Joe Joyce trusts boxing officials to hand him Rio 2016 gold medal

Joe Joyce insists he should have won Olympic boxing gold at Rio 2016 and demands he finally gets his medal as investigators fear 11 fights – including his defeat by France’s Tony Yoka – were fixed by officials

Joe Joyce insists he should have won Olympic boxing gold at Rio 2016 and demands the sport’s officials overturn his defeat in the wake of a vote-rigging scandal that emerged earlier this week.

It was revealed on Thursday that Joyce was one of at least 11 victims of a vote-rigging scandal when denied a gold medal against Tony Yoka in the Brazilian city five years ago.  

Professor Richard McLaren, sport’s top criminal investigator, found ‘problems’ in the decision to call the super heavyweight final in favour of Yoka, Joyce’s French opponent. 

Joe Joyce won a silver medal at the Rio Olympics after suffering a controversial loss in the final

Joyce says he 'firmly believes' he should have won his final at Rio 2016 and trusts the sport's officials to overturn his defeat

Joyce says he ‘firmly believes’ he should have won his final at Rio 2016 and trusts the sport’s officials to overturn his defeat

McLaren, whose investigative team also uncovered Russia’s state-sponsored doping in 2016, revealed elite ‘five-star’ referees and judges at the Rio Olympics helped rig decisions in return for six-figure sums or to ‘thank’ supportive nations. 

Two questionable verdicts at the time — defeats for Joyce and Irishman Michael Conlan — were ‘manipulated’, said McLaren. 

Joyce appeared to completely outbox Yoka in the Brazilian city. However, at the end of the fight, Yoka’s arm was raised instead to widespread astonishment in the world of boxing.

That bout is one of those the investigators have identified as suspicious, although they acknowledge there may be more that require scrutiny as additional information becomes available.

McLaren said he could not insist on a retrospective gold for Joyce, adding: ‘That is not up to me. The international federation rules on that.’ 

Tony Yoka (left) was awarded the win, but the result is set to be overturned after a fix probe

Tony Yoka (left) was awarded the win, but the result is set to be overturned after a fix probe

But, in a statement on Friday, Joyce admitted he had ‘scanned’ McLaren’s report and now hopes boxing’s authorities will finally give him the gold medal he believes is his.

He said: ‘It’s sad to see corruption in any sport but particularly in boxing – the sport I love. 

‘I firmly believe that I was the winner of the match with Tony Yoka and deserved the gold medal. But on the day I did not get that decision and at the time I accepted that. 

‘I have scanned the McLaren Report and have read that there was corruption in AIBA (International Boxing Association) and that corruption affected the result of my gold medal match with Tony Yoka.

‘If corruption has taken place, and it appears that it has, I trust AIBA and the IOC (International Olympic Committee) will ensure the integrity of the sport is upheld and award me the gold medal. 

‘I will be considering the report in detail with my legal team and await the decision of AIBA and the IOC. Corruption should never be allowed to succeed.’

Yoka celebrated at the end of the bout when the referee declared him the winner of the fight

Yoka celebrated at the end of the bout when the referee declared him the winner of the fight

As Sportsmail reported on Thursday, McLaren’s investigators are understood to have been hampered in their attempts to speak to the French former executive director of the AIBA, Karim Bouzidi.

McClaren revealed the voting scam was refined at London 2012, where referees and judges received their orders via signals at ringside or by discreet approaches.

McClaren described fears of ‘reprisals and threats to personal safety’ felt by those receiving such instructions.

One witness described drunk and corrupt officials entering his hotel room late at night using a set of keys obtained from the front desk and telling him that if he didn’t start doing the job he was hired to do, ‘things wouldn’t work out very well’ for him. 

More to follow. 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk