Following the International Olympic Committee's decision to suspend the International Boxing Association (AIBA), the Olympic Boxing Task Force was created to deliver the sport at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.
The decision was based on the recommendations of the IOC's Inquiry Committee in November 2018, over concerns about AIBA in the areas of finance, governance, ethics, and refereeing and judging.
The Olympic Boxing Task Force also came up with a new qualifying system for the Games with five qualifying tournaments deciding who will go to Tokyo.
Scroll down for full details of the qualifying events, which athletes to watch out for, and everything in between!
Tokyo 2020 boxing qualification event dates
Africa: DAKAR, Senegal, 20-29 February 2020
Venue: Dakar International Expo Centre, Diamniadio
Asia/Oceania: AMMAN, Jordan, 3-11 March 2020
(Moved from Wuhan in February due to coronavirus outbreak)
Europe: PARIS, France, 4-8 June 2021
Continuing from original London qualifier which was suspended on 17 March 2020 due to Covid restrictions)
Venue: Le Grand Dôme, Villebon-sur-Yvette
***CANCELLED***
Americas: BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, 27 March-3 April 2020
Venue: CeNARD high-performance athletics training centre
World: PARIS, France, 13-20 May 2020
Venue: Le Grand Dôme, Villebon-sur-Yvette
Americas places will now be decided by world rankings with the World qualification spots allocated to those next highest in the rankings who have not previously qualified.
Weight classes being contested in boxing qualification events for Tokyo 2020
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)
Improved gender equality as female boxing representation triples
The same number of boxers will compete at Tokyo 2020, as did four years previously at Rio 2016.
However, the composition of that 286 athletes will change significantly.
As part of the IOC's commitment to boost gender equality while maintaining the quality of female boxing, the Games in Japan will feature 186 men and 100 women (compared to 250 men and 36 women in Rio) with the number of women's weight classes rising from three to five.
Six places (four men and two women) were reserved for the host nation Japan, while eight further places (five men and three women) were allocated to the Tripartite Invitation Commission.
Ones to watch: Li Qian, Lauren Price, Julio Cesar La Cruz
China are the heavyweights of women's boxing in Asia, having won six gold medals at the 2019 Asian Championships. Headlining the team on home turf in Wuhan is middleweight veteran Li Qian, who won bronze at Rio 2016 and gold at the 2019 World Championships.
Elsewhere in Asia, India's Amit Panghal will feel quietly confident of qualifying for Tokyo 2020. The men's flyweight is a proven big-stage performer, having won World Championships silver and gold at the Asian Championships.
Middleweight fighter David Ssemujju is on a mission to restore Uganda's boxing pride. Once considered Africa's top boxing nation, Uganda has slipped from its 1990s zenith, but in African Games silver medallist Ssemujju, the nation's time for glory may have come again.
In Europe, Great Britain's top medal hope will be women's middleweight world champion Lauren Price. The former kickboxing world champion is built for sport's biggest stage, having also competed internationally in football and taekwondo.
In the men's draw, Ukraine's Oleksandr Khyzhniak is being touted as the new Vasyl Lomachenko. There aren't many greater comparisons in boxing than that and, with world and European gold medals at middleweight, Khyzhniak is looking good value for those accolades.
Cuba is synonymous with boxing, and true to form, athletes from the island nation will take centre stage in the Americas qualifying event.
Light-heavyweight Olympic champion Julio Cesar La Cruz will be out to prove he is still at the top of his game, while aggressive 64kg world champion Andy Cruz will hope to demonstrate that Cuba produces more than just master counter-punchers.
Stay with Olympic Channel for all the boxing updates in the build-up to Tokyo 2020, and make sure you bookmark this page for all the latest.