Boxing

Boxing, nicknamed the "sweet science" and also called pugilism or prizefighting, is a sport where two participants of similar weight attack each other with their fists in a series of two to three-minute intervals called "rounds". In both Amateur and Professional divisions, the combatants (called boxers or fighters) avoid their opponent's punches whilst trying to land punches of their own. Points are awarded for clean, solid blows to the legal area on the front of the opponent's body above the waistline, with hits to the head and torso especially valuable. The fighter with the most points after the scheduled number of rounds is declared the winner. Victory may also be achieved if the opponent is knocked down and unable get up before the referee counts to ten (a Knockout, or KO) or if the opponent is deemed too injured to continue (a Technical Knockout, or TKO).

Origins

Earliest evidence suggests that boxing was prevalent in North Africa during 4000 BC and the Mediterranean in 1500 BC.

A Greek ruler named Thesus, who ruled around 900 B.C., was entertained by men who would be seated in front of each other and beat another with their fists until one of them was killed. In time, the fighters fought on their feet and wore gloves (not padded) and wrappings on their arms below the elbows, but were otherwise naked when competing. First accepted as an Olympic sport (the ancient Greeks called it Pygme/ Pygmachia) in 688 BC, participants in the ancient games trained on punching bags (called a korykos). Keeping their fingers free, fighters then wore leather straps (called himantes) on their hands, wrists, and sometimes lower arms, to protect them from injury.

In Ancient Rome, fighters were usually criminals and slaves. They hoped to become champions and gain their freedom. However, free men also fought. Eventually, fist fighting became so popular that even aristocrats started fighting, but that was banned by the ruler Augustus. In 500 A.D., the sport was banned by Theodoric the Great.

London Prize Ring rules (1839)

The beginnings of the modern right cross demonstrated in Edmund Price's The Science of Self Defense: A Treatise on Sparring and Wrestling, 1867

Records of boxing activity disappeared after the fall of the Roman Empire. The sport would later resurface in England during the early 18th century in the form of bare-knuckle prizefighting. The first documented account of a bare-knuckle fight in England appeared in 1681 in the "London Protestant Mercury," and the first English bare-knuckle champion was James Figg in 1719. This is also the time when the word "boxing" first came to be used.

Early bare-knuckle fighting was crude with no written rules. There were no weight divisions, round limits and no referee. Modern rules banning gouging, grappling, biting, headbutting, fish-hooking and blows below the belt were absent.

The first boxing rules were introduced by heavyweight champion Jack Broughton in 1743 to protect fighters in the ring where deaths sometimes occurred. Under these rules, if a man went down and could not continue after a count of 30 seconds, the fight was over. Hitting a downed fighter and grasping below the waist were prohibited. Broughton also invented "mufflers" (padded gloves), which were used in training and exhibitions.

In 1839, the London Prize Ring rules were introduced which superceded Jack Broughton's rules. Later revised in 1853, they stipulated the following:

  • Fights occur in a 24-foot-square ring surrounded by ropes.
  • If a fighter was knocked down, he must rise within 30 seconds of his own power to be allowed to continue.
  • Biting, headbutting and hitting below the belt were declared fouls.

Marquess of Queensberry rules (1867)

In 1867, the Marquess of Queensberry rules were drafted by John Chambers for amateur championships held at Lillie Bridge in London for Lightweights, Middleweights and Heavyweights. The rules were published under the patronage of the Marquess of Queensberry, whose name has always been associated with them.

There were twelve rules in all, and they specified that fights should be "a fair stand-up boxing match" in a 24-foot-square ring. Rounds were three minutes long with one minute rest intervals between rounds. Each fighter was given a ten-second count if he was knocked down and wrestling was banned.

The introduction of gloves of "fair-size" also changed the nature of the bouts. An average pair of boxing gloves resembles a bloated pair of mittens and are laced up around the wrists. Gloves protected the hands of both fighters but their considerable size and weight made knock-out victories more difficult to achieve. Resultantly, bouts became longer and more strategic with greater importance attached to defensive maneuvers such as slipping, bobbing, countering and angling.

The first world heavyweight champion under the Queensberry Rules was "Gentleman Jim" Corbett, who defeated John L. Sullivan in 1892 at the Pelican Athletic Club in New Orleans.

With the gradual acceptance of formalised rules, two distinct branches of boxing emerged; Professional and Amateur. The boxing rules enforced by governing bodies worldwide today at the local, national and international level are all derived in some way from the Marquis of Queensberry Rules.

Amateur boxing

In amateur boxing (the version of the sport found at the Olympic Games and Commonwealth Games) the primary emphasis is on landing scoring punches rather than concern with doing physical damage to one's opponent. Competitors wear protective headgear and box for three to five rounds of two or three minutes each. Gloves in amateur boxing have a white strip across the knuckle. A punch is considered a scoring punch only when the boxers connect with the white portion of the gloves. Each punch that lands on the head or torso is awarded a point. A referee monitors the fight to ensure that competitors use only legal blows (a belt worn over the torso represents the lower limit of punches - any boxer repeatedly landing "low blows" is disqualified). Referees also ensure that the boxers don't use holding tactics to prevent the opponent from swinging (if this occurs, the referee separates the opponents and orders them to continue boxing. Repeated holding can result in a boxer being penalized, or ultimately, disqualified).

Also, in amateur boxing, referees will readily step in and stop the contest even if the competitor is only relatively lightly injured. As a result, the risk of grievous injury is considerably reduced in amateur boxing versus professional boxing.

Amateur boxing history

The Queensberry Amateur Championships continued from 1867 to 1885, and so, unlike their professional counterparts, amateur boxers did not deviate from using gloves once the Queensberry Rules had been published. In Britain, the Amateur Boxing Association (A.B.A.) was formed in 1880 when twelve clubs affiliated. It held its first championships the following year. Four weight classes were contested, Featherweight (9 stone), Lightweight (10 stone), Middleweight (11 stone, 4 pounds) and Heavyweight (no limit). (A stone is equal to 14 pounds). By 1902, American boxers were contesting the titles in the A.B.A. Championships, which, therefore, took on an international complexion. By 1924, the A.B.A. had 105 clubs in affiliation.

Boxing first appeared at the Olympic Games in 1904 and, apart from the Games of 1912, has always been part of them. From 1972 through 2004, Cuba and the United States have won the most Gold Medals, 29 for Cuba and 21 for the U.S. Internationally, amateur boxing spread steadily throughout the first half of the 20th century, but when the first international body, the Federation Internationale de Boxe Amateur (International Amateur Boxing Federation) was formed in Paris in 1920, there were only five member nations. In 1946, however, when the International Amateur Boxing Association (A.I.B.A.) was formed in London, twenty-four nations from five continents were represented, and the A.I.B.A. has continued to be the official world federation of amateur boxing ever since. The first World Amateur Boxing Championships were staged in 1974.

In the late 19th and early 20th century, amateur boxing was encouraged in schools, universities and in the armed forces, but the champions usually came from among the urban poor.

Women's boxing first appeared in the Olympic Games at a demonstration bout in 1904. For most of the 20th century, however, it was banned in most nations. Its revival was pioneered by the Swedish Amateur Boxing Association, which sanctioned events for women in 1988. The British Amateur Boxing Association sanctioned its first boxing competition for women in 1997. The first event was to be between two thirteen-year-olds, but one of the boxers withdrew because of hostile media attention. Four weeks later, an event was held between two sixteen-year-olds.

The A.I.B.A. accepted new rules for Women's Boxing at the end of the 20th century and approved the first European Cup for Women in 1999 and the first World Championship for women in 2001. Women's boxing will be an exhibition sport at the 2008 Olympics, but it won't become an official Olympic sport until the 2012 Olympics. .

A new scoring system was invented for amateur boxing: using a computer, judges must press a button every time they think a boxer landed a punch. When three or more of the five judges press the button within a second of each other, the punch counts as a "point" for the fighter that landed it. Punches to the head or face of an opponent usually score the most points for a competitor. At any point of the fight in which a fighter is leading by twenty points (or sometimes more), the referee is indicated and the fight is stopped, the leading fighter winning by "mercy", and credited with a knockout.

Professional boxing

Professional bouts are far longer than amateur bouts (ranging from four to twelve rounds), headgear is not permitted, and boxers are generally allowed to take much more punishment before a fight is halted. At any time, however, the referee may stop the contest if he believes that one participant can not or should not continue to box. In that case, the other participant is awarded a technical knockout win, which appears on the boxer's record as a knockout win (or loss). A technical knockout would also be awarded if a fighter lands a punch that opens a cut on the opponent, and the opponent is later deemed not fit to continue by a doctor because of the cut. If a boxer simply quits fighting, or if his corner stops the fight, then the winning boxer is also awarded a technical knockout victory.

If a knockout or disqualification does not occur, the fight must go to the scorecards. Professional fights have three judges each, and each of the judges must use the 10 point must system: Under this system, each time a boxer wins a round in the judges' eyes, the judge gives that boxer 10 points, and the other 9 or less. If the judge deems the round to be a tie, he or she may score it 10-10. When the fight reaches its scheduled distance, all scores are added, round by round, to determine who won on each judges' cards. When all three judges have the same boxer as the winner, this is an unanimous decision. When two judges have one boxer winning the fight and the other one has it a tie, this is called a majority decision. When two judges have one boxer winning the fight and the other judge has the other boxer winning, this is called a split decision. When one judge gives his or her vote to one boxer, another one gives it to the other boxer, and the third judge calls it a tie, this is a draw. It is also a draw when two judges score the fight a tie, regardless of who the third judge score the bout for.

In Britain, the bout is only scored by the referee, except when a title is at stake, in which case it is scored by three judges.

If a fight can not go on because of an injury caused to one of the competitors by a headbutt, there are different rules: If the fight has not reached the end of round three, (in some places, round four), the fight is declared a technical draw or a no contest. If it has reached beyond the end of round three (or four), then the scorecards are read and whoever is ahead, wins by a technical decision.

Evolution of professional boxing

In 1891, the National Sporting Club (N.S.C.), a private club in London, began to promote professional glove fights at its own premises, and created nine of its own rules to augment the Queensberry Rules. These rules specified more accurately the role of the officials, and produced a system of scoring that enabled the referee to decide the result of a fight. The British Boxing Board of Control (B.B.B.C.) was first formed in 1919 with close links to the N.S.C., and was re-formed in 1929 after the N.S.C. closed.

In 1909, the first of twenty-two belts were presented by the fifth Earl of Lonsdale to the winner of a British title fight held at the N.S.C. In 1929, the B.B.B.C. continued to award Lonsdale Belts to any British boxer who won three title fights in the same weight division. The "title fight" has always been the focal point in professional boxing. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, however, there were title fights at each weight. Promoters who could stage profitable title fights became influential in the sport, as did boxers' managers. The best promoters and managers have been instrumental in bringing boxing to new audiences and provoking media and public interest. The most famous of all three-way partnership (fighter-manager-promoter) was that of Jack Dempsey (Heavyweight Champion, 1919-1926), his manager Jack Kearns, and the promoter Tex Rickard. Together they grossed US$ 8.4 million in only five fights between 1921 and 1927 and ushered in a "golden age" of popularity for professional boxing in the 1920s. They were also responsible for the first live radio broadcast of a title fight (Dempsey v. Georges Carpentier, in 1921). In Britain, Jack Solomons' success as a fight promoter helped re-establish professional boxing after the Second World War and made Britain a popular place for title fights in the 1950s and 1960s.

In the first part of the 20th century, the United States became the centre for professional boxing. It was generally accepted that the "world champions" were those listed by the Police Gazette. After 1920, the National Boxing Association (N.B.A.) began to sanction "title fights". Also during that time, Ring Magazine magazine was founded and it listed champions and awarded championship belts. The N.B.A. was renamed in 1962 and became the World Boxing Association (W.B.A.). The following year, a rival body, the World Boxing Council (W.B.C.), was formed. In 1983, another world body, the International Boxing Federation (I.B.F.) was formed. By the end of the 20th century, a boxer had to be recognized by the three separate bodies to be the "Undisputed World Champion". Regional sanctioning bodies such as the North American Boxing Federation, the North American Boxing Council and the United States Boxing Association also awarded championships. Ring Magazine also continued listing the World Champion of each weight division, and its rankings continue being of the most appreciated by fans.

Although women fought professionally in many countries, in Britain the B.B.B.C. refused to issue licences to women until 1998. By the end of the century, however, they had issued five such licenses. The first sanctioned bout between women was in November 1998 at Streatham in London, between Jane Couch and Simona Lukic.

