What Exactly Is Boxing
What Exactly Is Boxing
What Exactly Is Boxing
Boxing is a sport that has been around for thousands of years, becoming an official Olympic event in 688 B.C. Modern day sport boxing
involves two athletes punching each other with padded gloves, trying to knock their opponent down and out. These fights usually last three
to twelve rounds, with each round usually lasting three minu.tes.
In the fitness industry, there are countless boxing gyms and boxing boot-camps across the country that can be joined by pretty much
anyone. These types of workouts usually include various types of punches bags, jumping rope, and other common exercises performed by
boxers (think about all the training montages in the Rocky movies).
These high intensity types of exercise in boxing makes it a great form of aerobic exercise.
Rules of Boxing
There are several different rules that are followed in professional boxing. Some common ones include:
In ancient Greece, two men would sit face to face with their fists wrapped in strips of leather. They would hit each other until one of
them fell to the ground unconscious--or dead. Roman fighters wore cestuses (leather straps plated with metal) to shorten the length
of the bouts. Shortly before the birth of Christ, Romans prohibited boxing.
Boxing disappeared until the late 1600s, when it surfaced again in England. Modern boxing was introduced there in the early 1700s,
with bare-knuckle fighting that continued without respite until one fighter could not continue. Boxing was made a bit less savage in
1743, when the London Prize Ring Rules were enacted.
In the mid-1850s, British boxers visited the United States and tried to create interest in boxing, but many Americans opposed the
bare-knuckle sport, and the last such fight, a 75-round main event, took place in 1889. A British sportsman, the Marquess of
Queensberry, introduced new professional tournament rules in which boxers were required to wear gloves and fight three-minute
rounds with a one-minute rest period between rounds.
What was called the golden age of U.S. boxing began in 1920 in New York with legislation that permitted public prizefighting.
Attendance at boxing matches declined during the '50s with the advent of television. Many fight fans preferred to watch major fights
on TV at home rather than watch from a ringside seat.
Scoring
The sport occasionally throws up such rows but considering how many fights take place around the world each
week, the system usually works extremely well.
There will always be matters of each judges’ opinion involved in close contests although their verdicts can
differ wildly – and be at odds with the opinion of managers, promoters, corner-men and spectators.
But in some cases a draw can turn out to deliver unexpected bonuses. For instance, there will now be huge
interest in the potential re-match between Fury and Wilder.
If two judges score for Fighter A and one judge scores for
8.. Fighter B, then it is a Split Decision win for Fighter A.
If two judges score for Fighter A and one judge scores a draw
9. then it is a Majority Decision win for Fighter A.
If two judges score a draw and one judge scores for either
11. boxer then it is a Majority Draw.
If, as in the case of Fury and Wilder, one judge scores for
Fighter A, one judge scores for fighter B and one judge
12. deems it a draw, then it is a Split Decision Draw.
13. Scores can vary from the usual 10-9 outcome. If Fighter A
knocks down Fighter B, the round is scored 10-8 to Fighter A.
If there is a second knockdown, it is scored 10-7.