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Professional boxing

Professional boxing, or prizefighting, is regulated, sanctioned boxing. Professional boxing bouts are fought for a purse that is divided between the boxers as determined by contract. Most professional bouts are supervised by a regulatory authority to guarantee the fighters' safety. Most high-profile bouts obtain the endorsement of a sanctioning body, which awards championship belts, establishes rules, and assigns its own judges and referees.

The Marquess of Queensberry who helped create the modern sport

In contrast with amateur boxing, professional bouts are typically much longer and can last up to twelve rounds, though less significant fights can be as short as four rounds. Protective headgear[1] is not permitted, and boxers are generally allowed to take substantial punishment before a fight is halted. Professional boxing has enjoyed a much higher profile than amateur boxing throughout the 20th century and beyond.

Professional boxing was banned in Cuba from 1961 to April 2022.[2] So was also the case in Sweden between 1970 and 2007, and Norway between 1981 and 2014.[1]

History

Early history

The June 1894 Leonard–Cushing bout. Each of the six one-minute rounds recorded by the Kinetograph was made available to exhibitors for $22.50.[3] Customers who watched the final round saw Leonard score a knockdown.

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 (BBBofC) 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.[4]

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 BBBofC 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.[5] They were also responsible for the first live radio broadcast of a title fight (Dempsey v. Georges Carpentier, in 1921). In the United Kingdom, Jack Solomons' success as a fight promoter helped re-establish professional boxing after the Second World War and made the UK a popular place for title fights in the 1950s and 1960s.

Modern history

1900 to 1920

In the early twentieth century, most professional bouts took place in the United States and Britain, and champions were recognised by popular consensus as expressed in the newspapers of the day. Among the great champions of the era were the peerless heavyweight Jim Jeffries and Bob Fitzsimmons, who weighed less than 12 stone (164 pounds), but won world titles at middleweight (1892), light heavyweight (1903), and heavyweight (1897). Other famous champions included light heavyweight Philadelphia Jack O'Brien and middleweight Tommy Ryan. After winning the Bantamweight title in 1892, Canada's George Dixon became the first ever black athlete to win a World Championship in any sport; he was also the first Canadian-born boxing champion. On May 12, 1902 lightweight Joe Gans became the first black American to be boxing champion. Despite the public's enthusiasm, this was an era of far-reaching regulation of the sport, often with the stated goal of outright prohibition. In 1900, the State of New York enacted the Lewis Law, banned prizefights except for those held in private athletic clubs between members. Thus, when introducing the fighters, the announcer frequently added the phrase "Both members of this club", as George Wesley Bellows titled one of his paintings.[6] The western region of the United States tended to be more tolerant of prizefights in this era, although the private club arrangement was standard practice here as well, San Francisco's California Athletic Club being a prominent example.[6]

On December 26, 1908, heavyweight Jack Johnson became the first black heavyweight champion and a highly controversial figure in that racially charged era. Prizefights often had unlimited rounds, and could easily become endurance tests, favouring patient tacticians like Johnson. At lighter weights, ten round fights were common, and lightweight Benny Leonard dominated his division from the late teens into the early twenties.

Championship level prizefighters in this period were the premier sports celebrities, and a title bout generated intense public interest. Long before bars became popular venues in which to watch sporting events on television, enterprising saloon keepers were known to set up ticker machines and announce the progress of an important bout, blow by blow. Local kids often hung about outside the saloon doors, hoping for news of the fight. Harpo Marx, then fifteen, recounted vicariously experiencing the 1904 Jeffries-Munroe championship fight in this way.[7]

1920 to present

Length of bouts

Professional bouts are limited to a maximum of twelve rounds, where each round last 3 minutes for men, 2 minutes for women. Most are fought over four to ten rounds depending upon the experience of the boxers. Through the early twentieth century, it was common for fights to have unlimited rounds, ending only when one fighter quit or the fight was stopped by police. In the 1910s and 1920s, a fifteen-round limit gradually became the norm, benefiting high-energy fighters like Jack Dempsey.[8][9]

For decades, boxing matches went on for 15 rounds, but that was all changed on November 13, 1982 following the death of Korean boxer Duk Koo Kim in a fight against Ray Mancini. Studies following the fight have concluded that his brain had become more susceptible to damage after the 12th round. [10] Exactly three months after the fatal fight, the WBC reduced the number of their championship fights to 12 three-minute rounds with 1 minute in between, making the total bout 47 minutes long.[11]

Scoring

If the bout "goes the distance", meaning that the scheduled time has fully elapsed, the outcome is determined by decision. In the early days of boxing, the referee decided the outcome by raising the winner's arm at the end of the bout, a practice that is still used for some professional bouts in the United Kingdom. In the early twentieth century, it became the practice for the referee or judge to score bouts by the number of rounds won by each boxer. To improve the reliability of scoring, two ringside judges were added besides the referee, and the winner was decided by majority decision. Since the late twentieth century, it has become common practice for the judges to be three ringside observers who award a score to each boxer for each round, with the referee having the authority to deduct points for certain violations.