Equipment

Boxing techniques utilize very forceful strikes with the hand. There are many bones in the hand, and striking surfaces without proper technique can cause serious hand injuries. Today, most trainers do not allow boxers to train and spar without handwraps and gloves. Handwraps are used to secure the bones in the hand, and the gloves are used to protect the hands from blunt injury, allowing boxers to throw punches with more force than if they did not utilize them.

Headgear, used in amateur boxing, protects against cuts, scrapes, and swelling, but does not protect very well against concussions. Headgear does not sufficiently protect the brain from the jarring that occurs when the head is struck with great force. Also, most boxers aim for the chin on opponents, and the chin is usually not padded. Thus, a powerpunch can do a lot of damage to a boxer, and even a jab that connects to the chin can cause damage, regardless of whether or not headgear is being utilized.

Length of bouts

For decades, from the 1920s to the 1980s, world championship matches in professional boxing were scheduled for fifteen rounds, but that changed after a November 13, 1982 WBA Lightweight title bout ended with the death of boxer Duk Koo Kim in a fight against Ray Mancini in the 14th round of a nationally televised championship fight on CBS.

Exactly three months after the fatal fight, the World Boxing Council reduced the number of their championship fights to 12 rounds. The World Boxing Association even stripped a fighter of his championship in 1983 because the fight had been a 15-round bout, shortly after the rule was changed to 12 rounds. By 1988, to the displeasure of many boxing purists, all fights had been reduced to a maximum of 12 rounds only, partially for safety, and partially for television, as a 12-round bout could take one hour to broadcast, while a 15-round bout could requre 90 minutes to broadcast.

Technique

Stance and movement

Development

The modern boxing stance is a reflection of the current system of rules employed by professional boxing. It differs in many ways from the typical boxing stances of the 19th and early 20th centuries. It's been stated that Americans adopted a more upright vertical armed guard (as opposed to more horizontally held, knuckles facing the ground guard as seen when looking at early 20th century boxers such as Jack Johnson) due to the Americans' confrontations with the Filipino natives as a result of the Philippines Spanish-American war. When engaged in hand to hand combat, the Filipinos would slash the wrists of the American soldiers, the Americans adapted by changing the guarded stance and thus just one example of a boxing technicality evolving.

The Boxer's Stance

The following stance applies for a right-handed boxer. The boxer stands with the legs shoulder-width apart with the right foot a half-step behind the left foot. The left (lead) fist is held vertically about six inches in front of the face at eye level. The right (rear) fist is held beside the chin and the elbow tucked against the ribcage to protect the body. The chin is tucked into the chest to avoid punches to the jaw which commonly cause knock-outs. Modern boxers can sometimes be seen "tapping" their cheeks or foreheads with their fists in order to remind themselves to keep their hands up (which becomes difficult during long bouts).

Movement

Modern boxers are taught to "push off" with their feet in order to move effectively. Forward motion involves lifting the lead leg and pushing with the rear leg. Rearward motion involves lifting the rear leg and pushing with the lead leg. During lateral motion the leg in the direction of the movement moves first while the opposite leg provides the force needed to move the body.

Punches

There are four basic punches in boxing: the Jab, Cross, Hook and Uppercut. If a boxer is right-handed, his left hand is the lead hand, his right hand is the rear hand and vice versa. The following techniques apply to a right-handed boxer. A right-handed boxer's handedness is commonly described as orthodox. A left-handed boxer is called an unorthodox boxer or a Southpaw.

  • Jab - A quick, straight punch thrown with the lead hand from the guard position. The jab is accompanied by a small, clockwise rotation of the torso and hips, while the fist rotates 180 degrees, becoming horizontal upon impact. As the punch reaches full extension, the lead shoulder is brought up to guard the chin. The rear hand remains next to the face to guard the jaw. After making contact with the target, the lead hand is retracted quickly to resume a guard position in front of the face. The jab is the most important punch in a boxer's arsenal because it provides a fair amount of its own cover and it leaves the least amount of space for a counterpunch from the opponent. It has the longest reach of any punch and does not require commitment or large weight transfers. Due to its relatively weak power, the jab is often used as a tool to gauge distances, probe an opponent's defenses, and set up heavier, more powerful punches. A half-step may be added, moving the entire body into the punch, for additional power.
  • Cross - A powerful straight punch thrown with the rear hand. From the guard position, the rear hand is thrown from the chin, crossing the body and travelling towards the target in a straight line. The rear shoulder is thrust forward and finishes just touching the outside of the chin. At the same time, the lead hand is retracted and tucked against the face to protect the inside of the chin. For additional power, the torso and hips are rotated anti-clockwise as the cross is thrown. Weight is also transferred from the rear foot to the lead foot, resulting in the rear heel turning outwards as it acts as a fulcrum for the transfer of weight. Body rotation and the sudden weight transfer is what gives the cross its power. Like the jab, a half-step forward may be added. After the cross is thrown, the hand is retracted quickly and the guard position resumed. It can be used to counterpunch a jab, aiming for the opponent's head (or a counter to a cross aimed at the body) or to set up a hook. The cross can also follow a jab, creating the classic "one-two combo." The cross is also called a "straight" or "right."
  • Hook - A semi-circular punch thrown with the lead hand to the side of the opponent's head. From the guard position, the elbow is drawn back with a horizontal fist (knuckles pointing forward) and the elbow bent. The rear hand is tucked firmly against the jaw to protect the chin. The torso and hips are rotated clockwise, propelling the fist through a tight, clockwise arc across the front of the body and connecting with the target. At the same time, the lead foot pivots clockwise, turning the left heel outwards. Upon contact, the hook's circular path ends abruptly and the lead hand is pulled quickly back into the guard position. A hook may also target the lower body (the classic Mexican hook to the liver) and this technique is sometimes called the "rip" to distinguish it from the conventional hook to the head. The hook may also be thrown with the rear hand.
  • Uppercut - A vertical, rising punch thrown with the rear hand. From the guard position, the torso shifts slightly to the right, the rear hand drops below the level of the opponent's chest and the knees are bent slightly. From this position, the rear hand is thrust upwards in a rising arc towards the opponent's chin or torso. At the same time, the knees push upwards quickly and the torso and hips rotate anti-clockwise and the rear heel turns outward, mimicking the body movement of the cross. The strategic utility of the uppercut depends on its ability to "lift" the opponent's body, setting it off-balance for successive attacks. The right uppercut followed by a left hook is a deadly combination.

Defense

  • Slip - Slipping rotates the body slightly so that an incoming punch passes harmlessly next to the head. As the opponent's punch arrives, the boxer sharply rotates the hips and shoulders. This turns the chin sideways and allows the punch to "slip" past.
  • Bob and Weave - Bobbing moves the head laterally and beneath an incoming punch. As the opponent's punch arrives, the boxer bends the legs quickly and simultaneously shifts the body either slightly right or left. Once the punch has been evaded, the boxer "weaves" back to an upright position, emerging on either the outside or inside of the opponent's still-extended arm. To move outside the opponent's extended arm is called "bobbing to the outside". To move inside the opponent's extended arm is called "bobbing to the inside".
  • Parry - Parrying uses the boxer's hands as defensive tools to deflect incoming attacks. As the opponent's punch arrives, the boxer delivers a sharp, lateral, open-handed blow to the opponent's wrist or forearm, redirecting the punch.
  • The Cover-Up - Covering up is the last line of defense against an incoming strike to an unprotected face or body. Generally speaking, the hands are held high to protect the head and chin and the forearms are tucked against the torso to impede body shots. When protecting the body, the boxer rotates the hips and lets incoming punches "roll" off the guard. When protecting the head, the boxer presses both fists against the front of the face with the forearms parallel and facing outwards.
  • The Clinch - Clinching is a rough form of grappling and occurs when the distance between both fighters has closed and straight punches cannot be employed. In this situation, the boxer attempts to hold or "tie up" the opponent's hands so he is unable to throw roundhouse punches or uppercuts. To perform a clinch, the boxer loops both hands around the outside of the opponent's shoulders, scooping back under the forearms to grasp the opponent's arms tightly against his own body. In this position, the opponent's arms are pinned and cannot be used to attack. Clinching is a temporary match state and is quickly dissipated by the referee.

Tactics and strategy

The "Rope-a-dope" Strategy

  • A tactic famously used by Muhammad Ali in his 1974 "Rumble in the Jungle" bout against George Foreman. The rope-a-dope method involves laying back on the ropes, covering up defensively as much as possible and allowing the opponent to land punches. Weathering the blows, the fighter lures the opponent into expending his energy whilst conserving his own. If successful, the attacking opponent will eventually tire, creating defensive flaws which the fighter now exploits. However, the rope-a-dope is generally discouraged in modern boxing since most opponents are not fooled by it and few boxers possess the physical toughness to withstand a prolonged, unanswered assault.

The "Peek-a-Boo" Style

  • A method made famous by Mike Tyson, the peek-a-boo involves heavy emphasis on "bobbing and weaving." Through elusive head movement, the boxer frustrates his opponent's attempts to land blows, and counters them with powerful punches of his own.

Stick and Move

  • This strategy is very popular in amateur boxing where points are often more important than damage. It is also used extensively by many professional fighters. The "stick and move" method involves avoiding the opponent through elusive footwork. The boxer will land well-timed jabs, then back away again without giving the opponent opportunity to launch an attack of his own. In this way, a fighter can slowly wear down an adversary in relative safety.

Brawling

  • This strategy involves attacking aggressively without backing away for rest or defense. This is a risky tactic, as defense becomes difficult for both fighters when so many punches are being thrown together. Contests tend to finish quickly when one of the fighters chooses to employ this method. Often considered the strategy of unskilled fighters, this method is often used by skilled fighters after they have gained an advantage by first injuring their opponent.

Ring Control

  • A boxer can gain advantage through strategic control of the space inside the boxing ring. A fighter employing this method will position himself at the center of the ring, and allow his opponent to circle around him as they fight. He must not let his opponent push him backward too far, or he will lose control of the center. As they fight, the boxer will attempt to push his opponent backwards toward the ropes, cutting down on the amount of space available for him to maneuver as he circles the center. If possible, the boxer will trap his opponent in the corner of the ring. When this happens, the boxer will attack more aggressively, keeping his opponent trapped. The trapped fighter will not be able to move side to side for defense, and will be forced to hold his ground until he can make the attacking fighter retreat.

Bolo punch

  • Occasionally seen in amateur boxing, the bolo is an arm punch which owes its power to the shortening of a circular arc rather than to transference of body weight; it tends to have more of an effect due to the surprise of the odd angle it lands at rather than the actual power of the punch. This is more of a gimmick than a technical maneuver, this punch is not taught, it is on the same plane in boxing technicality as is the Ali shuffle.

Boxing legends

The boxing world has produced talented and world famous personalities in both the amateur and professional realms. Famous amateur boxers have usually been Olympic medallists. The Olympics have long been considered a springboard for professional entry, though some Olympic champions prefer to retain their amateur status, including two Cuban three-time gold medalists, Teófilo Stevenson and Félix Savón.

It is the professional side of boxing, however, that has produced the celebrities whose activities the public have generally followed. In the period between bare-knuckle pugilism and post-Queensberry boxing, Jem Mace was important. He carried many of the traditions of the old London Prize-Ring, but promoted the use of gloves and helped to popularize the sport in the United States and Australia. In the post-Queensberry era, the first British fighter to achieve superstar status was Bob Fitzsimmons. He weighed less than 12 stone but won world titles at Middleweight (1892), Light Heavyweight (1903), and Heavyweight (1897). He fought his last bout at the age of fifty-two.

Great Britain, the birth place of modern boxing, has produced numerous boxing legends. Among British amateur boxers, only those who won Olympic gold medals tended to achieve recognition beyond the limits of boxing enthusiasts. They included Harry Mallin (Middleweight), 1920 and 1924), Terry Spinks (Flyweight, 1956), Dick McTaggart (Lightweight, 1956) and Chris Finnegan (Middleweight, 1968).

London rules and pre-Queensberry era

The bareknuckle era produced legends like John L. Sullivan, the first world heavyweight champion. Sullivan has been called the first great American sports hero.

1900s to 1920s

It is the post-Queensberry (or Modern) era that has the greatest number of legendary boxers, such as world heavyweight champions Jim Jeffries (the first Great White Hope) and Jack Johnson (the first black world heavyweight champion), who fought each other in 1910 in the first "Fight of the Century".

