Alan Hubbard

Amateur boxing - at least, that is what it used to be called when the combatants wore headguards and vests - is in a right old pugilistic pickle over the Olympics.

Right now there is more in-fighting outside the ropes than inside them as the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and AIBA, the International Boxing Association, lock fists over the future of the sport in the Games.

IOC President Thomas Bach has even warned that AIBA could be expelled from the Olympic Movement, thus placing the sport's participation in Tokyo two years hence and beyond in jeopardy.

Yet, such has been the surge of popularity in boxing over the past couple of years, that the IOC would be risking global condemnation and derision in the hopefully unlikely event of a ban on one of the Games' most traditional and best-watched sports.

It has been well chronicled that the dispute centres around the impending elevation next month of the deeply controversial figure of Gafur Rakhimov from interim to full President of AIBA, in succession to the now banned-for-life Dr C K Wu, who grossly overreached himself over his autocratic financial and fistic aspirations for the organisation and its 150 constituent bodies.

Why the IOC should suddenly pick on the dubious governance of boxing when in the past it has conveniently suffered from myopia over that of certain other sporting entities is the subject of some scornful curiosity.

However, if AIBA is cast out there are other organisations waiting in the dressing room ready to step into the administrative ring as late subs.

It is my understanding that Mauricio Sulaiman, the President of the World Boxing Council WBC, arguably the most authoritative of the pro game's fistful of ruling bodies, has already held informal talks with a number of national boxing associations as well as emissaries from the IOC about acting as an new umbrella organisation.

But, cards on the table. Boxing is by no means the only Olympic sport which has endured questionable leadership with the full blessing of the IOC.

One might even suggest there was as convenient outbreak of that incipient myopia when those in charge of football, athletics and cycling were first subjected to legal and/or moral scrutiny.

And how do we know Mr Rakhimov really is the bad guy he has been labelled?

His critics claim he has ties with organised crime, though no proof has been forthcoming. In 2012, the US Department of the Treasury put financial sanctions on Rakhimov and several other individuals accused of being part of the so-called Brothers Circle criminal organisation.

Boxing is battling for its future at the Olympic Games ©Getty Images
Boxing is battling for its future at the Olympic Games ©Getty Images

Yet Rakhimov has never been charged with any crime in any country. In fact, he has won defamation suits at the high courts in Britain, Australia and France.

His sporting credentials certainly pass muster.

He took up boxing as a youth and later moved on to coaching. After Uzbekistan's independence in 1991, he set up several commercial enterprises, which included trading in both raw materials and finished consumer goods.

The 67-year-old from Tashkent also became a prominent figure in Central Asian boxing, and in 2001 and again in 2005 was elected vice-president of the National Olympic Committee of Uzbekistan.

With so much "fake news" coming out of Trump-land these days why should we place so much credence on the word of the US Department of the Treasury about his so-called "criminal activities?"

I do not know Mr Rakhimov from Adam, have never met or spoken with him but I do wonder if there are worse people than him who have headed up international sports organisations in the past and perhaps are still doing so - with the IOC turning that convenient blind eye to their alleged misdemeanours.

The names of a certain dodgy Swiss poo-bah who presided over international football and an allegedly corrupt elderly judge from Senegal who ran athletics come to mind. Among others.

And do not tell me the IOC had not an inkling about what was going on in Russia with state-sponsored doping well before the whistle was blown.

In the past the IOC has shown no more qualms about whether anyone heading up sport would pass a fit and proper persons test than the Premier League does when kowtowing to potential open-chequed overseas owners of football clubs.

So why start to be so finicky now?

Is it a handy excuse to knock-out boxing from the Games programme, thus appeasing the snowflakery among certain elements in the IOC who, I suspect like President Bach himself, would prefer to see a more esoteric and less subjective activity in place of a few bloody noses?

It may seem an unlikely scenario but one that cannot be ruled out despite promises that one way or another boxing will be represented at Tokyo 2020. Perhaps like Russia in Rio?

Currently, because of the demise of Dr Wu, boxing has no voice on the IOC. That is bad news.

Only last week the IOC took the unprecedented step of barring Rakhimov from the Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires.

But if is elected as President of AIBA it will be on a democratic vote.

Boxing has lost its place at the IOC top table following the demise of CK Wu  ©Getty Images
Boxing has lost its place at the IOC top table following the demise of CK Wu ©Getty Images

The Greeks invented the Olympics and they are also supposed to have instituted democracy. At the moment the two do not seem to go hand in boxing glove.  

As my insidethegames colleague Liam Morgan hinted here yesterday, the boxing world is buzzing with speculation that there could be a new international body governing the sport led by a "high profile" name.

I believe that name to be Wladimir Klitschko, the retired former multi-belted world heavyweight champion and Olympic gold medal winner at Atlanta 1996.

He certainly has the status, the political nous and the bloodline for such a role with elder brother Vitali now mayor of Kyiv, capital of their native Ukraine.

I could throw another hat into the ring from left field should Rakhimov remain persona non grata by the IOC.

What Olympic boxing needs is a proven administrator who is a boxing buff and experienced sports leader.

Someone from outside AIBA perhaps, such as Lord Colin Moynihan, who knows the noble art well as an amateur boxer, winning a blue at Oxford, a former Sports Minister, chair of the British Olympic Association during London 2012, and steward of the British Boxing Board of Control.

He also showed he has backbone to stand up to Bach and the Olympic snowflakes.

In 1980 he defied his future political mistress, Margaret Thatcher, by competing in the partially boycotted Moscow Olympics, winning a silver medal as a rowing cox.

I have no idea whether he would want the job but perhaps someone should ask him before boxing fails to beat the Olympic count.