<p>Star Indian boxer Amit Panghal (52kg) bowed out of the Olympics with a stunning 1-4 loss to Rio Games silver-medallist Yuberjen Martinez, beaten by the Colombian's relentless attacks and pace in a draining pre-quarterfinal bout here on Saturday.</p>.<p>The world number one Indian, who was making his debut in the Games and was seeded top, had got an opening-round bye.</p>.<p>Panghal was put under pressure by the sprightly Colombian in the opening round itself but the pre-bout favourite ensured that he connected better to claim the first three minutes 4-1.</p>.<p>"They have sparred with each other. In some of them Amit was better than today but in others, it was similar to what happened today. It wasn't a total surprise because we had seen that this guy is very dangerous," Indian Boxing's High Performance Director Santiago Nieva said after the bout.</p>.<p>Martinez's pace should have set alarm bells ringing in the Indian corner despite Panghal bagging the first round because the Pan-American champion upped the ante in the second round, working relentlessly on Panghal's body with his uppercuts.</p>.<p>Panghal found it tough to respond and Martinez's persistence brought him level with the top star.</p>.<p>"We knew what to expect but our hope was that Amit would stand up better in the last two rounds," Nieva added.</p>.<p>Martinez made sure that there was no let up in the intensity in the final three minutes as well and Panghal ended up being on the defensive for most part.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/tokyo-olympics-live-Tokyo-2020-Olympics-Tokyo-Olympics-Japan-Covid-19-coronavirus-Tokyo-Tokyo-games-Japan-olympics-tokyo-summer-olympics-1014817.html" target="_blank">Follow live updates on the Olympics here</a></strong></p>.<p>"He didn't have the strength to move and so he stayed inside and then he didn't have the strength to respond also and he became passive and there the Colombian scored a lot of points," Nieva said.</p>.<p>"Against no other opponent, I have seen Amit so tired. It's not just him, in the Italy camp we also had Deepak, who is also a world-class boxer, and he also could not stop him. We were facing a very high-calibre boxer," he added referring to Asian silver-medallist Deepak Kumar, who was there with the Olympic-bound group for sparring.</p>.<p>Despite this loss, the 25-year-old Panghal remains one of the best-performing Indian boxers in recent times, having secured a gold medal at the 2018 Asian Games, followed by an unparalleled silver medal at the world championships in 2019.</p>.<p>The diminutive Army man is also a three-time Asian medallist, securing a medal every time he has been at the continental showpiece. It is in fact the first major setback that the youngster has endured since a breakthrough 2017, when he first burst into the scene.</p>.<p>Martinez won the light flyweight silver medal in the 2016 Rio Olympics and will turn professional after the Tokyo Games.</p>.<p>His parents, who follow the pacifism-supporting Anglican church, were against him taking up the sport but eventually came around to support his ambitions.</p>.<p>On Friday, Lovlina Borgohain (69kg) became the first Indian boxer to secure a medal at the ongoing Games after advancing to the semifinals. She defeated former world champion Nien-Chin Chen of Chinese Taipei in her quarterfinal bout.</p>
<p>Star Indian boxer Amit Panghal (52kg) bowed out of the Olympics with a stunning 1-4 loss to Rio Games silver-medallist Yuberjen Martinez, beaten by the Colombian's relentless attacks and pace in a draining pre-quarterfinal bout here on Saturday.</p>.<p>The world number one Indian, who was making his debut in the Games and was seeded top, had got an opening-round bye.</p>.<p>Panghal was put under pressure by the sprightly Colombian in the opening round itself but the pre-bout favourite ensured that he connected better to claim the first three minutes 4-1.</p>.<p>"They have sparred with each other. In some of them Amit was better than today but in others, it was similar to what happened today. It wasn't a total surprise because we had seen that this guy is very dangerous," Indian Boxing's High Performance Director Santiago Nieva said after the bout.</p>.<p>Martinez's pace should have set alarm bells ringing in the Indian corner despite Panghal bagging the first round because the Pan-American champion upped the ante in the second round, working relentlessly on Panghal's body with his uppercuts.</p>.<p>Panghal found it tough to respond and Martinez's persistence brought him level with the top star.</p>.<p>"We knew what to expect but our hope was that Amit would stand up better in the last two rounds," Nieva added.</p>.<p>Martinez made sure that there was no let up in the intensity in the final three minutes as well and Panghal ended up being on the defensive for most part.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/tokyo-olympics-live-Tokyo-2020-Olympics-Tokyo-Olympics-Japan-Covid-19-coronavirus-Tokyo-Tokyo-games-Japan-olympics-tokyo-summer-olympics-1014817.html" target="_blank">Follow live updates on the Olympics here</a></strong></p>.<p>"He didn't have the strength to move and so he stayed inside and then he didn't have the strength to respond also and he became passive and there the Colombian scored a lot of points," Nieva said.</p>.<p>"Against no other opponent, I have seen Amit so tired. It's not just him, in the Italy camp we also had Deepak, who is also a world-class boxer, and he also could not stop him. We were facing a very high-calibre boxer," he added referring to Asian silver-medallist Deepak Kumar, who was there with the Olympic-bound group for sparring.</p>.<p>Despite this loss, the 25-year-old Panghal remains one of the best-performing Indian boxers in recent times, having secured a gold medal at the 2018 Asian Games, followed by an unparalleled silver medal at the world championships in 2019.</p>.<p>The diminutive Army man is also a three-time Asian medallist, securing a medal every time he has been at the continental showpiece. It is in fact the first major setback that the youngster has endured since a breakthrough 2017, when he first burst into the scene.</p>.<p>Martinez won the light flyweight silver medal in the 2016 Rio Olympics and will turn professional after the Tokyo Games.</p>.<p>His parents, who follow the pacifism-supporting Anglican church, were against him taking up the sport but eventually came around to support his ambitions.</p>.<p>On Friday, Lovlina Borgohain (69kg) became the first Indian boxer to secure a medal at the ongoing Games after advancing to the semifinals. She defeated former world champion Nien-Chin Chen of Chinese Taipei in her quarterfinal bout.</p>