At the conclusion of the bout, each of the three judges tallies the points awarded to each boxer. A winner is declared if at least two judges score the bout in favour of the same boxer. The result is either a (win by) “unanimous decision”, by “majority decision” (if the third judge scores a draw), or by “split decision” (if the third judge scores the bout in favour of the other boxer). Otherwise, the result is a draw: a “unanimous draw” (if all three judges scored the bout a draw), a “majority draw” (if two judges scored the bout a draw, regardless of the result reached by the third judge), or a “split draw” (if each boxer was the winner on one scorecard, and the third judge scored a draw).

10-Point system

The 10 Point system was first introduced in 1968 by the World Boxing Council (WBC) as a rational way of scoring fights.[12] It was viewed as such because it allowed judges to reward knockdowns and distinguish between close rounds, as well as rounds where one fighter clearly dominated their opponent. Furthermore, the subsequent adoption of this system, both nationally and internationally, allowed for greater judging consistency, which was something that was sorely needed at the time.[12] There are many factors that inform the judge's decision but the most important of these are: clean punching, effective aggressiveness, ring generalship and defense. Judges use these metrics as a means of discerning which fighter has a clear advantage over the other, regardless of how minute the advantage.

The development of the 10-Point System

Modern boxing rules were initially derived from the Marquess of Queensberry rules which mainly outlined core aspects of the sport, such as the establishment of rounds and their duration, as well as the determination of proper attire in the ring such as gloves and wraps.[13] These rules did not, however, provide unified guidelines for scoring fights and instead left this in the hands of individual sanctioning organizations. This meant that fights would be scored differently depending on the rules established by the governing body overseeing the fight. It is from this environment that the 10-Point System was born.[12] The adoption of this system, both nationally and internationally, established the foundation for greater judging consistency in professional boxing.[12][14]

How the System Works

In the event the winner of a bout cannot be determined by a knockout, technical knockout, or disqualification, the final decision rests in the hands of three ringside judges approved by the commission. The three judges are usually seated along the edge of the boxing ring, separated from each other. The judges are forbidden from sharing their scores with each other or consulting with one another.[13] At the end of each round, judges must hand in their scores to the referee who then hands them to the clerk who records and totals the final scores.[13] Judges are to award 10 points (less any point deductions) to the victor of the round and a lesser score (less any point deductions) to the loser. The losing contestant's score can vary depending on different factors.

The 10-point Must System is the most widely used scoring system since the mid-twentieth century. It is so named because a judge "must" award ten points to at least one fighter each round (before deductions for fouls). Most rounds are scored 10–9, with 10 points for the fighter who won the round, and 9 points for the fighter the judge believes lost the round. If a round is judged to be even, it is scored 10-10. For each knockdown in a round, the judge deducts an additional point from the fighter knocked down, resulting in a 10–8 score if there is one knockdown or a 10–7 score if there are two knockdowns. If the referee instructs the judges to deduct a point for a foul, this deduction is applied after the preliminary computation. So, if a fighter wins a round, but is penalised for a foul, the score changes from 10–9 to 9-9. If that same fighter scored a knockdown in the round, the score would change from 10–8 in his favour to 9–8. While uncommon, if a fighter completely dominates a round but does not score a knockdown, a judge can still score that round 10–8.

Other scoring systems have also been used in various locations, including the five-point must system (in which the winning fighter is awarded five points, the loser four or fewer), the one-point system (in which the winning fighter is awarded one or more points, and the losing fighter is awarded zero), and the rounds system which simply awards the round to the winning fighter. In the rounds system, the bout is won by the fighter determined to have won more rounds. This system often used a supplemental points system (generally the ten-point must) in the case of even rounds.

If a fight is stopped due to an injury that the referee has ruled to be the result of an unintentional foul, the fight goes to the scorecards only if a specified number of rounds (usually three, sometimes four) have been completed. Whoever is ahead on the scorecards wins by a technical decision. If the required number of rounds has not been completed, the fight is declared a technical draw or a no contest.

If a fight is stopped due to a cut resulting from a legal punch, the other participant is awarded a technical knockout win. For this reason, fighters often employ cutmen, whose job is to treat cuts between rounds so that the boxer is able to continue despite the cut.[15]

Judges do not have the ability to disregard an official knockdown. If the referee declares a fighter going down to be a knockdown, the judges must score it as such.

