Here are described some of the defensive moves against a right-handed opponent in an traditional position:
- The Bob and Weave
- Lay Back
- The Block
- Parries
- The Slip
- Clinching
Here are described some of the defensive moves against a right-handed opponent in an traditional position:
Here are the basic rules:
In 1743 Jack Broughton wrote the first rules to govern boxing as a response to the dangerous and from time to time even deadly progressing of this sport. Some of the most important rules used also nowadays were created from Broughton. For instance, the rule that the fight is over once a boxer is not able to get on his feet for certain amount of time. Another one of Broughton’s rules also says that hitting or grabbing below the waist is forbidden.
The first detailed description of a boxing fight one can find in Homer’s Iliad (ca. 675 BC). According to this book, the Mycenaean warriors incorporated boxing among their competitions and they were honoring the fallen with great ceremonies (ca. 1200 BC). Another legend holds that the heroic ruler Theseus (around the 9th century BC) invented a form of boxing in which two men were facing each other and fought with their fists till death. After some time, the boxers began to fight while wearing gloves with spikes and some wrappings on their arms below the elbows, but otherwise they were completely naked.
Fist fighting drawings were observed in the 3rd millennium BC in Sumerian relief while both fist-fighters and spectators were depicted in the 2nd millennium BC in an ancient Egyptian relief. Both drawings show contests which were bare-fisted. The archaeologist Dr. E. A. Speiser discovered in 1927 in Baghdad, Iraq a Mesopotamian stone tablet which illustrates two men in a combat for a trophy. It is believed to be 7,000 years old. The first evidence for fist fighting with any kind of gloves originates from Minoan Crete (c. 1500–900 BC), and if we consider the boxing statues of Prama mountains (c. 2000–1000 BC) also from Sardinia.
Next articles will cover:
Boxing is a sport in which two people are fighting in a single combat using their fists. The boxing match is supervised by a referee who calls the rounds in a three minute intervals with 1-minute rest periods between the rounds. The two opponents are usually of comparable weight. There are different ways to win the boxing match: