although the Irish defending and goalkeeper Ayeisha McFerran particularly stood up under the constant Indian threat.
The match didnât really change complexion in the second half as the Indians stayed in full attack mode, Irelandâs slim chances coming from occasional breakaway runs.
While Anna OâFlanagan hit a reverse slap which forced a hand save from goalkeeper Savita in the final quarter, it was an increasingly frustrated India who were doing most of the attacking and circle penetrations.
Finally three minutes from the end, the tiring Irish defence was again stretched. A hard drill from the crown of the circle to the far post found the stick of Navneet Kaur, who nicked it towards the Irish goal. This time there was little the goalkeeper McFerran could do with India finishing the game with a 1-0 win and now more likely than Ireland to make it through to the quarter-final.
âIt was a tough game. Credit where credit is due,â said Irish captain Katie Mullan. âIndia played a really good performance. Theyâd done their homework. They really put it up to us there today. They won a lot of corners. Itâs always hard to come away from a game when you conceded a lot of corners like that.
âWeâd be disappointed that we got basically to the last three minutes. Weâve another opportunity and we just have to prepare for that. Now everything in our control is how we perform against GB. So weâll prepare now for that. Weâve played them a lot of times this year, so that will add something to the game.
âItâs been a really good week,â added Mullan. âWeâve been tracking really well until now. We have been performing really well and are just having a great time in the village. Itâs been a wonderful experience so far and we donât want it to end. Weâll just go out tomorrow and play with our hearts on our sleeve and give it our best shot.â
Ireland: A McFerran, S McAuley, H McLoughlin, R Upton, L Tice, C Watkins, K Mullan, A OâFlanagan, S Hawkshaw, D Duke, S Torrans.
Subs: S McCay, H Matthews, L Holden, N Carroll, N Daly.
India: Savita, Navjot Kaur, G Kaur, D G Ekka, Monika, Nisha, V Katariya, Udita, Navneet Kaur, Rani, Neha.
Subs: S Devi, N Pradhan, Lalremsiami, S Pukhrambam, S Tete.
Umpires: A Rostron (RSA), A Neumann (AUS).
SailingThere was disappointment for Annalise Murphy on Friday as she finished in 30th and 40th place in Races 9 and 10 respectively in the laser radial to see her finish out in 18th place overall - outside of the top-10 qualifying position needed to advance the medal race.

A strong sail yesterday saw her finish in first and second place in Races 7 and 8 to leave her at 14th overall, so a big push was still needed today to qualify into the top-10 today, but with light winds at Enoshima, it was a tough sail for Murphy.
The 49er duo of Robert Dickson and Seán Waddilove, meanwhile, are currently sitting in 14th overall after nine races. The pair finished in ninth, 18th and ninth position in Races 7, 8 and 9 respectively this morning, with the final three races to take place tomorrow.
The pair were well-placed after yesterdayâs action but slipped from seventh down to 13th after they were disqualified from Races 5 and 6 for a harness which was 90 grams too heavy.
AthleticsAfter waiting an extra year to actually write this, athletics got underway at the 2020 Olympics, and Thomas Barr found himself straight in the thick of it at the empty Olympic Stadium.
With the 400 metres hurdles likely to be among the most hotly contested events of the lot in here over the next nine days, Barr had to produce something assured and confident in his heat, which is exactly what he did - nailing second place behind recent world record breaker Karsten Warholm of Norway.

