Indian Women Boxers Target Asian Gold After Dominant World Cup Show

Indian women boxers, fresh from winning seven gold medals at the World Boxing Cup Finals, are intensifying their training at the NSNIS Patiala for the upcoming Asian Boxing Championships in Mongolia. Star boxer Nikhat Zareen is regaining form after an injury layoff and aims for gold in major 2026 events including the Commonwealth and Asian Games. Parveen Hooda highlights the positive impact of new head coach Santiago Nieva on the team's technique and confidence. The squad, featuring champions like Minakshi Hooda and Jaismine Lamboria, is focused on peaking for the crucial tournaments ahead.

Key Points: Indian Women Boxers Aim for Asian Championships Medal Haul

  • Dominant 7-gold haul at World Boxing Cup Finals
  • Training at NSNIS Patiala national camp
  • Focus on Asian Championships & multi-sport events
  • Nikhat Zareen's comeback from injury
  • New coach Santiago Nieva's impact
4 min read

Indian women boxers aiming rich medal haul at Asian Boxing Championships

Led by Nikhat Zareen, Indian women boxers target Asian Championships success after winning 7 golds at the World Boxing Cup Finals. Read more.

"2026 is a very important year and hopefully I will win gold in all the important events lined up this year to make India proud. - Nikhat Zareen"

Patiala, February 9

Fresh from impressive performances at the World Boxing Cup Finals at Greater Noida in November 2025, Indian women pugilists are targeting a rich medal haul at the upcoming Asian Boxing Championships at Ulaanbaatar in Mongolia from March 28 to April 11, 2026, in the build-up to the Asian Games later this year.

Led by Nikhat Zareen (51kg) and Jaismine Lamboria (57kg), the Indian women boxers ruled the show at the World Boxing Cup Finals, winning 7 out of the 10 possible gold medals. The other boxers who won gold medals were Minakshi Hooda (48kg), Preeti Pawar (54kg), Parveen Hooda (60kg), Arundhati Choudhary (70kg) and Nupur Sheoran (80+kg), as per a release from SAI Media.

Right now, these pugilists are sweating it out at the Netaji Subhash National Institute of Sports (NSNIS) Patiala as part of the national camp supported under the Sports Authority of India's (SAI) Annual Calendar for Training & Competition (ACTC) in collaboration with the Boxing Federation of India (BFI).

Proving her doubters wrong, Nikhat made a comeback from a six-month injury layoff due to a meniscus tear at the 2025 World Championship in Liverpool, ending as a quarter-finalist after her disappointment at the Paris 2024 Olympics. But the gold at the World Boxing Cup Finals gave her the much-needed morale booster.

"I was very happy to end the year 2025 with a gold medal in November. Further, I began the new year on a winning note, emerging as the national champion with my good performance at the Senior Nationals. So, it gives me immense pleasure that I am getting back in form and delivering consistently. 2026 is a very important year and hopefully I will win gold in all the important events lined up this year to make India proud," Nikhat said.

Sparring with male boxers and making crucial changes to her technique have paid off as she trains her eyes on multi-discipline events like the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow (July 23 to August 2, 2026) and the Asian Games in Aichi, Nagoya, Japan (September 19 to October 4, 2026).

"I have worked on my past mistakes. I have also sparred with different style of boxers in the last few months. After Paris 2024 when I made my return after injury, I was training at the Army Sports Institute in Pune, I was sparring with junior boxers and male boxers, in particular and that has helped me a lot. So, I discuss about my mistakes with coaches regularly and work on different aspects of my boxing and that has helped improve my results," explained the 29-year-old, who is supported under the Target Olympic Podium Scheme (TOPS).

Parveen Hooda, who has previously won gold in Asian Championships and a bronze in the World Championships, said that defeating Poland's World Championships silver medallist Aneta Rygielska in the semi-finals and Olympian Ayaka Taguchi of Japan in the final was the highlight of her World Boxing Cup Finals campaign.

"World Cup Finals was my comeback event as I had participated in an international level tournament after a long time due to injury. My opponents in the event were very accomplished boxers so, the event was very good for me," Parveen said.

Parveen further insisted that onboarding of Argentine-born Swede Santiago Nieva as the head coach for women's boxing team has also improved her overall performance. Nieva was the former High Performance Director for Indian boxing from 2017 to 2021.

"Santiago sir's periodisation plans and his emphasis on fitness and technique has been very useful for not only me but other female boxers as well. It is helping improve our confidence levels. I have also worked on my strength. Earlier, I felt my punches didn't have the desirable power so I have been working on that dimension as well with the coach and it is better now. Next month we have the Asian Championships and later this year we have the Commonwealth and Asian Games, so we have to reach peak performance around that time, which is part of our plan," the 25-year-old explained.

World Champion in the 48kg category, Minakshi Hooda, 24, is working on her footwork to win gold at the upcoming international events. Minakshi had registered the first gold for India in the World Boxing Cup Finals after beating Uzbekistan's Fozilova Farzona.

"Last year I played a lot of international events and clinched gold in many of them. As you are aware there are big events like Asian Games coming up later this year so I am working on my footwork and my leg strength. My natural game is to tire out my opponents in the ring by moving around. So, footwork becomes crucial as I have to finish three rounds without giving the chance to my rival to score. With the new coach and change in training regime I am confident of clinching a medal at the Asian Games in Japan," Minakshi said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great to see the focus on proper planning and periodisation with coach Nieva. This is what we need - scientific training, not just raw talent. The results are showing. 7 golds at the World Cup Finals is no joke! Bring home the medals from Mongolia, ladies!
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Aman W
While the success is fantastic, I hope the federation and SAI are also looking at the long-term. We need to build a strong bench strength. What about the next generation of boxers? The article only talks about current stars. The system needs to nurture new talent continuously.
S
Sarah B
The dedication is incredible. Sparring with male boxers to improve? That shows next-level commitment. Minakshi's point about footwork is so technical and smart. These athletes are not just powerful; they are brilliant tacticians. Go get that gold!
K
Karthik V
Jaismine, Nikhat, Minakshi... our women are literally punching above their weight on the world stage! 🥊 The confidence in their interviews is palpable. 2026 is shaping up to be a golden year for Indian boxing. All the best for the camp in Patiala.
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Nisha Z
Parveen defeating a Polish world silver medallist and a Japanese Olympian? That's huge! It shows our boxers can compete and beat the very best. The Asian Championships will be tough, but this team has the skill and the heart. Chak De India!

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