Successful fighters have provoked fierce local pride. The best example was Jimmy Wilde, a Welsh flyweight who won the world Flyweight Championship in 1916 and held it until 1923. He once had a sequence of eighty-eight fights without defeat. Between 1911 and 1923, he won seventy-five of his fights by a knockout. He was idolized in Wales, where they commonly believed him to be the best boxer, pound-for-pound, that ever lived. He was described as the "Mighty Atom" and "the ghost with a hammer in his hand".

1920s to 1940s

Jack Dempsey was one of the most important athletes of roaring twenties and became the World heavyweight champion after defeating Jess Willard. Joe Louis dominated the heavyweight scene for 12 years before retiring as world champion in 1949. Shortly before the beginning of WW2, the battles between Louis and Max Schmeling were seen as battles between America and Nazi Germany. Louis is considered by many one of the best boxers of the Depression and possibly of all time. Another famous boxer, James Braddock (better known as the Cinderella Man) inspired many with his rags to riches story. He eventually fought his way to the heavyweight title and won against Max Baer who had 10 to 1 odds in his favor. Braddock finally lost his title to Joe Louis but made financial arrangements with him to receive 10% of the profits from the rest of Louis's fights.

Britain has had other popular world champions. In the 1930s, Jackie Berg won the light welterweight title. In the 1940s, Freddie Mills won the light heavyweight title. In the 1950s and 1960s, Randy Turpin and Terry Downes won middleweight titles. and in the 1970s, John Conteh and John Stracey won the light heavyweight and welterweight titles respectively. With so many title-awarding bodies in the 1980s and 1990s, the public became unsure about who actually was the champion. Nevertheless, the successes of Nigel Benn, Naseem Hamed, Chris Eubank, Joe Calzaghe, and Ricky Hatton continued to bring extensive media coverage to boxing and sustained a considerable public following.

The Scots had a similar pride in Benny Lynch, a flyweight from Glasgow, who held the world flyweight title in 1935 and again in 1937. Over the years, Scots have had great success at this weight; Jackie Paterson won the title in 1943 and Walter McGowan in 1966. Scots have also had success in the lightweight division. Ken Buchanan won the title in 1971 and Jim Watt in 1980.

England, too, had its successes at the lighter weights. Among the flyweights, Jackie Brown won the title in 1932, Peter Kane in 1938 and Terry Allen.

1940s to 1960s

The 1950s had a boxer who would go down in history as the only undefeated world heavyweight champion: Rocky Marciano. The title of the movie Rocky was inspired by this legend. This era also had Sugar Ray Robinson, who most experts rate as the best pound-for-pound boxer of all time. Robinson held the world welterweight title from 1946 to 1951, and the world middleweight title a record five times from 1951 to 1960. Another great of this period was Archie Moore, who held the world light heavyweight title for ten years and scored more knockout victories than any other boxer in history.

In Northern Ireland, Rinty Monahan held the flyweight title from 1947 to 1950, and Barry McGuigan won the W.B.A. featherweight title in 1985.

1960s to 1980s

The decades of the 1960s & 1970s are best remembered by the dominance of a boxer once named Cassius Clay, who said he would "shock the world." He joined the Nation of Islam, changed his name to Muhammad Ali, and declared himself against war. Many sociologists, observers, and critics now view Ali as a reflection of the changing society of that time. Ali had tough opponents like Sonny Liston, Joe Frazier, Ken Norton, and George Foreman, but proved himself to be the best heavyweight of his era, if not of all time. Larry Holmes (a former sparring partner of Ali) and the electric promoter Don King both gained prominence during this time.

After the retirement of Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard became the biggest star in the sport. In the late 1970s and the 1980s, Leonard won world titles in five different weight divisions, and was the first boxer to make 100 million dollars during his career.

1980s to present

If there was ever a bad boy of boxing, the title surely would go to a man who burst into professional boxing like a hurricane; Mike Tyson. Nicknamed "Iron Mike" because of his devastating punching power, Tyson took the world by storm. The most dominant figure on the heavyweight division in the mid-to-late 80s, he ran through his opponents like a wrecking ball, becoming the first undisputed champion in a decade. Both in and out of the ring, he was always in the news. He was jailed multiple times, barred from boxing for a year after biting a chunk out of Evander Holyfield's ear, and going into bankruptcy. When he fought his last title fight, against Lennox Lewis in 2002, he was beaten thoroughly and knocked out. Lewis, a Canadian trained British born heavyweight titleholder, retired as champion.

Roy Jones, Jr. was the most dominant fighter of the 1990s and early 2000s. He won world titles in four different weight divisions, from middleweight to heavyweight. When he defeated John Ruiz to win the WBA heavyweight title, he was the first former middleweight champion to win a heavyweight title since Bob Fitzsimmons accomplished the feat over one hundred years earlier.

Oscar De La Hoya was possibly the most popular American boxer of his era. He won titles from junior lightweight to middleweight. With good looks and charisma, along with plenty of boxing talent, he became the richest non-heavyweight in the history of boxing.

Julio Cesar Chavez was the most dominant fighter of this era. He defeated many big name fighters like: Roger Mayweather, Melderick Taylor, and Hector Camacho. However, his illustrious streak was broken by Frankie Randall. After, the Randall fight the once invincible Chavez was see as vulnerable. Subsequently, he lost to De La Hoya and Kostya Tszyu.


Britain had to wait 100 years to have its first heavyweight champion since Bob Fitzsimmons lost his title in 1899. Lennox Lewis became undisputed champion in 1999, having first gained the W.B.C. title in 1993. Frank Bruno held the W.B.C. world heavyweight title from 1995 and 1996, after beating the man who beat Lewis, Oliver McCall. He lost it to Mike Tyson in a rematch of their 1989 title bout.

Sue Atkins (alias Sue Catkins) helped to pioneer women's boxing in Britain in the 1980s, but without any official recognition. The first British woman to be issued with a license was Jane Couch from Fleetwood, who won the Women's International Boxing Federation (W.I.B.F.) welterweight title in 1996.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. is the current dominant figure in boxing.

International Boxing Hall of Fame

For many years, the sport of boxing did not have a hall of fame. The inspiration for the boxing hall of fame evolved from a tribute the town of Canastota, New York held for two local heroes in 1982. The tribute was for Carmen Basilio, who was world welterweight and middleweight champion in the 1950s, and his nephew, Billy Backus, who was world welterweight champion in the early 1970s. The people of Canastota raised money for the tribute, which was so success that some started to look into the idea of creating the sport's first hall of fame and museum. The International Boxing Hall of Fame opened in Canastota in 1989. In 1990, the first group of legends were inducted, which included Jack Johnson, Benny Leonard, Jack Dempsey, Henry Armstrong, Sugar Ray Robinson, Archie Moore, and Muhammad Ali. The Hall of Fame holds it's induction ceremony every June as part of a four day event.

List of articles on boxing history

For more information on the timeline of boxing history see

  • Boxing in the 1920s
  • Boxing in the 1930s
  • Boxing in the 1940s
  • Boxing in the 1950s
  • Boxing in the 1960s
  • Boxing in the 1970s
  • Boxing in the 1980s

Medical concerns

In 1983, The Journal of the American Medical Association called for a ban on boxing. The editor, Dr. George Lundberg, called boxing an "obscenity" that "should not be sanctioned by any civilized society." Since the AMA called for abolition of boxing, the British, Canadian, Australian and World Medical Association have also called for the sport's abolition, as have the American Neurological Association and the American Academy of Neurology.

Many who disagree with the AMA point out that boxing is far from being the most dangerous of sports. To put the risks in perspective, here are some US figures on sports fatalities:

Fatality rates per 100,000 participants

  1. Horse racing: 128
  2. Sky diving: 123
  3. Hang gliding: 56
  4. Mountaineering: 51
  5. Scuba diving: 11
  6. Motorcycle racing: 7
  7. College football: 3
  8. Boxing: 1.3

(This table was compiled by R.J. McCunney and P.K. Russo, authors of an article entitled Brain Injuries in Boxing, which was published in 1984.)

In response to such statistics, Lundberg has said, "It's not the deaths but the chronic brain damage that is so frequent." the AMA says about three out of four boxers who have twenty or more professional fights show some brain deterioration.

Many who support the ban proposal consider its main reason is not the fact that boxing is a dangerous sport, but the fact that the goal of the sport is to cause injury to the opponent. Dr. Bill O'Neill, boxing spokesman for the British Medical Association, has said in support of the BMA's proposed ban on boxing, "It is the only sport where the intention is to inflict serious injury on your opponent, and we feel that we must have a total ban on boxing."[1]

Impact of boxing on the English language

Numerous metaphors common to everyday speech derive from the sport of boxing. Some of these include:

Boxing in popular culture

  • Battling Butler (1926 film) Starring Buster Keaton
  • The Champ (1931 film)
  • Two-Fisted (1935 film) Comedy
  • Kid Galahad (1937 film) Starring Edward G. Robinson
  • Golden Boy (1937 stageplay) written by Clifford Odets
  • Golden Boy (1939 film) Starring William Holden and Barbara Stanwyck
  • Gentleman Jim (1942 film) Starring Errol Flynn
  • Body and Soul (1947 film) Starring John Garfield
  • Champion (1949 film) Starring Kirk Douglas
  • The Set-Up (1949 film) Starring Robert Ryan
  • Day of the Fight (1951 short subject) first film directed by Stanley Kubrick
  • On the Waterfront (1954 film) Starring Marlon Brando
  • The Harder They Fall (1956 film) Starring Humphrey Bogart
  • Somebody Up There Likes Me (1956 film) Starring Paul Newman
  • Requiem for a Heavyweight (1956 TV play) Starring Jack Palance, written by Rod Serling
  • Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962 film) Starring Anthony Quinn, Jackie Gleason and Mickey Rooney
  • Kid Galahad (1962 film) Musical starring Elvis Presley
  • Golden Boy (1964 musical stageplay)
  • The Great White Hope (1970 film) Starring James Earl Jones and Jane Alexander
  • Fat City (1972 film) Starring Stacey Keach and Jeff Bridges
  • Rocky Oscar winning movie in 1976 and its sequels, starring Sylvester Stallone (also scriptwriter)
  • The Main Event (1979 film) Starring Barbra Streisand and Ryan O'Neal
  • The Champ (1979 film) Starring Jon Voight, Faye Dunaway, and Rick Schroeder; remake of 1931 film
  • The Prize Fighter (1979 film), starring Don Knotts and Tim Conway
  • Raging Bull (1980 film) A classic boxing movie, starring Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci
  • Spike of Bensonhurst (1988 film)
  • The Great White Hype (1996 film) Starring Samuel L Jackson and Jeff Goldblum
  • When We Were Kings (1997 film) The story of Muhammad Ali and George Foreman and The Rumble in the Jungle
  • 24 7: Twenty Four Seven (1997 film) Starring Bob Hoskins
  • Don King: Only in America (TV movie) Starring Ving Rhames
  • The Hurricane (1999 film) Starring Denzel Washington as middleweight Rubin Carter
  • Billy Elliot, about a young dancer whose father and brother wanted to become a boxer, like Ken Buchanan
  • Girlfight (2000 film)
  • Ali (2001 film) Starring Will Smith
  • Champion (2002 film) South Korean film about Duk Koo Kim, a South Korean boxer who died after a bout against Ray Mancini
  • Undefeated (2003 TV movie) Starring John Leguizamo
  • Million Dollar Baby (2004 film) Multiple Oscar winner about a female boxer directed by Clint Eastwood
  • Against the Ropes (2004 film) Starring Meg Ryan as Jackie Kallen famous female boxing promoter
  • Black Cloud Directed by and starring Rick Schroder
  • The Calcium Kid (2004 film)
  • Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson (2004 film) Documentary directed by Ken Burns
  • Cinderella Man (2005 film) Based on the true story of Jim Braddock starring Russell Crowe.
  • The Contender 2005 Reality TV series
  • Hajime no Ippo A manga/anime about a young featherweight boxer
  • Activision Boxing, one of the first console games about boxing
  • Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!! A Nintendo game. Later adapted to SNES as Super Punch-Out!!
  • EA Sports fight night 2004 and Fight Night: Round 2 (formerly Knockout Kings).

This page about Boxing includes information from a Wikipedia article.
Additional articles about Boxing
News stories about Boxing
External links for Boxing
Videos for Boxing
Wikis about Boxing
Discussion Groups about Boxing
Blogs about Boxing
Images of Boxing

Some of these include:.
. Numerous metaphors common to everyday speech derive from the sport of boxing. Also in 2005, General Motors announced the first Cadillac designed exclusively for the European market, a model called the BLS, to be built by Saab in Sweden. Bill O'Neill, boxing spokesman for the British Medical Association, has said in support of the BMA's proposed ban on boxing, "It is the only sport where the intention is to inflict serious injury on your opponent, and we feel that we must have a total ban on boxing."[1]. In late 2005, Cadillac introduced the new DTS, the replacement of the DeVille, completing the full lineup of A&S models. Dr. Bush features A&S design cues, and is said to foreshadow the 2006 Cadillac DTS, which is the replacement for the DeVille.

