Didcot Amateur Boxing Academy on Broadway sent a team of juniors to the Warehouse Box Cup in Wales.
At the November event, its boxers secured four golds and two silvers.
READ MORE: Oxfordshire boxing coach targets Olympics after MAJOR award
In addition, youngster Jackson Myers became the junior national champion at 66kg.
This caps a remarkable turnaround for Mr Myers who only recently recovered from a severe injury and before that lost his first five fights in the ring.
Jackson Myers with a team mate (Image: Didcot Amateur Boxing Academy)
Coach Kieran Davis said: “Unbelievable and remarkable story for this kid.
“His first five fights he lost; he kept on, trained hard and got the national title.
“Not forgetting seven months ago he picked up an injury where he had a twisted pelvis and it was only six weeks ago that he was told from the physio that he couldn’t box after MRI scans.”
Jackson Myers is the new junior champion (Image: Didcot Amateur Boxing Academy)
Mr Myers won his bout by a unanimous points decision and is part of a promising squad at the academy.
Around 300 boxers are part of the overall Didcot team, including national champions and international Box Cup gold medallists.
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Earlier this year, Mr Davis was named the 2025 Male Boxing Coach of the Year by England Boxing at a ceremony in Sheffield, and he has said some of the boxers he coaches could become professionals.
Tipping a couple for the next Olympics in Los Angeles, the coach of the year has also emphasised the importance of the academy being a “safe space”.
He told this paper: “We’re there for kids when they have nowhere else to go; it is a safe environment.”