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Ngangom Dingko Singh, commonly known as 'Dingko Singh' was an Indian boxer. He is considered to have been one of the most outstanding boxers India ever produced. He won the King's Cup in Bangkok in 1997 and the Asian Games gold in the 1998 Bangkok Games. He was a service personnel of the Indian Navy.
Dingko Singh: Arjuna Award: Male 1999 Jitender Kumar: Arjuna Award: Male 1999 Gurcharan Singh: Arjuna Award: Male 2002 Mohammed Ali Qamar: Arjuna Award: Male 2003 Mary Kom: Arjuna Award: Female 2005 Akhil Kumar: Arjuna Award: Male 2006 Vijender Singh: Arjuna Award: Male 2007 Varghese Johnson: Arjuna Award: Male 2009 Laishram Sarita Devi: Arjuna ...
Kom is fascinated by the glove and grows up taking a keen interest in boxing, despite her father's disapproval. During an early fight, she chases a boy and ends up in a boxing gym. After realising that the coach of the gym, Narjit Singh, was also the coach of the Asian champion Dingko Singh, Kom tells him about her boxing aspirations. He asks ...
Dingko Singh, Boxing, Padma Shri, Asian Games Medallist [6] [7] Kunjarani Devi, Weightlifting, Padma Shri, Khel Ratna, Commonwealth Games Medallist [8] Laishram Sarita Devi, Boxing, Asian Games Medallist [9] Ningthoujam Pritam Singh, Football [10] Ningthoujam Samananda, Football; Saikhom Mirabai Chanu, Weightlifting, Olympic Medallist [11]
Mangte Chungneijang "Mary" Kom [2] (born 24 November 1982) [1] is an Indian Olympic boxer, politician, and former Member of Rajya Sabha. [3] [4] [5] She is the only woman to win the World Amateur Boxing Championship six times, the only female boxer to have won a medal in each one of the first seven World Championships, and the only boxer (male or female) to win eight World Championship medals.
Like all Olympic boxing events, the competition was a straight single-elimination tournament. [1] This event consisted of 28 boxers who have qualified for the competition through various qualifying tournaments held in 1999 and 2000.
On the way to his bronze medal, Danylchenko got a 1st round bye, and defeated India's Dingko Singh and Australia's Justin Kane, before losing in the semifinal against Russia's Raimkul Malakhbekov. A year later, at the 2001 World Amateur Boxing Championships, he won the bronze medal in the same division.
Round of 32 Round of 16 Quarterfinals Semifinals Kairat Yeraliyev 0 Elísio Gaio 0 Chatchai Butdee 5 Chatchai Butdee 5 Chatchai Butdee Jo Hyo-nam ()