Many who support the ban proposal consider its main reason is not the fact that boxing is a dangerous sport, but the fact that the goal of the sport is to cause injury to the opponent. The 2005 Presidential Limousine first shown at the second inauguration of President George W. In response to such statistics, Lundberg has said, "It's not the deaths but the chronic brain damage that is so frequent." the AMA says about three out of four boxers who have twenty or more professional fights show some brain deterioration. This version of A&S will probably see itself debuted on models that appeal to more conservative demographics, such as the DeVille's replacement and a possible ultraluxury sedan. Russo, authors of an article entitled Brain Injuries in Boxing, which was published in 1984.). A slight evolution of A&S was shown at Detroit's 2003 Auto Show with the Cadillac Sixteen concept, which had a rounded body with crisp A&S features. McCunney and P.K. The new Cadillac V-Series was also introduced to provide sporty models based on Cadillac production cars, with very extensive chassis and engine upgrades.

(This table was compiled by R.J. The 2005 Cadillac STS is the latest in the A&S lineup and will complete the transition between the old school of design and the new. Fatality rates per 100,000 participants. Following in its success was the Cadillac SRX sport utility wagon and the Evoq-inspired Cadillac XLR roadster. To put the risks in perspective, here are some US figures on sports fatalities:. Cadillac's 2003 Cadillac CTS was the first ground-up incarnation of A&S and was an instant hit, partly due to product placements in the cyberpunk Matrix trilogy. Many who disagree with the AMA point out that boxing is far from being the most dangerous of sports. The DeVille sedan and 2002 Escalade sport utility were the first executions of the Art & Science design philosophy, though they should be appropriately noted as more transitional vehicles since they combine A&S with the last era of styling and tested the waters for public acceptance.

George Lundberg, called boxing an "obscenity" that "should not be sanctioned by any civilized society." Since the AMA called for abolition of boxing, the British, Canadian, Australian and World Medical Association have also called for the sport's abolition, as have the American Neurological Association and the American Academy of Neurology. Distinctive characteristics of Art & Science design include stacked headlamps, vertical taillamps, angular grille, and creased body lines in addition to alphanumeric model names. The editor, Dr. With its crisp lines, hard creases, and sharp corners, the Evoq not only had a striking presence of its own, but also marked a departure from the softer design of previous Cadillacs. In 1983, The Journal of the American Medical Association called for a ban on boxing. The latest incarnation of Cadillac styling - Art & Science (A&S) was previewed with the 1999 Cadillac Evoq concept roadster at that year's Detroit Auto Show. For more information on the timeline of boxing history see. After GM phased out the GM B platform after 1996, abeit the importation of the European-based Catera, the only equivalent of rear-wheel drive is seen as a sport utility vehicle with the present-day Escalade.

The Hall of Fame holds it's induction ceremony every June as part of a four day event. It was discontinued after the 1996 model year (the Brougham was rebadged as the Fleetwood Brougham). In 1990, the first group of legends were inducted, which included Jack Johnson, Benny Leonard, Jack Dempsey, Henry Armstrong, Sugar Ray Robinson, Archie Moore, and Muhammad Ali. By the late 80s, the Brougham was the only Cadillac model that retained the style and size of the "big" DeVilles and Fleetwoods of the 70s. The International Boxing Hall of Fame opened in Canastota in 1989. Throughout the 1980s, American auto makers downsized most of their models, and the Cadillac was no exception. The people of Canastota raised money for the tribute, which was so success that some started to look into the idea of creating the sport's first hall of fame and museum. The Cimarron and Seville models marked a beginning of "smaller" cars for the Cadillac line.

The tribute was for Carmen Basilio, who was world welterweight and middleweight champion in the 1950s, and his nephew, Billy Backus, who was world welterweight champion in the early 1970s. Indeed, Cadillac was so confident of the Seville that it was exported to Europe, but it faced stiff opposition. The inspiration for the boxing hall of fame evolved from a tribute the town of Canastota, New York held for two local heroes in 1982. The Allante's styling influenced other Cadillacs, especially the Seville, which adopted its sharper, tailored lines. For many years, the sport of boxing did not have a hall of fame. The car was, sadly, not a commercial success, but today stands out as a modern classic and more than able to hold its own, image-wise, next to its Mercedes-Benz SL rival. is the current dominant figure in boxing. The greatest challenge to the imports was the Cadillac Allante, a convertible designed by Pininfarina of Italy, and built on what was touted as the world's longest production line—with the car's bodies fabricated in Italy and flown by Boeing 747 to the United States to meet their transmission and engine.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. Some new design approaches were tried: the Seville, for instance, had gracefully rounded wheel arches with a hint of chrome. The first British woman to be issued with a license was Jane Couch from Fleetwood, who won the Women's International Boxing Federation (W.I.B.F.) welterweight title in 1996. The mid-1980s saw Cadillac try to rebuild its image, aware that European and Japanese imports were on a rise, and with Honda launching its American luxury division, Acura. Sue Atkins (alias Sue Catkins) helped to pioneer women's boxing in Britain in the 1980s, but without any official recognition. The 4100's problems cost Cadillac the loyalty of many customers. He lost it to Mike Tyson in a rematch of their 1989 title bout. It suffered from coolant leaks, warped intake manifolds and warped heads.

world heavyweight title from 1995 and 1996, after beating the man who beat Lewis, Oliver McCall. This proved to be one of the worst engines ever built. Frank Bruno held the W.B.C. The 4100 (4.1 liter) V8 engine was used widely in Cadillacs in the late 1980's. title in 1993. Company marketing hailed the engine as cutting-edge technology, but it proved unreliable and was dropped the next year in favor of a family of smaller aluminum V8 engines rushed into production. Lennox Lewis became undisputed champion in 1999, having first gained the W.B.C. Introduced in 1981, this 368 in³ (6.0 L) engine sequentially shut down cylinders as demand dropped.


Britain had to wait 100 years to have its first heavyweight champion since Bob Fitzsimmons lost his title in 1899. Another low point during the early 1980s was the variable displacement engine, branded the L62 V8-6-4 engine. Subsequently, he lost to De La Hoya and Kostya Tszyu. Although the motoring press lauded the first Cadillac manual transmission in decades, the automatic's extra cost also rankled buyers. After, the Randall fight the once invincible Chavez was see as vulnerable. Buyers also objected to the Cimmaron's four-cylinder engine and low level of standard equipment. However, his illustrious streak was broken by Frankie Randall. Buyers rejected this model for being too close to the considerably cheaper Chevrolet — unlike the Seville, which did not resemble the Nova or other GM X-cars, the Cimarron was almost indistinguishable from the down-market versions.

He defeated many big name fighters like: Roger Mayweather, Melderick Taylor, and Hector Camacho. However, trying to extend its brand further downward to appeal to younger buyers, Cadillac launched in 1981 (for the 1982 model year) the compact Cimarron, a warmed-over Chevrolet Cavalier as a rival to the BMW 3-series. Julio Cesar Chavez was the most dominant fighter of this era. Ironically, GM's other division, Detroit Diesel had had decades of experience building Diesel engines. With good looks and charisma, along with plenty of boxing talent, he became the richest non-heavyweight in the history of boxing. The engine was notoriously unreliable and smoky. He won titles from junior lightweight to middleweight. This was a disaster for GM.

Oscar De La Hoya was possibly the most popular American boxer of his era. Due to gasoline shortages, Cadillac offered a "dieselized" (converted from gasoline use) LF9 350-cubic-inch (5.7L) V8 engine, in its full-size cars from 1979 to 1981. When he defeated John Ruiz to win the WBA heavyweight title, he was the first former middleweight champion to win a heavyweight title since Bob Fitzsimmons accomplished the feat over one hundred years earlier. It launched a smaller car around the size of the Mercedes-Benz 300, the Seville, based on a Chevrolet Nova platform, which became a success for the marque. He won world titles in four different weight divisions, from middleweight to heavyweight. Its staple De Ville and Fleetwood lines were downsized for 1977 and again for 1985. was the most dominant fighter of the 1990s and early 2000s. As with most American brands, Cadillac was forced to downsize its offerings between the 1973 and 1979 fuel crises.

Roy Jones, Jr. The build quality also became poorer when measured against German rivals. Lewis, a Canadian trained British born heavyweight titleholder, retired as champion. However, the 1970s saw vehicles memorable for other types of excess: engine size, for one (the Eldorado featured an 8.2-litre engine at one point), weight, and physical bulk. When he fought his last title fight, against Lennox Lewis in 2002, he was beaten thoroughly and knocked out. There were high points, such as the launch of the Eldorado two-door personal luxury car in 1967, with its simple, elegant design—a far cry from the tail-fin and chrome excesses of the 1950s. He was jailed multiple times, barred from boxing for a year after biting a chunk out of Evander Holyfield's ear, and going into bankruptcy. Cadillac suffered from the malaise that set in to the American auto industry in the late 1970s to the late 1980s.

Both in and out of the ring, he was always in the news. Somewhat surprisingly for a marque with such a strong design heritage, Cadillac has resisted the temptation to produce any "retro" models such as the revived Ford Thunderbird or the VW New Beetle, and has instead pressed ahead with a new design philosophy for the 21st century called "art and science"[1] which it says "incorporates sharp, shear forms and crisp edges - a form vocabulary that expresses bold, high-technology design and invokes the technology used to design it.". The most dominant figure on the heavyweight division in the mid-to-late 80s, he ran through his opponents like a wrecking ball, becoming the first undisputed champion in a decade. The tailfin style gave birth to the enduring vertical-tailight pattern, which is a subtle trademark of the Cadillac line (the opposite of the horizontal tailight pattern which is a likewise subtle trademark of rival Lincoln.). Nicknamed "Iron Mike" because of his devastating punching power, Tyson took the world by storm. Nevertheless, Cadillacs retained their tailfins through 1964, and suggestions of them remain in the peaked rear fenders of many models even to this day. If there was ever a bad boy of boxing, the title surely would go to a man who burst into professional boxing like a hurricane; Mike Tyson. At this point, Bill Mitchell succeeded Harley Earl as styling chief, and his preference for more austere design combined with changing buyer tastes caused the excess to be rapidly toned down, starting in 1960.

In the late 1970s and the 1980s, Leonard won world titles in five different weight divisions, and was the first boxer to make 100 million dollars during his career. Cadillac's first tailfins, inspired by the twin rudders of the Lockheed P-38 Lightning, appeared in 1948; the 1959 Cadillac was the epitome of the tailfin craze, with the most recognizable tailfins of any production automobile. After the retirement of Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard became the biggest star in the sport. Earl, innovated many of the styling features that came to be synonymous with the classic (late 1940s-late 1950s) American automobile, including tailfins and wraparound windshields. Larry Holmes (a former sparring partner of Ali) and the electric promoter Don King both gained prominence during this time. Postwar Cadillacs, incorporating the ideas of General Motors styling chief Harley J. Ali had tough opponents like Sonny Liston, Joe Frazier, Ken Norton, and George Foreman, but proved himself to be the best heavyweight of his era, if not of all time. Cadillac was the first automaker to use the Phillips technology, which was widely adopted in 1940.

Many sociologists, observers, and critics now view Ali as a reflection of the changing society of that time. He entered into talks with General Motors and convinced the Cadillac group that his new screws would speed assembly times and therefore increase profits. The decades of the 1960s & 1970s are best remembered by the dominance of a boxer once named Cassius Clay, who said he would "shock the world." He joined the Nation of Islam, changed his name to Muhammad Ali, and declared himself against war. Phillips introduced the Philips screw and driver onto the market. featherweight title in 1985. Henry F. In Northern Ireland, Rinty Monahan held the flyweight title from 1947 to 1950, and Barry McGuigan won the W.B.A. 1934 brought about a revolution in assembly line technology.

Another great of this period was Archie Moore, who held the world light heavyweight title for ten years and scored more knockout victories than any other boxer in history. By 1940, Cadillac sales had risen 1000% compared to 1934, thus saving Cadillac from extinction. Robinson held the world welterweight title from 1946 to 1951, and the world middleweight title a record five times from 1951 to 1960. By 1934, Cadillac had regained profitability. This era also had Sugar Ray Robinson, who most experts rate as the best pound-for-pound boxer of all time. The Board agreed to give Dreystadt 18 months to produce results. The title of the movie Rocky was inspired by this legend. At a fateful board meeting, Cadillac president Nicholas Dreystadt gave the GM Board of Directors a 10 minute speech in which he advocated advertising to black consumers so as to increase sales.

