List of Val Barker Trophy winners

The Val Barker Trophy is presented every four years to the most "outstanding boxer" at the Olympic Games.[1] In theory, the award goes to the top "pound for pound" boxer in the Olympics.[1] The winner is selected by a committee of International Boxing Association (amateur) (AIBA) officials.[1] The trophy is named after British boxer Val Barker who won the Amateur Boxing Association of England (ABA) heavyweight title in 1891,[2] before becoming the secretary of the AIBA between 1926 and 1929.[1]

Val Barker Trophy
Awarded fordemonstration of excellence in Olympic boxing
Presented byAIBA
First awarded1936
Currently held byClaressa Shields
Hasanboy Dusmatov

The inaugural recipient of the Val Barker Trophy was American flyweight Louis Laurie who won bronze at the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. He is one of just three boxers who did not win gold at the same Olympics in which they were presented with the trophy, the others being Kenyan featherweight Philip Waruinge (bronze at the 1968 Games) and American light middleweight Roy Jones Jr. (silver at the 1988 Games). In the 2016 Games, two Val Barker Trophies were presented for the first time, one for men and one for women;[1] women's boxing made its Olympic debut at the previous Games in 2012.[3] The inaugural female winner was middleweight Claressa Shields who became the first American boxer to win two consecutive Olympic gold medals when she defeated Dutch boxer Nouchka Fontijn in Rio de Janeiro.[4]

American boxers lead with six trophies, followed by Kazakhstani boxers with three awards and Russian boxers with two awards (one for the Soviet Union and one for Russia).

Recipients

Roy Jones Jr. was controversially denied a gold in 1988, but was recognized as the most stylistic boxer of the games
Claressa Shields became the first recipient of the female variant of the trophy, after winning the gold medal at the Rio de Janeiro games in 2016
GamesLocationBoxerNationalityWeight classMedalRef(s)
1936BerlinLouis Laurie  United StatesFlyweightBronze[5]
1948LondonGeorge Hunter  South AfricaLight heavyweightGold[6]
1952HelsinkiNorvel Lee  United StatesLight heavyweightGold[7]
1956MelbourneDick McTaggart  Great BritainLightweightGold[8]
1960RomeNino Benvenuti  ItalyWelterweightGold[9]
1964TokyoValeri Popenchenko  Soviet UnionMiddleweightGold[10]
1968Mexico CityPhilip Waruinge  KenyaFeatherweightBronze[11]
1972MunichTeófilo Stevenson  CubaHeavyweightGold[12]
1976MontrealHoward Davis Jr.  United StatesLightweightGold[13]
1980MoscowPatrizio Oliva  ItalyLight welterweightGold[14]
1984Los AngelesPaul Gonzales  United StatesLight flyweightGold[15]
1988SeoulRoy Jones Jr.  United StatesLight middleweightSilver[13]
1992BarcelonaRoberto Balado  CubaSuper heavyweightGold[16]
1996AtlantaVassiliy Jirov  KazakhstanLight heavyweightGold[17]
2000SydneyOleg Saitov  RussiaWelterweightGold[18]
2004AthensBakhtiyar Artayev  KazakhstanWelterweightGold[19]
2008BeijingVasyl Lomachenko  UkraineFeatherweightGold[20]
2012LondonSerik Sapiyev  KazakhstanWelterweightGold[21]
2016Rio de JaneiroHasanboy Dusmatov  UzbekistanMen's light flyweightGold[1]
Claressa Shields  United StatesWomen's middleweightGold
2020TokyoNot awarded due to tue suspension of AIBA[22]

References

External links