Championships

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.[16] After 1920, the National Boxing Association (NBA) began to sanction "title fights". Also during that time, The Ring was founded, and it listed champions and awarded championship belts. The NBA was renamed in 1962 and became the World Boxing Association (WBA). The following year, a rival body, the World Boxing Council (WBC) was formed.[17] In 1983, the International Boxing Federation (IBF) was formed. In 1988, another world sanctioning body, the World Boxing Organization (WBO) was formed. In the 2010s a boxer had to be recognised by these four bodies to be the undisputed world champion; minor bodies like the International Boxing Organization (IBO) and World Boxing Union (WBU) are disregarded. Regional sanctioning bodies such as the North American Boxing Federation (NABF), the North American Boxing Council (NABC) and the United States Boxing Association (USBA) also awarded championships. The Ring magazine also continued listing the world champion of each weight division, and its rankings continue to be appreciated by fans.

Major sanctioning bodies

Citations

  • Combat sports: Professional boxing championship rules; Government of Ontario. (2016, June 28). Retrieved November 11, 2018
  • Did Lennox Lewis Beat Evander Holyfield?: Methods for Analysing Small Sample Interrater Agreement Problems; Herbert K. H. Lee, Cork, D., & Algranati, D. (2002). Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series D (The Statistician), 51(2), pp. 129–146.
  • Rules for IBF, USBA & Intercontinental Championship and Elimination Bouts; IBF, O. (2015, June). Retrieved November 7, 2018
  • WORLD BOXING FEDERATION RULES & REGULATIONS OF CHAMPIONSHIP CONTESTS 2019-04-10 at the Wayback Machine; WBF. (2009). Retrieved November 6, 2016.
  • ABC Unified Rules of Boxing; WBO, E., & ABC. (2008, July 3). Retrieved November 6, 2018.

References

  1. ^ a b Hjellen, Bjørnar (December 16, 2014). "Brækhus fikk drømmen oppfylt". BBC News.
  2. ^ Walker, Christopher (5 April 2022). "Professional boxing approved in Cuba for first time since 1962 | DAZN News UK". DAZN. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  3. ^ Leonard–Cushing fight Part of the Library of Congress/Inventing Entertainment educational website. Retrieved 12/14/06.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-04-04. Retrieved 2006-09-01.
  5. ^ . boxrec.com. Archived from the original on 2006-04-10. Retrieved 2006-09-01.
  6. ^ a b Robert G. Rodriguez. The regulation of boxing, p32. McFarland & Co., Jefferson, NC 2008
  7. ^ Harpo Speaks! pp 59-60. Limelight Editions, New York, 1961
  8. ^ Olver, Ron; Collins, Nigel. "Boxing | History, Rules, Weight Divisions, Notable Fighters, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-12-07.
  9. ^ Bianco, Massimiliano; Loosemore, Mike; Daniele, Gianlorenzo; Palmieri, Vincenzo; Faina, Marcello; Zeppilli, Paolo (2013). "Amateur boxing in the last 59 years. Impact of rules changes on the type of verdicts recorded and implications on boxers' health". British Journal of Sports Medicine. 47 (7): 452–457. doi:10.1136/bjsports-2012-091771. ISSN 0306-3674.
  10. ^ Goodman, Margaret (November 13, 2007). "Ring tragedy from a doctor's perspective". ESPN.com.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. ^ Sugden, John Peter (1996). Boxing and society : an international analysis. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-4320-4. OCLC 35174810.
  12. ^ a b c d Tom, Kaczmarek (1996). You be the boxing judge! : judging professional boxing for the TV boxing fan. Pittsburgh, Pa.: Dorrance Pub. Co. ISBN 978-0805939033. OCLC 39257557.
  13. ^ a b c Lee, Herbert K.H; Cork, Daniel.L; Algranati, David.J (2002). "Did Lennox Lewis Beat Evander Holyfield?: Methods for Analysing Small Sample Interrater Agreement Problems". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. series D ( the statistician) (51(2)): 129–146. doi:10.1111/1467-9884.00306. JSTOR 3650314.
  14. ^ How it works;
  15. ^ Bert Randolph Sugar (2001). "Boxing" 2006-06-19 at the Wayback Machine, World Book Online Americas Edition
  16. ^ "The Police Gazette". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  17. ^ Piero Pini and Professor Ramón G. Velásquez (2006). History & Founding Fathers WBCboxing . Archived from the original on 2003-12-16. Retrieved 2006-06-06.