The 1950s had a boxer who would go down in history as the only undefeated world heavyweight champion: Rocky Marciano. In 1932, after Cadillac suffered from record low sales and charges of discrimination against black customers, Alfred Sloan created a committee to consider the discontinuation of the Cadillac line. Among the flyweights, Jackie Brown won the title in 1932, Peter Kane in 1938 and Terry Allen. In the 1930s, Cadillac added cars with 12- and 16-cylinder engines to their range, many of which were fitted with custom coach-built bodies; these engines were remarkable at the time for their ability to deliver a combination of high power, silky smoothness and quietness. England, too, had its successes at the lighter weights. Pre-World War II Cadillacs were well-built, powerful, mass-produced luxury cars, aimed at an upper class market, below that of such ultra-exclusive marques such as Pierce-Arrow and Duesenberg. Ken Buchanan won the title in 1971 and Jim Watt in 1980. That model remained in production until 1940.

Scots have also had success in the lightweight division. About this time, automobile stylist, Harley Earl, whom Cadillac had recruited in 1926 and who was to head the new Art & Color section starting in January 1928, designed for 1927 a new, smaller "companion" car to the Cadillac which he called the La Salle, after another French explorer, René Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle. Over the years, Scots have had great success at this weight; Jackie Paterson won the title in 1943 and Walter McGowan in 1966. Other innovations included the first V8 engine in mass production in 1915; shatter-resistant safety glass in 1926; and the first fully synchronized transmission (with gears "locked" in relation to one another to prevent clashing upon execution of a shift) in 1928. The Scots had a similar pride in Benny Lynch, a flyweight from Glasgow, who held the world flyweight title in 1935 and again in 1937. Originally marketed as a convenience device for female drivers, the electric starter developed by Charles Kettering was first used on the production models of 1912. Nevertheless, the successes of Nigel Benn, Naseem Hamed, Chris Eubank, Joe Calzaghe, and Ricky Hatton continued to bring extensive media coverage to boxing and sustained a considerable public following. In 1911, Cadillac was the first gasoline internal combustion engine auto to incorporate electric start, as opposed to earlier crank start.

With so many title-awarding bodies in the 1980s and 1990s, the public became unsure about who actually was the champion. The latter two of which were custom made by aftermarket manufacturers, GM does not produce any such vehicles on its own. and in the 1970s, John Conteh and John Stracey won the light heavyweight and welterweight titles respectively. The Cadillac line was also GM's default marque for "commercial chassis" institutional vehicles, such as ambulances, limousines, hearses, and funeral home flower cars. In the 1950s and 1960s, Randy Turpin and Terry Downes won middleweight titles. Cadillac became General Motors' prestige division, devoted to the production of large luxury vehicles. In the 1940s, Freddie Mills won the light heavyweight title. Cadillac was purchased by the General Motors conglomerate in 1909.

In the 1930s, Jackie Berg won the light welterweight title. The Dewar Trophy was an annual award for the most important advancement of the year in the automobile industry. Britain has had other popular world champions. As a result of these tests, the Cadillac Automobile Company was awarded the Dewar Trophy for 1908 (actual award date was Feb 1909). Braddock finally lost his title to Joe Louis but made financial arrangements with him to receive 10% of the profits from the rest of Louis's fights. Trophy! Parts interchangeability could not have been proven in any other more appropriate way. He eventually fought his way to the heavyweight title and won against Max Baer who had 10 to 1 odds in his favor. It came out the winner of the R.A.C.

Another famous boxer, James Braddock (better known as the Cinderella Man) inspired many with his rags to riches story. On completion of the test, one of the cars was placed under lock and key where it remained until the start of the 2000 miles (3200 km) Reliability Trials, several months later. Louis is considered by many one of the best boxers of the Depression and possibly of all time. Using only wrenches and screwdrivers the 3 cars were re-assembled and on Friday March 13 they completed a mandatory 500 mile (800 km) run. Shortly before the beginning of WW2, the battles between Louis and Max Schmeling were seen as battles between America and Nazi Germany. Their 721 component parts were scrambled in one heap; 89 parts requiring extreme accuracy were withdrawn from the heap,locked away at the Brooklands club house and replaced with new parts from the showroom stock. Joe Louis dominated the heavyweight scene for 12 years before retiring as world champion in 1949. They were driven 25 miles to the Brooklands race track at Weybridge where they completed another 25 miles (40 km) before being put under lock and key until Monday March 2, 1908 when they were released and disassembled completely.

Jack Dempsey was one of the most important athletes of roaring twenties and became the World heavyweight champion after defeating Jess Willard. In Feb to Mar 1908, three Model K Cadillacs (1907 production) were released from the stock of Frederick Bennett (UK agent for Cadillac) at the Heddon Street showroom in London to compete in the annual Royal Automobile Club's Standardization Test. He was described as the "Mighty Atom" and "the ghost with a hammer in his hand". The Cadillac's biggest selling point was precision manufacturing and, therefore, reliability; it was simply a better made vehicle than its competition. He was idolized in Wales, where they commonly believed him to be the best boxer, pound-for-pound, that ever lived. In any case, the new Cadillac was shown at the New York Auto Show the following January, where it impressed the crowds enough to gather over two thousand firm orders. Between 1911 and 1923, he won seventy-five of his fights by a knockout. Many sources say the first car rolled out of the factory on October 17; in the book Henry Leland - Master of Precision, on p.69, that date is shown to be October 20; yet another reliable source shows car #3 to have been built on October 16.

He once had a sequence of eighty-eight fights without defeat. Their first car was completed in October 1902, the 10 horsepower (7 kW) Cadillac, based on Henry Ford's design was practically identical to the 1903 Ford Model A. The best example was Jimmy Wilde, a Welsh flyweight who won the world Flyweight Championship in 1916 and held it until 1923. The Cadillac automobile was named after the 17th century French explorer Antoine Laumet de La Mothe, sieur de Cadillac, founder of Detroit, Michigan in 1701. Successful fighters have provoked fierce local pride. Henry Ford's departure required a new name, and on August 22, 1902, the company reformed as the Cadillac Automobile Company. It is the post-Queensberry (or Modern) era that has the greatest number of legendary boxers, such as world heavyweight champions Jim Jeffries (the first Great White Hope) and Jack Johnson (the first black world heavyweight champion), who fought each other in 1910 in the first "Fight of the Century". Instead, Leland persuaded them to continue in the automobile business.

Sullivan has been called the first great American sports hero. Leland to appraise the plant and equipment prior to selling them. Sullivan, the first world heavyweight champion. With the intent of liquidating the firm's assets, Ford's financial backers, William Murphy and Lemuel Bowen called in engineer Henry M. The bareknuckle era produced legends like John L. Cadillac was formed from the Henry Ford Company upon Henry Ford's departure. They included Harry Mallin (Middleweight), 1920 and 1924), Terry Spinks (Flyweight, 1956), Dick McTaggart (Lightweight, 1956) and Chris Finnegan (Middleweight, 1968). .

Among British amateur boxers, only those who won Olympic gold medals tended to achieve recognition beyond the limits of boxing enthusiasts. In the United States, the name became a synonym for "high quality", used in such phrases as "the Cadillac of clocks." This is less prevalent, though still known, in other English-speaking countries (who are more likely to use Rolls-Royce in such phrases). Great Britain, the birth place of modern boxing, has produced numerous boxing legends. Cadillac is a brand of luxury automobile, part of the General Motors corporation, produced and mostly sold in the United States; outside of North America, they have been less successful. He fought his last bout at the age of fifty-two. Cadillac Sixteen - 2003. He weighed less than 12 stone but won world titles at Middleweight (1892), Light Heavyweight (1903), and Heavyweight (1897). Cadillac Cien - 2002.

In the post-Queensberry era, the first British fighter to achieve superstar status was Bob Fitzsimmons. Cadillac Imaj - 2001. He carried many of the traditions of the old London Prize-Ring, but promoted the use of gloves and helped to popularize the sport in the United States and Australia. Cadillac Vizon - 2000. In the period between bare-knuckle pugilism and post-Queensberry boxing, Jem Mace was important. Cadillac Evoq - 1999. It is the professional side of boxing, however, that has produced the celebrities whose activities the public have generally followed. Cadillac Solitaire - 1989.

The Olympics have long been considered a springboard for professional entry, though some Olympic champions prefer to retain their amateur status, including two Cuban three-time gold medalists, Teófilo Stevenson and Félix Savón. Cadillac Voyage - 1988. Famous amateur boxers have usually been Olympic medallists. Cadillac CART-PPG - 1985. The boxing world has produced talented and world famous personalities in both the amateur and professional realms. Cadillac Aurora - 1980. Bolo punch. Cadillac Florentine - 1964.

Ring Control. Cadillac Bonneville Maharani - 1963. Brawling. Cadillac 4-door phaeton - 1960. Stick and Move. Cadillac Cyclone - 1959. The "Peek-a-Boo" Style. Cadillac "Rain Car" and 4-door Eldorado Seville - 1958.

The "Rope-a-dope" Strategy. Cadillac Director - 1957. A left-handed boxer is called an unorthodox boxer or a Southpaw. Cadillac Castilian, Gala, Maharani, Palomino, Eldorado Brougham and Eldorado Brougham Town Car, - 1956. A right-handed boxer's handedness is commonly described as orthodox. Moritz, Westchester - 1955. The following techniques apply to a right-handed boxer. Cadillac Celebrity, Eldorado Brougham, La Salle II, Eldorado St.

If a boxer is right-handed, his left hand is the lead hand, his right hand is the rear hand and vice versa. Cadillac El Camino, La Espada, Park Avenue - 1954. There are four basic punches in boxing: the Jab, Cross, Hook and Uppercut. Cadillac Le Mans and Orleans - 1953. During lateral motion the leg in the direction of the movement moves first while the opposite leg provides the force needed to move the body. Cadillac Eldorado and Townsman - 1952. Rearward motion involves lifting the rear leg and pushing with the lead leg. Cadillac custom roadster for Bill Boyer - 1951-52.

Forward motion involves lifting the lead leg and pushing with the rear leg. Cadillac Debutante - 1950. Modern boxers are taught to "push off" with their feet in order to move effectively. Cadillac Caribbean, Coupe de Ville, El Rancho, Embassy - 1949. Movement. Cadillac V-16 Aero coupe - 1933. Modern boxers can sometimes be seen "tapping" their cheeks or foreheads with their fists in order to remind themselves to keep their hands up (which becomes difficult during long bouts). 2004-present Cadillac XLR.

The chin is tucked into the chest to avoid punches to the jaw which commonly cause knock-outs. 2005-present Cadillac STS. The right (rear) fist is held beside the chin and the elbow tucked against the ribcage to protect the body. 2004-present Cadillac SRX. The left (lead) fist is held vertically about six inches in front of the face at eye level. 1999-present Cadillac Escalade (ESV/EXT). The boxer stands with the legs shoulder-width apart with the right foot a half-step behind the left foot. 2006-present Cadillac DTS.

The following stance applies for a right-handed boxer. 2003-present Cadillac CTS. The Boxer's Stance. 2006-present Cadillac BLS (Europe only). When engaged in hand to hand combat, the Filipinos would slash the wrists of the American soldiers, the Americans adapted by changing the guarded stance and thus just one example of a boxing technicality evolving. 2004-present Cadillac CTS V-Series. It's been stated that Americans adopted a more upright vertical armed guard (as opposed to more horizontally held, knuckles facing the ground guard as seen when looking at early 20th century boxers such as Jack Johnson) due to the Americans' confrontations with the Filipino natives as a result of the Philippines Spanish-American war. 2006-present Cadillac STS V-Series.

It differs in many ways from the typical boxing stances of the 19th and early 20th centuries. 1975-1976 Cadillac Castilian Station Wagon. The modern boxing stance is a reflection of the current system of rules employed by professional boxing. 1938-1993 Cadillac Sixty Special. Development. 1975-2004 Cadillac Seville. By 1988, to the displeasure of many boxing purists, all fights had been reduced to a maximum of 12 rounds only, partially for safety, and partially for television, as a 12-round bout could take one hour to broadcast, while a 15-round bout could requre 90 minutes to broadcast. 1927-1996 Cadillac Fleetwood.

