Posts Tagged ‘boxing’

Muhammad Ali - The Boxing Legend of the 19th Century

Monday, February 6th, 2012

Muhammad Ali was 70 on January 17th, 2012. He was the most feared opponent in the boxing ring in his long and active career and with very good cause. He won the world heavy weight boxing championship three times after winning a gold medal at the Olympics and was voted sportsman of the century by the BBC and Sports Illustrated.

Muhammad Ali was born in Louisville, Kentucky on January 17th, 1942 and was christened after his father Cassius Marcellus Clay. They added the handle Junior, to distinguish him from his father who was a billboard painter. In 1967, Cassius changed his name to Muhammad Ali and became a Muslim.

A local white Louisville police officer named Joe E. Martin was the first person to see that the young Clay had something extraordinary while he watched him fighting over a stolen bicycle as a twelve tear old. Martin encouraged Clay to go to the boxing ring with him. Martin and Clay trained together at Stoner’s Gym.

Martin and Ali used to do a show together called ‘Tomorrow’s Champions’. Stone was a useful coach for Ali and he stayed his tutor for nearly all his amateur career (the last four years he was with Chuck Bodak).

As an amateur Ali won six Kentucky Golden Gloves, two National Golden Gloves, an Amateur Athletic Union title and the Gold Medal at the 1960 Rome Olympics for light-heavyweight boxing.

His history as an amateur was 100 wins and five losses. Ali was both hero-worshipped and vilified in his mother country. After Ali changed his name he refused to accept the name Clay, saying that his family had been given it by slave-owners.

He was also accused of switching his religion to dodge the draft, but his well-known reply to that allegation was: “I ain’t got no quarrel with them Viet Cong… No Viet Cong ever called me nigger”. In 1966 he was barred from fighting in the United States. Ali was stripped of his boxing titles and his boxing license was suspended. So he fought abroad, frequently in the United Kingdom.

Ali’s first title fight was against Sonny Liston on February 25 1964, but it was nearly cancelled, because it became known that Ali had joined Malcolm X’s Nation of Islam. The promoter, Bill Faversham. was concerned that that may ruin the attendance figures, because Ali was not considered likely to win anyway (7:1 against).

Ali agreed not to authenticate that he had links with Malcolm X until after the fight and it went ahead. At the weigh in, Ali’s pulse was 120 as opposed to his norm of 54 and his opponent’s team misread this for nerves. This was when Ali, the Louisville Lip, first said that he was going to “float like a butterfly, sting like a bee”.

Ali saw his first professional defeat in 1971 against Joe Frazier, although he won the title back from George Foreman in 1974. This was the famous ‘Rumble in the Jungle’ which had political overtones.

It was ranked seventh in ‘The 100 Greatest Sporting Moments’. Ali’s fight against Chuck Wepner in 1975 motivated the film ‘Rocky’, which won the Academy Award.

Ali announced his retirement on June 27th 1979, but made a comeback 18 months later in October 1980. He finally retired in 1981, but before that the councillors of Louisville renamed Walnut Street as Muhammad Ali Boulevard. A dozen of the seventy street signs were stolen within a week.

In 1984, Ali was diagnosed as having Altzeimer’s, which people who have head shocks are more liable to get. Despite his illness, Ali has worked tirelessly for peace and equality and has represented America at several international peace negotiations.

He has won more prizes than anyone can possibly remember and established a $60 million not for profit centre in Louisville which houses his awards, but is there to promote peace, social responsibility, respect and personal growth.

On average, Ali travels over 200 days a year to raise money for and consciousness of poverty and hunger. It has been determined that he has helped supply more than 22,000,000 meals.

Angelo Dundee, Ali’s cornerman and trainer from 1960-1981 passed away on February 1st 2012 at the age of 90,

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on a number of topics, but is now involved with Quotes On Mixed Martial Arts. If you would like to know more, go to our website at Mixed Martial Arts Quotes

The Disciplines Of Mixed Martial Arts

Sunday, December 18th, 2011

Mixed martial arts is a blend of any martial arts. There is no set combination, you can learn whichever techniques you like and call yourself a mixed martial artist. The techniques that you should learn depend on your mental attitude, body shape and personal preferences. Local availability may take precedence over these reasons though. We will look at some of the most popular styles below.

Kick Boxing: there are different disciplines of kick boxing including a French and a Thai version known as Muay Thai. Kick boxing is a full contact activity which makes use of the fists, elbows, feet and knees to hit the opponent. There are frequent clinches, but the bout is stopped when a fighter falls to the canvas as in boxing.

Thai kick boxing is one of the most well-liked styles in a mixed martial artist’s repertoire, especially among female fighters, because it requires great suppleness.

Boxing: boxing is the most popular western martial art. It was practiced in Ancient Greece and was a sport in the early Olympic Games. You may only use your fists. Boxing skills benefit the more powerful upper bodied athlete. Boxing has to be combined with mat skills such as wrestling or the MMA fighter will be disadvantaged on the canvas.

Judo: judo is in essence a defensive skill and is the first oriental martial art that most people learn. It is a decent style to start learning oriental fighting skills, but you will also need to learn some aggressive manoeuvres.

Wrestling: wrestling is not taught to young men as much as boxing any more, but it is a very popular spectator sport. There are different types of wrestling such as normal western wrestling and Japanese Sumo. It is indispensable to have some wrestling-type skills for when you are grappling on the canvas.

