I ask myself everyday and there are too reasons that I just can't put it in words.
Why do you love boxing and what got u into this sport?
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I ask myself everyday and there are too reasons that I just can't put it in words.
Why do you love boxing and what got u into this sport?
I think one of the many reasons I love both boxing and mma is because no other sport shows whats really inside of someone. How much guts you have or how mentally tough you are.
No sport shows what kind of man (or woman) you really are like MMA or Boxing. These are real mens sports lol.
Has a fan I love seeing other men challenge themselves like this and has an athlete I love to challenge myself like this. Whose the toughest?
I can honestly say I love everything about it my dad got me into it as I imagine most fans my age got into it. I love football and hate MMA to the point I won't watch PPV replays for free. I love how every card feels like a major event, the brutality of it, what boxers sacrifice, the way that you never really know what will happen, how styles make fights, how complicated it is I have a full mastery of football, I know the formations plays what teams are given breaks but boxing I'm always learning I'll talk to people who done watched it 30 years longer than me it's very impressive, the fantasy match ups, the nationalism and how I grew up with Roy Jones Jr, Prince, Zab and Johnny as my heros. Even when it disappoints me it like a girl who you can't get over.
Yeah the same here my dad got me into it at a young age in the 60's, live fights in the old days where betting went on ring side over the backs of chairs and fights on white canvas rings, cigar and smoke filled old iron clad halls and if there was a great fight the crowd used to throw their spare change into the ring and the corner men would be on their hands and knees scoping it all up..:cool:
I like the evasive qualities of the fight game as much as the attack I like when smart beat tough and tough beats smart and all the in betweens.
Much of it is hard to put into words but I love the one on one competition. I love foot work and defense. when I see the red Sox play I often watch the game inside the game. Shows the intricacy of the game. I now do that with boxing. Someone compared it to chess, I tend to agree with that. Sometimes you can see how these guys know what punch is coming next and where. like a good hitter knowing the changeup is on the way. I like seeing the brawlers and the boxers. I know Manny gets a lot of flack here but I think he was the closest thing to the complete package to come around as of late. When I went to see Macklin v GGG I was amazed at how the fans hung on everything done in the ring. it is a bit sad that so few people I know enjoy the sport. I invite people over to watch fights sometimes but you can see the half interest they have. I guess that is about all I can put into words.
The calculated chaos and the raw individuality of it all. The mental and life metaphor aspect of it is inspiring.
There just is a balance to it. The most talented guy doesn't always win. The best strategy doesn't always win. The guy with the most heart doesn't always win. And yet - all of that comes together and it is great to try to predict what will happen in any given fight. I love watching fights unfold, and a lot of people who have watched fights with me will tell you that I like watching the strategy of both fighters, seeing the openings in the defense of both fighters, and I love being able to predict what strengths in one fighter will exploit the weaknesses in the other. It's the mixing of the styles and watching a guy maximize what he can do on any given night... it's just really enjoyable to me.
What's missing lately is that I like to see guys step outside of their comfort zone and challenge themselves to do things that are even somewhat scary in the name of trying to be great. That is rare now... but I love it when it happens.
My Granddad used to come home late from the railroad and sit in between our beds on the floor and tell us about boxing history and his time in England going to fights almost every weekend. Yet he was the gentlest man I had/have ever known. We lived 40 miles from the U.S. border in Saskatchewan so we got free cable or coax as it was called in those days. He hooked us to the sport and when Chuvalo and Clay fought that was it for me.
Yeah good point, adding to it:
In the ring remains the same for the most parts but the thing that has wrecked some of the gloss for me is like you suggest:
Theres a calculated risk and a pre fight strategy to who will fight who and when and if they will fight a 'certain opponent or risk' at all, sometimes the whole shamoo is for all the wrong reasons these days.
I grew up hearing boxing stories from both my parents. my father was born in the 1920s, in Pittsburgh, so he told me about Billy Conn and fritzie Zivic. Rocky Marciano was also a favorite of his, and he taught me the value of turning your body into your punches and punching short. He never ever wanted me to be involved in boxing in anyway.
My mother came to LA from Butte (where I live now) at 18, and boxing was huge in LA at the time. There were multiple fight cards every night of the week, and my mother went often. So I heard about Art Aragon and lauro Salas from her, from the time I was 3,4 years old. She used to take me, by bus, to the fights at the Olympic Auditorium; this was when the bus station in downtown LA was hell on earth. Bums, winos and general low lifes would come up and proposition my mother and she'd tell them to get lost. I was 4,5,6 years old and would stand there trying to look tough. Then, after the fights, we'd take the bus to a friend's house on Alpine and my dad would pick us up there at 2am after he got off work.
I love boxing because it has always been in me; when I was a kid I wanted to box from the time I could walk. When you start doing it, you can approach it like a barbarian and get hit all the time. Or you can understand it as an exercise in the utilization and control of distance, and that takes most of the risk factor out of it. I love teaching it- at 10 I had my three year old sister and my 5 year old cousins gloved up and working off the jab. It bothers me that, for the last decade, just about every time I watch the fights I get disappointed, but I can still sit for hours watching videos of guys that know how to fight.
I usually think even the most "boring" fights are exciting. I think your average person just doesnt understand the true skill that is going on in the ring. So when fighters arent pounding each other in the face they dont understand whats going on and lose interest.
And as for myself, I watch every fight closely because there is always things you can learn. And your average person definately isnt watching to learn.
History, legacy, excitement, knock outs, careers being made and you being part of it.
Ali
I was in a fight in high school and I knocked a kid out, in front of my gym teacher. Not only did I get a 2 week suspension, I got asked to join the local boxing gym and the rest is history.
Funny, I knocked that kid out, but I got bullied in sparring for like a month before I developed any sort of understanding of reach or movement.
It's much easier when the guy you're fighting ain't got a clue how to block a left hook.