The World Boxing Association even stripped a fighter of his championship in 1983 because the fight had been a 15-round bout, shortly after the rule was changed to 12 rounds. 1963-2003 Cadillac Fleetwood Eldorado. Exactly three months after the fatal fight, the World Boxing Council reduced the number of their championship fights to 12 rounds. 1956-1960 Cadillac Eldorado Seville. For decades, from the 1920s to the 1980s, world championship matches in professional boxing were scheduled for fifteen rounds, but that changed after a November 13, 1982 WBA Lightweight title bout ended with the death of boxer Duk Koo Kim in a fight against Ray Mancini in the 14th round of a nationally televised championship fight on CBS. 1957-1960 Cadillac Eldorado Brougham. Thus, a powerpunch can do a lot of damage to a boxer, and even a jab that connects to the chin can cause damage, regardless of whether or not headgear is being utilized. 1956-1962 Cadillac Eldorado Biarritz.

Also, most boxers aim for the chin on opponents, and the chin is usually not padded. 1953-2003 Cadillac Eldorado. Headgear does not sufficiently protect the brain from the jarring that occurs when the head is struck with great force. 1949-1993 Cadillac Coupe de Ville. Headgear, used in amateur boxing, protects against cuts, scrapes, and swelling, but does not protect very well against concussions. 1949-2005 Cadillac DeVille. Handwraps are used to secure the bones in the hand, and the gloves are used to protect the hands from blunt injury, allowing boxers to throw punches with more force than if they did not utilize them. 1935-1983 Cadillac commercial chassis.

Today, most trainers do not allow boxers to train and spar without handwraps and gloves. 1982-1988 Cadillac Cimarron. There are many bones in the hand, and striking surfaces without proper technique can cause serious hand injuries. 1994-1996 Cadillac Catera. Boxing techniques utilize very forceful strikes with the hand. 1965-1976 Cadillac Calais. The first sanctioned bout between women was in November 1998 at Streatham in London, between Jane Couch and Simona Lukic. 1985-1993 Cadillac Brougham.

By the end of the century, however, they had issued five such licenses. 1987-1993 Cadillac Allante. refused to issue licences to women until 1998. Fleetwood - 126.3  133  151.5 &bnsp; and 157.5 in wheelbase V8. Although women fought professionally in many countries, in Britain the B.B.B.C. Seville - 114.3 in wheelbase V8. Ring Magazine also continued listing the World Champion of each weight division, and its rankings continue being of the most appreciated by fans. DeVille/Coupe de Ville - 130 in wheelbase V8.

Regional sanctioning bodies such as the North American Boxing Federation, the North American Boxing Council and the United States Boxing Association also awarded championships. Calais - 130 in wheelbase V8. By the end of the 20th century, a boxer had to be recognized by the three separate bodies to be the "Undisputed World Champion". 1975 - Cadillac "Calais", "De Ville", "Seville" and "Fleetwood" Series Fisher Fleetwood

    . In 1983, another world body, the International Boxing Federation (I.B.F.) was formed. Fleetwood - 126  133  151.5 &bnsp; and 157.5 in wheelbase V8. The following year, a rival body, the World Boxing Council (W.B.C.), was formed. DeVille/Coupe de Ville - 130 in wheelbase V8.

    was renamed in 1962 and became the World Boxing Association (W.B.A.). Calais - 130 in wheelbase V8. The N.B.A. 1974 - Cadillac "Calais", "De Ville" and "Fleetwood" Series Fisher Fleetwood

      . Also during that time, Ring Magazine magazine was founded and it listed champions and awarded championship belts. Fleetwood - 126.3  133  151.5 &bnsp; and 157.5 in wheelbase V8. After 1920, the National Boxing Association (N.B.A.) began to sanction "title fights". DeVille/Coupe de Ville - 130 in wheelbase V8.

      It was generally accepted that the "world champions" were those listed by the Police Gazette. Calais - 130 in wheelbase V8. In the first part of the 20th century, the United States became the centre for professional boxing. 1970-1973 Cadillac "Calais", "De Ville" and "Fleetwood" Series Fisher Fleetwood

        . In Britain, Jack Solomons' success as a fight promoter helped re-establish professional boxing after the Second World War and made Britain a popular place for title fights in the 1950s and 1960s. Fleetwood - 120  133  149.8  and 156 in wheelbase V8. Georges Carpentier, in 1921). DeVille/Coupe de Ville - 129.5 in wheelbase V8.

        They were also responsible for the first live radio broadcast of a title fight (Dempsey v. Calais - 129.5 in wheelbase V8. Together they grossed US$ 8.4 million in only five fights between 1921 and 1927 and ushered in a "golden age" of popularity for professional boxing in the 1920s. 1967-1970 Cadillac "Calais", "De Ville" and "Fleetwood" Series Fisher Fleetwood

          . The most famous of all three-way partnership (fighter-manager-promoter) was that of Jack Dempsey (Heavyweight Champion, 1919-1926), his manager Jack Kearns, and the promoter Tex Rickard. Fleetwood - 133  149.8  and 156 in wheelbase V8. The best promoters and managers have been instrumental in bringing boxing to new audiences and provoking media and public interest. DeVille/Coupe de Ville - 129.5 in wheelbase V8.

          Promoters who could stage profitable title fights became influential in the sport, as did boxers' managers. Calais - 129.5 in wheelbase V8. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, however, there were title fights at each weight. 1965-1966 Cadillac "Calais", "De Ville" and "Fleetwood" Series Fisher Fleetwood

            . The "title fight" has always been the focal point in professional boxing. Series 75 - 149.8 in wheelbase V8. continued to award Lonsdale Belts to any British boxer who won three title fights in the same weight division. Series 62 - 129.5 in wheelbase V8.

            In 1929, the B.B.B.C. Series 60S Fleetwood - 129.5 in wheelbase V8. In 1909, the first of twenty-two belts were presented by the fifth Earl of Lonsdale to the winner of a British title fight held at the N.S.C. 1961-1964 Cadillac Series 60S, 62, 75 Fisher Fleetwood

              . closed. Series 75 - 149.75 in wheelbase V8. The British Boxing Board of Control (B.B.B.C.) was first formed in 1919 with close links to the N.S.C., and was re-formed in 1929 after the N.S.C. Series 69 - 130 in wheelbase V8 "Eldorado Brougham".

              These rules specified more accurately the role of the officials, and produced a system of scoring that enabled the referee to decide the result of a fight. Series 64 - 130 in wheelbase V8"Eldorado" sub-series. In 1891, the National Sporting Club (N.S.C.), a private club in London, began to promote professional glove fights at its own premises, and created nine of its own rules to augment the Queensberry Rules. Series 63 - 130 in wheelbase V8"De Ville" sub-series. If it has reached beyond the end of round three (or four), then the scorecards are read and whoever is ahead, wins by a technical decision. Series 62 - 130 in wheelbase V8. If a fight can not go on because of an injury caused to one of the competitors by a headbutt, there are different rules: If the fight has not reached the end of round three, (in some places, round four), the fight is declared a technical draw or a no contest. Series 60S Fleetwood - 130 in wheelbase V8.

              In Britain, the bout is only scored by the referee, except when a title is at stake, in which case it is scored by three judges. 1959-1960 Cadillac Series 60S, 62, 63, 64, 69, 75 Fisher Fleetwood

                . It is also a draw when two judges score the fight a tie, regardless of who the third judge score the bout for. Series 75 - 149.7 in wheelbase V8. When one judge gives his or her vote to one boxer, another one gives it to the other boxer, and the third judge calls it a tie, this is a draw. Series 70 - 126 in wheelbase V8 "Eldorado Brougham". When two judges have one boxer winning the fight and the other judge has the other boxer winning, this is called a split decision. Series 62 - 129.5 in wheelbase V8.

                When two judges have one boxer winning the fight and the other one has it a tie, this is called a majority decision. Series 60S Fleetwood - 133 in wheelbase V8. When all three judges have the same boxer as the winner, this is an unanimous decision. 1957-1958 Cadillac Series 60S, 62, 70, 75 Fisher Fleetwood

                  . When the fight reaches its scheduled distance, all scores are added, round by round, to determine who won on each judges' cards. Series 75 - 149.75 in wheelbase V8. If the judge deems the round to be a tie, he or she may score it 10-10. Series 62 - 129 in wheelbase V8.

                  Professional fights have three judges each, and each of the judges must use the 10 point must system: Under this system, each time a boxer wins a round in the judges' eyes, the judge gives that boxer 10 points, and the other 9 or less. Series 60S Fleetwood - 133 in wheelbase V8. If a knockout or disqualification does not occur, the fight must go to the scorecards. 1956 Cadillac Series 60S, 62, 75 Fisher Fleetwood

                    . If a boxer simply quits fighting, or if his corner stops the fight, then the winning boxer is also awarded a technical knockout victory. Series 75 - 149.8 in wheelbase V8. A technical knockout would also be awarded if a fighter lands a punch that opens a cut on the opponent, and the opponent is later deemed not fit to continue by a doctor because of the cut. Series 62 - 129 in wheelbase V8.

                    In that case, the other participant is awarded a technical knockout win, which appears on the boxer's record as a knockout win (or loss). Series 60S Fleetwood - 133 in wheelbase V8. At any time, however, the referee may stop the contest if he believes that one participant can not or should not continue to box. 1954-1955 Cadillac Series 60S, 62, 75 Fisher Fleetwood

                      . Professional bouts are far longer than amateur bouts (ranging from four to twelve rounds), headgear is not permitted, and boxers are generally allowed to take much more punishment before a fight is halted. Series 75 - 146.75 in wheelbase V8. At any point of the fight in which a fighter is leading by twenty points (or sometimes more), the referee is indicated and the fight is stopped, the leading fighter winning by "mercy", and credited with a knockout. Series 62 - 126 in wheelbase V8.

                      Punches to the head or face of an opponent usually score the most points for a competitor. Series 60S Fleetwood - 130 in wheelbase V8. When three or more of the five judges press the button within a second of each other, the punch counts as a "point" for the fighter that landed it. 1953 Cadillac Series 60S, 62, 75 Fisher Fleetwood

                        . A new scoring system was invented for amateur boxing: using a computer, judges must press a button every time they think a boxer landed a punch. Series 75 - 147 in wheelbase V8. Women's boxing will be an exhibition sport at the 2008 Olympics, but it won't become an official Olympic sport until the 2012 Olympics. Series 62 - 126 in wheelbase V8.

                        accepted new rules for Women's Boxing at the end of the 20th century and approved the first European Cup for Women in 1999 and the first World Championship for women in 2001. Series 60S Fleetwood - 130 in wheelbase V8. The A.I.B.A. 1952 Cadillac Series 60S, 62, 75 Fisher Fleetwood

                          . Four weeks later, an event was held between two sixteen-year-olds. Series 75 - 146.75 in wheelbase V8. The first event was to be between two thirteen-year-olds, but one of the boxers withdrew because of hostile media attention. Series 62 - 126 in wheelbase V8.

                          The British Amateur Boxing Association sanctioned its first boxing competition for women in 1997. Series 61 - 122 in wheelbase V8. Its revival was pioneered by the Swedish Amateur Boxing Association, which sanctioned events for women in 1988. Series 60S Fleetwood - 130 in wheelbase V8. For most of the 20th century, however, it was banned in most nations. 1950-1951 Cadillac Series 60S, 61, 62, 75 Fisher Fleetwood

                            . Women's boxing first appeared in the Olympic Games at a demonstration bout in 1904. Series 75 - 136 in wheelbase V8.

                            In the late 19th and early 20th century, amateur boxing was encouraged in schools, universities and in the armed forces, but the champions usually came from among the urban poor. Series 62 - 126 in wheelbase V8. The first World Amateur Boxing Championships were staged in 1974. Series 61 - 126 in wheelbase V8. has continued to be the official world federation of amateur boxing ever since. Series 60S Fleetwood - 133 in wheelbase V8. In 1946, however, when the International Amateur Boxing Association (A.I.B.A.) was formed in London, twenty-four nations from five continents were represented, and the A.I.B.A. 1948-1949 Cadillac Series 60S, 61, 62, 75 Fisher Fleetwood

                              .

                              Internationally, amateur boxing spread steadily throughout the first half of the 20th century, but when the first international body, the Federation Internationale de Boxe Amateur (International Amateur Boxing Federation) was formed in Paris in 1920, there were only five member nations. Series 75 - 138 in wheelbase V8. From 1972 through 2004, Cuba and the United States have won the most Gold Medals, 29 for Cuba and 21 for the U.S. Series 62 - 129 in wheelbase V8. Boxing first appeared at the Olympic Games in 1904 and, apart from the Games of 1912, has always been part of them. Series 61 - 126 in wheelbase V8. had 105 clubs in affiliation. Series 60S Fleetwood - 133 in wheelbase V8.

