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Lennox Lewis slams plans for professional boxers at Rio Olympics

Lennox Lewis won Super Heavyweight gold after beating Riddick Bowe in 1988
Image: Lennox Lewis won Super Heavyweight gold after beating Riddick Bowe in 1988

Lennox Lewis has called a proposal to allow professionals to box at this summer's Olympics "preposterous".

Radical new plans being pushed through by AIBA could theoretically have the likes of Anthony Joshua defend the heavyweight title he won at the London Games in 2012.

AIBA president, Dr Ching-Kuo Wu, has suggested the prospect of having full-time professionals competing in Brazil is "absolutely possible".

Former world heavyweight champion and Olympic gold medallist Lewis told the BBC: "I know they are doing it for other sports but I don't think it works with boxing. I think it is preposterous to a certain degree.

"Olympic boxing is built for amateurs and is the highest achievement you can get, alongside being world amateur champion.

"All of a sudden you could have a scenario where someone like [former world heavyweight champion] Wladimir Klitschko, who won Olympic gold in Atlanta and has so much experience, could go up against a kid of 18 who has had just 10 fights. I don't think it is fair.

Pros in Rio?
Pros in Rio?

Professional boxers could be fighting in Rio

"Even the scoring systems are different. In the professional game, you score on power punches and you keep pressure on your opponent, while the amateur system is to score points."

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The 50-year-old, who won gold at the Seoul Olympics in 1988 representing Canada before turning professional, retired in 2003 having won 41 of his 44 pro fights.

Wu, AIBA president since 2006, was in Manchester last week for an AIBA Commissions meeting with changes in the existing eligibility criteria top of the agenda.

Proposals from the meeting need to be ratified by AIBA's executive commission.

Wu said on Wednesday: "We want the best boxers to come to the Olympic Games. It is AIBA's 70th birthday and we want something to change - not after four years, but now.

Dr Ching-Kuo Wu has indicated the barriers preventing full-time professionals from competing in the Olympics are to be abolished imminently
Image: AIBA president Dr Ching-Kuo Wu [left] is keen on ringing the changes

"It is an IOC policy to have the best athletes in the Games and of the international federations, AIBA is probably the only one without professional athletes in the Olympics.

"We already have our own professionals, APB and WSB boxers, in the Games - and we will go further."

Despite the qualifying process for Rio already under way, the intention is clearly to change the rules in time to give individual national federations the chance to select whoever they want in time to join the remainder of the procedure.

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