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Boxing in 2024 olympics Paris France

At Paris 2024, boxing will celebrate 120 years since its first appearance on the Olympic Games programme in St Louis. That in itself is a huge achievement for our sport and highlights boxing’s continuing popularity and relevance around the world. It is also a reflection of the remarkable performances of our athletes, who have managed to raise the bar every four years and deliver first-class sporting entertainment throughout the Olympic Games. AIBA as an organisation with 202 affiliated national federations, and boxing as a whole, look forward to working closely with the IOC to ensure the upward trajectory of Olympic boxing continues,” said AIBA President Dr Ching-Kuo Wu.Boxing has been contested at every Summer Olympic Games since its introduction to the program at the 1904 Summer Olympics, except for the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm, because Swedish law banned the sport at the time. The 2008 Summer Olympics were the final games with boxing as a male only event.Men will compete across eight weight classes:

Flyweight (52kg) Featherweight (57kg) Lightweight (63kg) Welterweight (69kg) Middleweight (75kg) Light heavyweight (81kg) Heavyweight (91kg) Super heavyweight (+91kg) Women will compete across five weight classes

Flyweight (51kg) Featherweight (57kg) Lightweight (60kg) Welterweight (69kg) Middleweight (75kg) Paris 2024 will see a new vision of Olympism in action, delivered in a unique spirit of international celebration.

We will offer one of the world’s most inspirational cities as a memorable stage for the athletes – and a truly global platform to promote them, and their incredible stories.

And we will partner with the entire Olympic family to demonstrate that, more than ever after an extremely challenging period, sport has a unique power to help create a better world.

Our plan features 95 per cent existing or temporary venues, and every single one has a clear, defined legacy aligned with the city’s long-term development plans.

The sporting celebration will flow along the Seine, from the new Olympic Village, just 15 minutes from Paris city centre, to such city centre landmarks as the Eiffel Tower and the Grand Palais.

Paris has welcomed people from all over the world – including the founding fathers of the Olympic Movement – for hundreds of years, to collaborate and inspire each other; to shape ideas and forge the future.

In 2024, we will stage magnificent and meaningful Games that will set a new milestone in sporting history, in the city where Pierre de Coubertin first imagined the potential of a world united by sport.