Jiu Jitsu: jiu jitsu is indispensable for MMA, most fighters would suggest. There are several styles, besides the original one, known as Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and an offshoot of that called Gracie Jiu Jitsu.

These last two types are the most prevalent in MMA. Jiu Jitsu is aggressive and defensive and includes stand-up fighting and grappling on the canvas. It is an outstanding all-round martial art.

Karate: another Japanese martial art that involves strength and speed. Karate is also good for vertical and horizontal combative manoeuvres and so is more flexible than boxing. It is a full contact sport in some styles, but not in others, because it is risky to hit an untutored person using karate - it could be fatal.

Tae Kwando: tae kwando takes enormous suppleness and lightening-fast reflexes. It is also more popular with female MMA fighters as many of the men are too weighty to carry out the jumps and aerial attacks that are common in this martial art. The octagon may also be a little too cramped to carry out all the manoeuvres of tae kwando properly as well.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on many subjects, but is now concerned with mixed martial arts for kids. If you would like to know more, please go to our website at Mixed Martial Arts Quotes

What Is Mixed Martial Arts?

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

Have you ever seen a mixed martial arts bout? There are plenty of mixed martial arts (MMA) bouts on television, but in some countries, most of them are on Pay-Per-View (PPV). MMA is a very brutal and hard-hitting sport in which almost anything goes. Most of the bouts in America are organized by the Ultimate Fighting Championship.

MMA began about 2,000 years ago when it was a sport in the early Olympic Games. It passed out of the games for some unknown explanation, but it discovered a renaissance in Europe in the late Nineteenth Century.

Again, it died out, but came back with the Kings of the Square Ring in which Muhammad Ali took part in about 1980.

Again, MMA, which it was not called then, waned. In those earlier matches, the idea was to find out which was the best martial art, so they would put a boxer against a wrestler or a boxer against an aficionado of karate. In the early 1990’s, the emphasis shifted to finding out who was the best fighter, not which was the best discipline.

Fighters were allowed to use any techniques they knew. ‘Vale Todo’ (’Everything Goes’) from Brazil was vital in this development. In fact, many if not most of the modern MMA fighters have trained in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. The Gracie family from Brazil was (and still is) central to MMA.

In the Nineties, there were no rules really and everything went. Surprisingly, this seemed to hamper MMA’s rise in popularity, because as more rules were added to (slightly) limit the brutality, so MMA has boomed.

MMA is still very belligerent and brutal and fractured limbs are not uncommon. Fortunately, the death rate in the ring is way below that of some other martial arts like boxing, in which fighters focus more on the head than the body.

In contemporary Mixed martial arts, a fighter is permitted to use his or her body as a weapon according to any discipline they have learned. Most top fighters have studied three of four and are still learning more.

The most well-liked starting point seems to be Brazilian jiu jitsu, followed by boxing, wrestling, Thai boxing, karate, judo and aikido.

Because there are so many martial arts techniques, it means that no two fighters are likely to have the same style. This has the potential to make MMA more interesting than say, boxing, because MMA includes boxing, but boxing is merely boxing.

Wrestling damaged the image of TV bouts with its silly, choreographed dances known as fights. It did not fool many people and it was more of a joke than a real sport. MMA is categorically not the same.

It is not scripted, although a branch of scripted MMA might come about, who knows? The sport is still in its experimental days, despite having such ancient origins. Maybe it will even be a sport in the Olympic Games again.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on a variety of subjects, but is now concerned with Mixed Martial Arts Training Gyms. If you would like to know more, please go to our website at Mixed Martial Arts Quotes

Boxing VS MMA

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

I am more of a mixed martial arts fan than a boxing fan, but I do enjoy boxing every now and then. For me personally MMA is more exciting purely because there are more ways for a fighter to win the fight. So many times have I seen on forums and websites people arguing over which is the better sport and which fighters are tougher? The truth is toughness comes down to individuals, there are tough boxers just like there are tough MMA fighters. So the question remains; can boxing and mixed martial arts co-exist?

First of all let me address this ridiculous notion that ‘Boxing is dying man!’. No, it most certainly is not! Boxing has been around since around 2000 BC. It is one of the oldest sports in the world and is still one of the biggest sports in the world. Something that’s been around that long does not just die and wither away. Boxing is still more popular than MMA and has thrown up some great fights in recent times.

It has been great to watch a sport like MMA grow from a child that nobody wanted to the spectacle it is today; generating millions of dollars in TV revenue for fighters and Mr White. Mixed martial arts organizations are doing their best to rectify the mistakes made by boxing over the years, of which there are many, but in doing so they have found some new ones themselves. Neither of these sports are perfect, although mixed martial arts is still young and has time to adjust, whereas boxing is pretty much a fully grown adult. And as we all know adults find it more difficult to change.

So can boxing and MMA co-exist? My answer is yes, of course they can, In fact this competition may be exactly what the world of boxing needs. No longer does it have the monopoly on contact sports. There is a young buck in town and he’s eating well and growing fast. Either boxing jump starts itself or it just might find itself loosing more than just it’s old retired fighters to the sport of MMA. These sports can actually learn from each other and who knows? Maybe we’ll see a world championship boxing fight on the same event as a mixed martial arts title fight.

So I ask all you boxing fans to welcome the new sport and appreciate it for what it is. And to the MMA fans I say ‘Respect your elders’, boxing has been around a lot longer than you and will be with for many more years to come.

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