                              By 1924, the A.B.A. 1947 Cadillac Series 60S, 61, 62, 75 Fisher Fleetwood

                                . Championships, which, therefore, took on an international complexion. Series 75 - 136 in wheelbase V8. By 1902, American boxers were contesting the titles in the A.B.A. Series 62 - 129 in wheelbase V8. (A stone is equal to 14 pounds). Series 61 - 126 in wheelbase V8.

                                Four weight classes were contested, Featherweight (9 stone), Lightweight (10 stone), Middleweight (11 stone, 4 pounds) and Heavyweight (no limit). Series 60S Fleetwood - 133 in wheelbase V8. It held its first championships the following year. 1946 Cadillac Series 60S, 61, 62, 75 Fisher Fleetwood

                                  . In Britain, the Amateur Boxing Association (A.B.A.) was formed in 1880 when twelve clubs affiliated. Series 42-75 - 136  and 163 in wheelbase V8. The Queensberry Amateur Championships continued from 1867 to 1885, and so, unlike their professional counterparts, amateur boxers did not deviate from using gloves once the Queensberry Rules had been published. Series 42-67 - 139 in wheelbase V8.

                                  As a result, the risk of grievous injury is considerably reduced in amateur boxing versus professional boxing. Series 42-63 - 126 in wheelbase V8. Also, in amateur boxing, referees will readily step in and stop the contest even if the competitor is only relatively lightly injured. Series 42-62 - 129 in wheelbase V8. Repeated holding can result in a boxer being penalized, or ultimately, disqualified). Series 42-61 - 126 in wheelbase V8. Referees also ensure that the boxers don't use holding tactics to prevent the opponent from swinging (if this occurs, the referee separates the opponents and orders them to continue boxing. Series 42-60S Fleetwood - 133 in wheelbase V8.

                                  A referee monitors the fight to ensure that competitors use only legal blows (a belt worn over the torso represents the lower limit of punches - any boxer repeatedly landing "low blows" is disqualified). 1942 Cadillac Series 42-60S, 42-61, 42-62, 42-63, 42-67, 42-75 Fisher Fleetwood

                                    . Each punch that lands on the head or torso is awarded a point. Series 41-75 - 136  and 163 in wheelbase V8. A punch is considered a scoring punch only when the boxers connect with the white portion of the gloves. Series 41-67 - 139 in wheelbase V8. Gloves in amateur boxing have a white strip across the knuckle. Series 41-63 - 126 in wheelbase V8.

                                    Competitors wear protective headgear and box for three to five rounds of two or three minutes each. Series 41-62 - 126  and 163 in wheelbase V8. In amateur boxing (the version of the sport found at the Olympic Games and Commonwealth Games) the primary emphasis is on landing scoring punches rather than concern with doing physical damage to one's opponent. Series 41-61 - 126 in wheelbase V8. The boxing rules enforced by governing bodies worldwide today at the local, national and international level are all derived in some way from the Marquis of Queensberry Rules. Series 41-60S - 126 in wheelbase V8. With the gradual acceptance of formalised rules, two distinct branches of boxing emerged; Professional and Amateur. 1941 Cadillac Series 41-60S, 41-61, 41-62, 41-63, 41-67, 41-75 Fisher Fleetwood

                                      .

                                      Sullivan in 1892 at the Pelican Athletic Club in New Orleans. Series 40-90 - 141 in wheelbase V16. The first world heavyweight champion under the Queensberry Rules was "Gentleman Jim" Corbett, who defeated John L. Series 40-75 - 141  and 161.75 in wheelbase V8. Resultantly, bouts became longer and more strategic with greater importance attached to defensive maneuvers such as slipping, bobbing, countering and angling. Series 40-72 - 138  and 165.25 in wheelbase V8. Gloves protected the hands of both fighters but their considerable size and weight made knock-out victories more difficult to achieve. Series 40-62 - 129 in wheelbase V8.

                                      An average pair of boxing gloves resembles a bloated pair of mittens and are laced up around the wrists. Series 40-60S - 127 in wheelbase V8. The introduction of gloves of "fair-size" also changed the nature of the bouts. 1940 Cadillac Series 40-60S, 40-62, 40-72, 40-75, 40-90 Fisher Fleetwood

                                        . Each fighter was given a ten-second count if he was knocked down and wrestling was banned. Series 39-90 - 141 in wheelbase V16. Rounds were three minutes long with one minute rest intervals between rounds. Series 39-75 - 141  and 161.75 in wheelbase V8.

                                        There were twelve rules in all, and they specified that fights should be "a fair stand-up boxing match" in a 24-foot-square ring. Series 39-61 - 126  and 162.25 in wheelbase V8. The rules were published under the patronage of the Marquess of Queensberry, whose name has always been associated with them. Series 39-60S - 127 in wheelbase V8. In 1867, the Marquess of Queensberry rules were drafted by John Chambers for amateur championships held at Lillie Bridge in London for Lightweights, Middleweights and Heavyweights. 1939 Cadillac Series 39-60S, 39-65, 39-75, 39-90 Fisher Fleetwood

                                          . Later revised in 1853, they stipulated the following:. Series 38-90 - 141 in wheelbase V16.

                                          In 1839, the London Prize Ring rules were introduced which superceded Jack Broughton's rules. Series 38-75 - 141  and 160 in wheelbase V8. Broughton also invented "mufflers" (padded gloves), which were used in training and exhibitions. Series 38-65 - 132  in wheelbase V8. Hitting a downed fighter and grasping below the waist were prohibited. Series 38-60S - 127 in wheelbase V8. Under these rules, if a man went down and could not continue after a count of 30 seconds, the fight was over. Series 38-60 - 124  and 160 in wheelbase V8.

                                          The first boxing rules were introduced by heavyweight champion Jack Broughton in 1743 to protect fighters in the ring where deaths sometimes occurred. 1938 Cadillac Series 38-60, 38-60S, 38-65, 38-75, 38-90 Fisher Fleetwood

                                            . Modern rules banning gouging, grappling, biting, headbutting, fish-hooking and blows below the belt were absent. Series 37-80 - 154 in wheelbase V16. There were no weight divisions, round limits and no referee. Series 37-85 - 138 in wheelbase V12. Early bare-knuckle fighting was crude with no written rules. Series 37-75 - 138  and 156 in wheelbase V8.

                                            This is also the time when the word "boxing" first came to be used. Series 37-70 - 131 in wheelbase V8. The first documented account of a bare-knuckle fight in England appeared in 1681 in the "London Protestant Mercury," and the first English bare-knuckle champion was James Figg in 1719. Series 37-65 - 131 in wheelbase V8. The sport would later resurface in England during the early 18th century in the form of bare-knuckle prizefighting. Series 37-60 - 124  and 160.75 in wheelbase V8. Records of boxing activity disappeared after the fall of the Roman Empire. 1937 Cadillac Series 36-60, 37-65, 37-70, 37-75, 37-85, 37-90 Fisher Fleetwood

                                              .

                                              In 500 A.D., the sport was banned by Theodoric the Great. Series 36-80 - 154 in wheelbase V16. Eventually, fist fighting became so popular that even aristocrats started fighting, but that was banned by the ruler Augustus. Series 36-85 - 138 in wheelbase V12. However, free men also fought. Series 36-80 - 131 and 160 in wheelbase V12. They hoped to become champions and gain their freedom. Series 36-75 - 138 in wheelbase V8.

                                              In Ancient Rome, fighters were usually criminals and slaves. Series 36-70 - 131 in wheelbase V8. Keeping their fingers free, fighters then wore leather straps (called himantes) on their hands, wrists, and sometimes lower arms, to protect them from injury. Series 36-60 - 121 in wheelbase V8. First accepted as an Olympic sport (the ancient Greeks called it Pygme/ Pygmachia) in 688 BC, participants in the ancient games trained on punching bags (called a korykos). 1936 Cadillac Series 36-60, 36-70, 36-75, 36-80, 36-85, 36-90 Fisher Fleetwood

                                                . In time, the fighters fought on their feet and wore gloves (not padded) and wrappings on their arms below the elbows, but were otherwise naked when competing. Series 452-D or 60 - 154 in wheelbase V16.

                                                A Greek ruler named Thesus, who ruled around 900 B.C., was entertained by men who would be seated in front of each other and beat another with their fists until one of them was killed. Series 370-D - 146 and 160 in wheelbase V12. Earliest evidence suggests that boxing was prevalent in North Africa during 4000 BC and the Mediterranean in 1500 BC. Series 30 - 146 in wheelbase V8. . Series 20 - 136 in wheelbase V8. Victory may also be achieved if the opponent is knocked down and unable get up before the referee counts to ten (a Knockout, or KO) or if the opponent is deemed too injured to continue (a Technical Knockout, or TKO). Series 10 - 128 in wheelbase V8.

                                                The fighter with the most points after the scheduled number of rounds is declared the winner. 1935 Cadillac Series 10, 20, 30 and 452-D Fisher Fleetwood

                                                  . Points are awarded for clean, solid blows to the legal area on the front of the opponent's body above the waistline, with hits to the head and torso especially valuable. Series 452-D - 154 in wheelbase V16. In both Amateur and Professional divisions, the combatants (called boxers or fighters) avoid their opponent's punches whilst trying to land punches of their own. Series 370-D - 146 in wheelbase V12. Boxing, nicknamed the "sweet science" and also called pugilism or prizefighting, is a sport where two participants of similar weight attack each other with their fists in a series of two to three-minute intervals called "rounds". Series 30 - 146 in wheelbase V8.

                                                  EA Sports fight night 2004 and Fight Night: Round 2 (formerly Knockout Kings). Series 20 - 136 in wheelbase V8. Later adapted to SNES as Super Punch-Out!!. Series 10 - 128 in wheelbase V8. Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!! A Nintendo game. 1934 Cadillac Series 10, 20, 30 and 452-D Fisher Fleetwood

                                                    . Activision Boxing, one of the first console games about boxing. Series 452-C - 143  and 149 in wheelbase V16.

                                                    Hajime no Ippo A manga/anime about a young featherweight boxer. Series 370-C - 134  140  and 156 in wheelbase V12. The Contender 2005 Reality TV series. Series 355-C - 140  and 156 in wheelbase V8. Cinderella Man (2005 film) Based on the true story of Jim Braddock starring Russell Crowe. 1933 Cadillac Series 355-C, 370-C and 452-C Fisher Fleetwood

                                                      . Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson (2004 film) Documentary directed by Ken Burns. Series 452-B - 143 and 149 in wheelbase V16 Fisher Fleetwood.

                                                      The Calcium Kid (2004 film). Series 370-B - 140  and 156 in wheelbase V12 Fisher Fleetwood. Black Cloud Directed by and starring Rick Schroder. Series 355-B - 134  and 156 in wheelbase V8 Fisher Fleetwood. Against the Ropes (2004 film) Starring Meg Ryan as Jackie Kallen famous female boxing promoter. 1932 Cadillac Series 355-B, 370-B and 452-B Fisher Fleetwood

                                                        . Million Dollar Baby (2004 film) Multiple Oscar winner about a female boxer directed by Clint Eastwood. Series 452-A - 148 in wheelbase V16 Fisher Fleetwood.

                                                        Undefeated (2003 TV movie) Starring John Leguizamo. Series 370-A - 140  143  and 152 in wheelbase V12 Fleetwood. Champion (2002 film) South Korean film about Duk Koo Kim, a South Korean boxer who died after a bout against Ray Mancini. Series 355 - 134  and 152 in wheelbase V8 Fleetwood. Ali (2001 film) Starring Will Smith. 1931 Cadillac Series 355, 370-A and 452-A Fisher Fleetwood

                                                          . Girlfight (2000 film). Series 452 - 148 in wheelbase V16 Fisher Fleetwood.

                                                          Billy Elliot, about a young dancer whose father and brother wanted to become a boxer, like Ken Buchanan. Series 370 - 140  143  and 152 in wheelbase V12 Fisher Fleetwood. The Hurricane (1999 film) Starring Denzel Washington as middleweight Rubin Carter. Series 353 - 140  and 152 in wheelbase V8 Fisher Fleetwood. Don King: Only in America (TV movie) Starring Ving Rhames. 1930 Cadillac Series 353, 370 and 452 Fisher Fleetwood

                                                            . 24 7: Twenty Four Seven (1997 film) Starring Bob Hoskins. 1929 - Cadillac Series 341-B; 140  and 152 in wheelbase V8 Fisher Fleetwood.

