Author | Comments |
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Regular 32 posts |
Thursday 20th April 2006 at 22:21 this question has probably been asked loads of times before and i just wonder what peoples views were, who would win between a good boxer and a good martial artist, (whilst on there feet). i am aware that there are a huge number of variables like weight, height etc but assume there fairly equal and only things like stamina skill etc matter Inveniam Viam Aut Faciam |
Regular 235 posts |
Friday 21st April 2006 at 00:53 There are still far too many variables. Rules? What counts as a win? What are they playing? What martial art? Have they got gloves on? |
1319 posts |
Friday 21st April 2006 at 02:13 I think the early UFC's answer that question... The Admin Guy |
Resident 855 posts |
Friday 21st April 2006 at 08:35 Royce Gracie :-p ______________________________ |
Regular 235 posts |
Friday 21st April 2006 at 12:40 UFC 1, Royce Gracie fought a professional cruiser weight boxer. He kept him away with low side kicks, then took him to the ground. From then on it was just embarrassing for the poor boxer. The boxer, frustrated and not knowing what to do on the ground, conceeded without the need for Gracie to apply a submission technique. |
1319 posts |
Friday 21st April 2006 at 15:45 I guess ya did say "(whilst on there feet)", so maybe Royce vs that boxer isn't answering the question. The Admin Guy |
Resident 855 posts |
Friday 21st April 2006 at 18:40 Isn't boxing a martial art? ______________________________ |
Regular 235 posts |
Friday 21st April 2006 at 23:38 I'm not so sure about that. The majority of boxers have far more experience fighting and striking people than most martial artists do. Sure the martial artist knows more moves, like finger eye jabs, but unless he has blinded hundreds of people, he can't have practised this more dangerous techniques as much as a boxer has boxing. |
Regular 44 posts |
Saturday 22nd April 2006 at 02:41 Boxing is a sport not a martial art. ______________________________ |
Resident 855 posts |
Saturday 22nd April 2006 at 09:05 if tkd, karate, etc is a martial art then so is boxing! ______________________________ |
1319 posts |
Saturday 22nd April 2006 at 11:55 I didn't know boxing was formed from martial law in the east??? The Admin Guy |
Regular 235 posts |
Saturday 22nd April 2006 at 15:40 And BJJ was? |
Regular 44 posts |
Saturday 22nd April 2006 at 16:11 tkd, karate, and judo all originated from eastern martial law. ______________________________ |
Resident 855 posts |
Saturday 22nd April 2006 at 19:53 Posted : 2006-04-22 16:11:59 GMT ______________________________ |
Addict 123 posts |
Saturday 22nd April 2006 at 20:15 How about combat forms (not sports) which originated in other countries such as France or Israel? |
Regular 44 posts |
Saturday 22nd April 2006 at 20:31 Yeah judo began as a martial art and then evolved into a sport for the olympics etc... whereas boxing has always been a sport. ______________________________ |
1319 posts |
Sunday 23rd April 2006 at 03:56 I'm feeling lost from the last few posts. The Admin Guy |
Resident 855 posts |
Sunday 23rd April 2006 at 09:06 I think it all depends on how BJJ is taught, some clubs put an emphasis on the sport side others sport and defence. ______________________________ |
Resident 855 posts |
Sunday 23rd April 2006 at 09:13 [link=http://www.bbc.co.uk/london/sport/boxing/early_history.shtml]Boxing History[/link] ______________________________ |
Regular 44 posts |
Sunday 23rd April 2006 at 17:17 "Take MMA if my two main disciplines are boxing and im a japanese ju jitsu 46thDan master, then i cant be called a mixed martial artist then can i???" ______________________________ |