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Canadian Olympic boxer Mandy Bujold, who fought to compete in Tokyo, hangs up her gloves

Two-time Canadian Olympic boxer Mandy Bujold confirmed on Wednesday she would be leaving the ring.

The 34-year-old Kitchener, Ont., native said before the Tokyo Olympic she planned to retire afterwards. Now, it's official.

"As an athlete I was always so focused on the next big event that many times I didn't even realize how big some of my accomplishments were," Bujold, the 11-time national champion, wrote in a Twitter post.

"Now that I am starting to think beyond the boxing ring I am actually able to appreciate the journey I've been on and all the amazing pieces that came with it."

Full article: <a href="https://t.co/FZMtDyva1B">https://t.co/FZMtDyva1B</a> <a href="https://t.co/FvTTUNlHqu">pic.twitter.com/FvTTUNlHqu</a>

Bujold, who won the national junior title in 2006, made her Olympic debut a decade later in Rio. She placed fifth, dropping her quarter-final bout after spending the previous night in hospital with an illness that caused her to lose five pounds overnight.

While Bujold's second Olympic appearance at Tokyo 2020 only yielded a 17th-place result, the Canadian's journey just to compete in Japan was a win in itself.

During 2018 and parts of 2019, Bujold — who ranked second in the world — didn't compete after giving birth to daughter Kate. But when the pandemic hit, the sport's international federation changed the Olympic qualifying criteria to cover that timeframe, leaving Bujold on the outs.

Bujold fought the ruling, garnering support from the likes of Billie Jean King, Hayley Wickenheiser and Lennox Lewis along the way. Eventually, the Court of Arbitration for Sport ruled in Bujold's favour, implementing a rule to assure the International Olympic Committee accounts for women who were pregnant or recently gave

Read more on cbc.ca