                                                            When We Were Kings (1997 film) The story of Muhammad Ali and George Foreman and The Rumble in the Jungle. 1928 - Cadillac Series 341-A; 140  and 152 in wheelbase V8 Fisher Fleetwood. The Great White Hype (1996 film) Starring Samuel L Jackson and Jeff Goldblum. 1926-1927 Cadillac Series 314; 132  138  and 150 in wheelbase V8 Fisher Fleetwood. Spike of Bensonhurst (1988 film). 1925 - Cadillac Type V-63; 132  138  and 145 in wheelbase V8 Fisher Fleetwood. Raging Bull (1980 film) A classic boxing movie, starring Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci. 1924 - Cadillac Type V-63; 132  and 145 in wheelbase V8 Fisher.

                                                            The Prize Fighter (1979 film), starring Don Knotts and Tim Conway. 1922-1923 Cadillac Type 61; 132 in wheelbase V8 Fisher. The Champ (1979 film) Starring Jon Voight, Faye Dunaway, and Rick Schroeder; remake of 1931 film. 1920-1921 Cadillac Type 59; 122  and 132 in wheelbase V8 Fisher. The Main Event (1979 film) Starring Barbra Streisand and Ryan O'Neal. 1918-1919 Cadillac Type 57; 125  132  and 145 in wheelbase V8 Fisher. Rocky Oscar winning movie in 1976 and its sequels, starring Sylvester Stallone (also scriptwriter). 1917 - Cadillac Type 55; 125  and 145 in wheelbase V8 Fisher.

                                                            Fat City (1972 film) Starring Stacey Keach and Jeff Bridges. 1916 - Cadillac Type 53; 122  132  and 145 in wheelbase V8 Fisher. The Great White Hope (1970 film) Starring James Earl Jones and Jane Alexander. 1915 - Cadillac Type 51; 122  and 145 in wheelbase V8 Fisher. Golden Boy (1964 musical stageplay). 1914 - Cadillac Model 1914; 120  and 134 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine Fisher. Kid Galahad (1962 film) Musical starring Elvis Presley. 1913 - Cadillac Model 1913; 120 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine Fisher.

                                                            Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962 film) Starring Anthony Quinn, Jackie Gleason and Mickey Rooney. 1912 - Cadillac Model 1912; 116 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine Fisher. Requiem for a Heavyweight (1956 TV play) Starring Jack Palance, written by Rod Serling. 1911 - 116 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine Fisher. Somebody Up There Likes Me (1956 film) Starring Paul Newman. 1910 - 110 in wheelbase; 120 in wheelbase (limousine) four-cylinder engine Fisher. The Harder They Fall (1956 film) Starring Humphrey Bogart. 1909 - 106 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine.

                                                            On the Waterfront (1954 film) Starring Marlon Brando. 1909-1911 Cadillac Model Thirty

                                                              . Day of the Fight (1951 short subject) first film directed by Stanley Kubrick. Model T - 82 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine. The Set-Up (1949 film) Starring Robert Ryan. Model S - 82 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine. Champion (1949 film) Starring Kirk Douglas. Model M - 76 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine.

                                                              Body and Soul (1947 film) Starring John Garfield. Model H - 102 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine. Gentleman Jim (1942 film) Starring Errol Flynn. Model G - 100 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine. Golden Boy (1939 film) Starring William Holden and Barbara Stanwyck. 1908 Cadillac Models G, H, M, S and T

                                                                . Golden Boy (1937 stageplay) written by Clifford Odets. Model M - 76 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine.

                                                                Robinson. Model K - 74 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine. Kid Galahad (1937 film) Starring Edward G. Model H - 102 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine. Two-Fisted (1935 film) Comedy. Model G - 100 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine. The Champ (1931 film). 1907 Cadillac Models G, H, K, and M

                                                                  .

                                                                  Battling Butler (1926 film) Starring Buster Keaton. Model M - 76 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine. Boxing: 1.3. Model L - 110 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine. College football: 3. Model K - 74 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine. Motorcycle racing: 7. Model H - 102 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine.

                                                                  Scuba diving: 11. 1906 Cadillac Models H, K, L, and M

                                                                    . Mountaineering: 51. Model F - 76 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine. Hang gliding: 56. Model E - 74 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine. Sky diving: 123. Model D - 100 in wheelbase four-cylinder engine.

                                                                    Horse racing: 128. Model C - 72 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine. Boxing in the 1980s. Model B - 76 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine. Boxing in the 1970s. 1905 Cadillac Models B, C, D, E and F

                                                                      . Boxing in the 1960s. Model B - 76 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine.

                                                                      Boxing in the 1950s. Model A - 72 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine. Boxing in the 1940s. 1904 Cadillac Models A and B

                                                                        . Boxing in the 1930s. 1903-1904 Cadillac Model A - 72 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine. Boxing in the 1920s. 1902-1903 Cadillac runabout and tonneau - 72 in wheelbase single-cylinder engine.

                                                                        This is more of a gimmick than a technical maneuver, this punch is not taught, it is on the same plane in boxing technicality as is the Ali shuffle. Occasionally seen in amateur boxing, the bolo is an arm punch which owes its power to the shortening of a circular arc rather than to transference of body weight; it tends to have more of an effect due to the surprise of the odd angle it lands at rather than the actual power of the punch. The trapped fighter will not be able to move side to side for defense, and will be forced to hold his ground until he can make the attacking fighter retreat. When this happens, the boxer will attack more aggressively, keeping his opponent trapped.

                                                                        If possible, the boxer will trap his opponent in the corner of the ring. As they fight, the boxer will attempt to push his opponent backwards toward the ropes, cutting down on the amount of space available for him to maneuver as he circles the center. He must not let his opponent push him backward too far, or he will lose control of the center. A fighter employing this method will position himself at the center of the ring, and allow his opponent to circle around him as they fight.

                                                                        A boxer can gain advantage through strategic control of the space inside the boxing ring. Often considered the strategy of unskilled fighters, this method is often used by skilled fighters after they have gained an advantage by first injuring their opponent. Contests tend to finish quickly when one of the fighters chooses to employ this method. This is a risky tactic, as defense becomes difficult for both fighters when so many punches are being thrown together.

                                                                        This strategy involves attacking aggressively without backing away for rest or defense. In this way, a fighter can slowly wear down an adversary in relative safety. The boxer will land well-timed jabs, then back away again without giving the opponent opportunity to launch an attack of his own. The "stick and move" method involves avoiding the opponent through elusive footwork.

                                                                        It is also used extensively by many professional fighters. This strategy is very popular in amateur boxing where points are often more important than damage. A method made famous by Mike Tyson, the peek-a-boo involves heavy emphasis on "bobbing and weaving." Through elusive head movement, the boxer frustrates his opponent's attempts to land blows, and counters them with powerful punches of his own. However, the rope-a-dope is generally discouraged in modern boxing since most opponents are not fooled by it and few boxers possess the physical toughness to withstand a prolonged, unanswered assault.

                                                                        If successful, the attacking opponent will eventually tire, creating defensive flaws which the fighter now exploits. Weathering the blows, the fighter lures the opponent into expending his energy whilst conserving his own. The rope-a-dope method involves laying back on the ropes, covering up defensively as much as possible and allowing the opponent to land punches. A tactic famously used by Muhammad Ali in his 1974 "Rumble in the Jungle" bout against George Foreman.

                                                                        Clinching is a temporary match state and is quickly dissipated by the referee. In this position, the opponent's arms are pinned and cannot be used to attack. To perform a clinch, the boxer loops both hands around the outside of the opponent's shoulders, scooping back under the forearms to grasp the opponent's arms tightly against his own body. In this situation, the boxer attempts to hold or "tie up" the opponent's hands so he is unable to throw roundhouse punches or uppercuts.

                                                                        The Clinch - Clinching is a rough form of grappling and occurs when the distance between both fighters has closed and straight punches cannot be employed. When protecting the head, the boxer presses both fists against the front of the face with the forearms parallel and facing outwards. When protecting the body, the boxer rotates the hips and lets incoming punches "roll" off the guard. Generally speaking, the hands are held high to protect the head and chin and the forearms are tucked against the torso to impede body shots.

                                                                        The Cover-Up - Covering up is the last line of defense against an incoming strike to an unprotected face or body. As the opponent's punch arrives, the boxer delivers a sharp, lateral, open-handed blow to the opponent's wrist or forearm, redirecting the punch. Parry - Parrying uses the boxer's hands as defensive tools to deflect incoming attacks. To move inside the opponent's extended arm is called "bobbing to the inside".

                                                                        To move outside the opponent's extended arm is called "bobbing to the outside". Once the punch has been evaded, the boxer "weaves" back to an upright position, emerging on either the outside or inside of the opponent's still-extended arm. As the opponent's punch arrives, the boxer bends the legs quickly and simultaneously shifts the body either slightly right or left. Bob and Weave - Bobbing moves the head laterally and beneath an incoming punch.

                                                                        This turns the chin sideways and allows the punch to "slip" past. As the opponent's punch arrives, the boxer sharply rotates the hips and shoulders. Slip - Slipping rotates the body slightly so that an incoming punch passes harmlessly next to the head. The right uppercut followed by a left hook is a deadly combination.

                                                                        The strategic utility of the uppercut depends on its ability to "lift" the opponent's body, setting it off-balance for successive attacks. At the same time, the knees push upwards quickly and the torso and hips rotate anti-clockwise and the rear heel turns outward, mimicking the body movement of the cross. From this position, the rear hand is thrust upwards in a rising arc towards the opponent's chin or torso. From the guard position, the torso shifts slightly to the right, the rear hand drops below the level of the opponent's chest and the knees are bent slightly.

                                                                        Uppercut - A vertical, rising punch thrown with the rear hand. The hook may also be thrown with the rear hand. A hook may also target the lower body (the classic Mexican hook to the liver) and this technique is sometimes called the "rip" to distinguish it from the conventional hook to the head. Upon contact, the hook's circular path ends abruptly and the lead hand is pulled quickly back into the guard position.

                                                                        At the same time, the lead foot pivots clockwise, turning the left heel outwards. The torso and hips are rotated clockwise, propelling the fist through a tight, clockwise arc across the front of the body and connecting with the target. The rear hand is tucked firmly against the jaw to protect the chin. From the guard position, the elbow is drawn back with a horizontal fist (knuckles pointing forward) and the elbow bent.

                                                                        Hook - A semi-circular punch thrown with the lead hand to the side of the opponent's head. The cross can also follow a jab, creating the classic "one-two combo." The cross is also called a "straight" or "right.". It can be used to counterpunch a jab, aiming for the opponent's head (or a counter to a cross aimed at the body) or to set up a hook. After the cross is thrown, the hand is retracted quickly and the guard position resumed.

                                                                        Like the jab, a half-step forward may be added. Body rotation and the sudden weight transfer is what gives the cross its power. Weight is also transferred from the rear foot to the lead foot, resulting in the rear heel turning outwards as it acts as a fulcrum for the transfer of weight. For additional power, the torso and hips are rotated anti-clockwise as the cross is thrown.

                                                                        At the same time, the lead hand is retracted and tucked against the face to protect the inside of the chin. The rear shoulder is thrust forward and finishes just touching the outside of the chin. From the guard position, the rear hand is thrown from the chin, crossing the body and travelling towards the target in a straight line. Cross - A powerful straight punch thrown with the rear hand.

                                                                        A half-step may be added, moving the entire body into the punch, for additional power. Due to its relatively weak power, the jab is often used as a tool to gauge distances, probe an opponent's defenses, and set up heavier, more powerful punches. It has the longest reach of any punch and does not require commitment or large weight transfers. The jab is the most important punch in a boxer's arsenal because it provides a fair amount of its own cover and it leaves the least amount of space for a counterpunch from the opponent.

                                                                        After making contact with the target, the lead hand is retracted quickly to resume a guard position in front of the face. The rear hand remains next to the face to guard the jaw. As the punch reaches full extension, the lead shoulder is brought up to guard the chin. The jab is accompanied by a small, clockwise rotation of the torso and hips, while the fist rotates 180 degrees, becoming horizontal upon impact.

                                                                        Jab - A quick, straight punch thrown with the lead hand from the guard position. Biting, headbutting and hitting below the belt were declared fouls. If a fighter was knocked down, he must rise within 30 seconds of his own power to be allowed to continue. Fights occur in a 24-foot-square ring surrounded by ropes.