The overall title went to the Services Sports Control Board (SSCB), who ended with four gold, one silver and three bronze medals. The Railways Sports Promotion Board (RSPB) finished second with two gold, two silver and two bronze medals.
Shiva, fighting with a bruised forehead after being head-butted in the quarterfinals, was aggression personified as he overpowered Haryana's Asian Youth silver-medallist Ankush Dahiya 5-0.
With Ankush continuously targeting Shiva's wound, the Assam boxer pumped up the aggression in the second round resulting in a furious exchange. Ankush did not back down either making it a high-voltage showdown which had the crowd on its feet.
However, Devendro, a two-time Olympian and an Asian Championships silver-medallist as well, lost 0-5 to Chandigarh greenhorn Deepak Singh, who was competing in his maiden National Championships.
"There was slight pressure on me because the bout was against Devendro but I was confident about the hard work I had put in my training. I started boxing as a 12-year-old and this is my first national championships. Previously I have won a gold medal in the Inter-University Championships," said the 20-year-old Deepak after causing perhaps the biggest upset of the day.
Devendro's trademark tempo boxing found its match in Deepak and all his attempted attacks were cleverly dodged by the new kid on the block.
(REOPENS DEL 73)
In a fine sporting gesture, Devendro happily posed for pictures with his 20-year-old rival after the bout and patted him on the back for a spirited performance.
The welterweight title went expectedly to former Commonwealth Games gold-medallist Manoj Kumar (RSPB). However, it was no stroll in the park for him today and he was pushed hard by SSCB's Duryodhan Singh before the judges ruled 4-1 in his favour.
There was another upset, in the light flyweight category, where former Asian Youth bronze-medallist K Shyam Kumar was stunned by Haryana's Amit.
"I made a few mistakes in the opening round, which probably cost me. Still I thought I should have won the bout," said shy Andhra Pradesh boxer.
The light welterweight title went to SSCB's Thomas Meitei after he scored a hard-fought 3-2 triumph over RSPB's Rohit Tokas in the summit clash.
The gold medal winners walked away with cash prizes of Rs 20,000, while the silver-medallists were presented Rs 12,000. The bronze medal winners got Rs 7,000 each.
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