Asghar Ali Changezi

Pakistani boxer

Asghar Ali Changezi
Personal information
NationalityPakistani
Born (1967-03-03) 3 March 1967 (age 57)
Mehrabad Alamdar Road, Quetta, Pakistan
Sport
SportBoxing
Medal record

Asghar Ali Changezi[1] (born 3 March 1967) is a Pakistani professional Olympian boxer. Changezi participation in 34 National Games and is a National and International Gold medalist (Boxing).

Early life

Changezi was born on 3 March 1967, in Mehrabad, Alamdar Road, a Hazara ethnic neighborhood in the southwestern city of Quetta, Pakistan.

Boxing Career

He competed in the men's light heavyweight event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.[2]

Summary of his achievements are as per below:

 1- Asian Gold medal won 1992 in Bangkok 
 2- Participate Barcelona olympics1992 Barcelona (Spain) with ranking of world no. (8) 
 3- Four times won Gold medals in SAF games in the years 1984 (Nepal) 1989 (Islamabad) 1991 (Colombians) 1993 Dhaka (Bangladesh)and record of hatric winner 
 4- Two times won Gold medals in k•E•S•E International competitions in 1990 (Karachi) and 1993 (Karachi) 
 5- Won Gold medal in P•S•B International Boxing tournament 1989 (Islamabad)
 6- PAK-IRAN Boxing tournament and won Gold medal (1991) (Karachi)  
 7- 28 times represented country from 1983-1996 in international competitions 
 8- Remained Captain of Pakistan Boxing team from 1993 to 1996

References

  1. ^ "Boxers should be given regular jobs". The News International. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
  2. ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Asghar Muhammad Olympic Results". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Pride of Performance for Sports
1950s
  • Hashim Khan (1958)
  • Hawaldar Abdul Khaliq (1958)
  • Abdul Hafeez Kardar (1958)
  • Fazal Mehmood (1958)
  • Subedar Muhammad Iqbal (1959)
  • Hanif Mohammad (1959)
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
  • Honorary Lieutenant Mohammad Younis (1990)
  • Arif Khan (1990)
  • Muhammad Umer (1990)
  • Nazo Anwar Miandad (1990)
  • Mohammad Shehnaz Sheikh (1990)
  • Wasim Akram (1992)
  • Shahbaz Ahmed (1992)
  • Ghulam Abbas (1992)
  • Taimur Hasan (1992)
  • Shahid Ali Khan (1992)
  • Qazi Muhibur Rehman (1993)
  • Rajab Shah (1993)
  • Mohammad Yousuf (1994)
  • Mohibullah Khan Junior (1994)
  • Khwaja Mohammad Junaid (1994)
  • Abdul Rashid (1994)
  • Muhammad Saeed Khan (1994)
  • Mansoor Ahmed (1994)
  • Ahmed Alam (1994)
  • Tahir Zaman (1994)
  • Muhammad Shahbaz (1994)
  • Muhammad Shafqat (1994)
  • Irfan Mehmood (1994)
  • Naveed Alam (1994)
  • Asif Bajwa (1994)
  • Muhammad Danish Kaleem (1994)
  • Muhammad Usman (1994)
  • Kamran Ashraf (1994)
  • Rahim Khan (1994)
  • Rana Mujahid Ali (1994)
  • Waseem Feroze (1994)
  • Aliya Rasheed (1995)
  • Fareed Sehrai (1995)
  • Waqar Younis (1995)
  • Ali Nawaz Baloch (1995)
  • Mohammad Sarwar (1995)
  • Asghar Ali Changezi (1996)
  • Sardar Azmarai Javaid Hissam el-Effendi (1996)* Ghulam Noorani Khan (1996)
  • Munawwar uz Zaman (1997)
2000s
  • Saeed Anwar (2000)
  • Haider Ali (2003)
  • Rozi Ali (2003)
  • Mohammad Irfan Islam (2003)
  • Grand Master Muhammad Ashraf Tai (2004)
  • Zakir Hussain Syed (2004)
  • Mehrullah Lassi (2004)
  • Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi (2005)
  • Nida Waseem (2008)
  • Zubair Ahmed Hundal (2008)
  • Shahid Rehman (2008)
  • Umer Khan Achakzai (2009)
2010s


Stub icon

This biographical article related to Pakistani boxing is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e