That got Barr into Sundayâs semi-final, where heâs again drawn against Warholm, plus the top American Benjamin Rai: only the top two, and two fastest losers, will progress to the final.
âGood, yes good,â Barr said, the Waterford athlete making the Rio final in 2016, finishing fourth. âIn my head, the aim was second place, thatâs where I was aiming for, knew I could kind of get to.
âI could have done with a quicker time, at the same time I didnât need it. I felt like I went out very relaxed, first 200, 250m. So relaxed that I ended up with a lot of energy coming around the top bend, and very close to hurdle seven and eight, I had to check them a little bit. But I knew by hurdle eight, I could just see the German on my inside, knew I could catch him.â
Warholm, who ran 46.70 seconds a few weeks ago, was on his outside, and won in 48.65, Barr second in 49.03. That ranked him 11th fastest of the semi-final qualifiers and Barr knows a new lifetime best may be needed to make the final.
âComing down the home straight, I had loads left, I was like âdo I stick in this position or go for second?â and I like go for second, get myself a good lane, do what I need to do. Ran 49-dead pretty much, so happy with the race.
âI donât feel too tired, the legs feel good, and Iâve a whole day off tomorrow to get ready again. Definitely, I felt very comfortable, very relaxed, especially down the backstraight. I was just working off Warholm really, he said he was going to go out fairly easy, and his easy is probably my quick. So Iâd just hold onto him as best I can. He was almost trying to discuss tactics with me in the warm-up track, saying how would I go out, and I said âIâll just hold on to you.ââ
No such joy earlier in the morning session for the three Irish women who had qualified for Tokyo in the 800 metres, Nadia Power, Louise Shanahan and SÃofra Cléirigh Büttner eliminated over three successive heats in the steamy but not quite yet sweltering conditions. In truth none of the trio came close to qualifying for the semi-finals.

Power was first up in Heat 2, finishing seventh of the eight starters, clocking 2:03.74, over two seconds outside her best. The 2019 World champion from Uganda, Halimah Nakaayi, could only manage fourth, qualifying as a fastest loser.
âIâm really confident I was in the right mental space coming up here,â said Power. âI wasnât freaked out by the occasion, I felt incredibly ready, relaxed, I donât even have a really good excuse, it just wasnât my day today.â
Shanahan went in Heat 3 with only the first three in each heat, plus the next six fastest, going into Sundayâs semi-finals. Still tightly packed down the backstretch, Shanahan started losing touch around the final bend and as hard and determined as she chased it was in vain and brought up the rear in eighth place in 2:03.57.
âI canât believe Iâm here, Iâm absolutely delighted. I would have liked to make it through, I came here to compete, this wasnât a holiday, but yeah, I can now call myself an Olympian and if thatâs the worst thing that happens today thatâs a pretty good day,â said Shanahan. That heat was won by rising American star Athing Mu, who just turned 19, running a smooth 2:01.10, clearly with plenty more in the tank.
Then came Büttner in Heat 4 which was a more tactical affair with the Dublin runner having to check herself a few times around the bell as she looked for a best position. She ended up seventh too, running 2:04.62, well down on her best of 2:01.67. Victory there went to another American Raevyn Rogers who ran 2:01.42
âWe always knew itâd be tactical, itâs rounds, itâs heats, itâs a major championship,â she said. âIâm disappointed I couldnât do more but the fight to get here was draining in itself. The three of us had to go through a lot to get here and safely make it on to the line, Iâm proud of that. Itâs been a long time coming and itâs great to be a part of this, even during Covid.â
EquestrianSam Watson got the Irish eventing team off to a positive start in dressage, scoring a 34.3. This leaves the pair in 14th position after the first session, with two more to follow. The eye-catching Tullabeg Flamenco was composed and relaxed throughout the entire test.
A small error in the flying changes towards the end of the test cost them a few marks but the pair are looking forward to the next two phases, cross country and show jumping.
âI was pleased with the horse and I think the foundations were there,â said Watson afterwards. âThe softness, suppleness, and relaxation were all there. I possibly didnât give him enough punch and enough X-Factor for what they are looking for at the Olympic Games. It was a little safe and then I made a small mistake, which was on me, I shouldnât be missing changes at the Olympic Games. I am pretty happy with the horse; I am a little disappointed with the mark and there are a few things that I could have done better.
âI am looking forward to cross country. It is a riderâs course because he has given us a lot of choices. You have got to make decisions on the course and commit to your lines and stay focused and concentrating. I like that. I like to be thinking when I am on a course.â
Action continues in the second session later today with Austin OâConnor and Colorado Blue taking to the stage.
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