External links

professional, boxing, prizefighter, redirects, here, other, uses, prizefighter, disambiguation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, examples, perspective, t. Prizefighter redirects here For other uses see Prizefighter disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Professional boxing or prizefighting is regulated sanctioned boxing Professional boxing bouts are fought for a purse that is divided between the boxers as determined by contract Most professional bouts are supervised by a regulatory authority to guarantee the fighters safety Most high profile bouts obtain the endorsement of a sanctioning body which awards championship belts establishes rules and assigns its own judges and referees The Marquess of Queensberry who helped create the modern sport In contrast with amateur boxing professional bouts are typically much longer and can last up to twelve rounds though less significant fights can be as short as four rounds Protective headgear 1 is not permitted and boxers are generally allowed to take substantial punishment before a fight is halted Professional boxing has enjoyed a much higher profile than amateur boxing throughout the 20th century and beyond Professional boxing was banned in Cuba from 1961 to April 2022 2 So was also the case in Sweden between 1970 and 2007 and Norway between 1981 and 2014 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Modern history 1 2 1 1900 to 1920 1 2 2 1920 to present 2 Length of bouts 3 Scoring 3 1 10 Point system 3 1 1 The development of the 10 Point System 3 1 2 How the System Works 4 Championships 5 Major sanctioning bodies 6 Citations 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit source source source source source source The June 1894 Leonard Cushing bout Each of the six one minute rounds recorded by the Kinetograph was made available to exhibitors for 22 50 3 Customers who watched the final round saw Leonard score a knockdown 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 BBBofC 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 4 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 BBBofC 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 5 They were also responsible for the first live radio broadcast of a title fight Dempsey v Georges Carpentier in 1921 In the United Kingdom Jack Solomons success as a fight promoter helped re establish professional boxing after the Second World War and made the UK a popular place for title fights in the 1950s and 1960s Modern history Edit 1900 to 1920 Edit Philadelphia Jack O Brien In the early twentieth century most professional bouts took place in the United States and Britain and champions were recognised by popular consensus as expressed in the newspapers of the day Among the great champions of the era were the peerless heavyweight Jim Jeffries and Bob Fitzsimmons who weighed less than 12 stone 164 pounds but won world titles at middleweight 1892 light heavyweight 1903 and heavyweight 1897 Other famous champions included light heavyweight Philadelphia Jack O Brien and middleweight Tommy Ryan After winning the Bantamweight title in 1892 Canada s George Dixon became the first ever black athlete to win a World Championship in any sport he was also the first Canadian born boxing champion On May 12 1902 lightweight Joe Gans became the first black American to be boxing champion Despite the public s enthusiasm this was an era of far reaching regulation of the sport often with the stated goal of outright prohibition In 1900 the State of New York enacted the Lewis Law banned prizefights except for those held in private athletic clubs between members Thus when introducing the fighters the announcer frequently added the phrase Both members of this club as George Wesley Bellows titled one of his paintings 6 The western region of the United States tended to be more tolerant of prizefights in this era although the private club arrangement was standard practice here as well San Francisco s California Athletic Club being a prominent example 6 On December 26 1908 heavyweight Jack Johnson became the first black heavyweight champion and a highly controversial figure in that racially charged era Prizefights often had unlimited rounds and could easily become endurance tests favouring patient tacticians like Johnson At lighter weights ten round fights were common and lightweight Benny Leonard dominated his division from the late teens into the early twenties Championship level prizefighters in this period were the premier sports celebrities and a title bout generated intense public interest Long before bars became popular venues in which to watch sporting events on television enterprising saloon keepers were known to set up ticker machines and announce the progress of an important bout blow by blow Local kids often hung about outside the saloon doors hoping for news of the fight Harpo Marx then fifteen recounted vicariously experiencing the 1904 Jeffries Munroe championship fight in this way 7 1920 to present Edit Main articles 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 Boxing in the 1990s Boxing in the 2000s and Boxing in the 2010sLength of bouts EditProfessional bouts are limited to a maximum of twelve rounds where each round last 3 minutes for men 2 minutes for women Most are fought over four to ten rounds depending upon the experience of the boxers Through the early twentieth century it was common for fights to have unlimited rounds ending only when one fighter quit or the fight was stopped by police In the 1910s and 1920s a fifteen round limit gradually became the norm benefiting high energy fighters like Jack Dempsey 8 9 For decades boxing matches went on for 15 rounds but that was all changed on November 13 1982 following the death of Korean boxer Duk Koo Kim in a fight against Ray Mancini Studies following the fight have concluded that his brain had become more susceptible to damage after the 12th round 10 Exactly three months after the fatal fight the WBC reduced the number of their championship fights to 12 three minute rounds with 1 minute in between making the total bout 47 minutes long 11 Scoring EditIf the bout goes the distance meaning that the scheduled time has fully elapsed the outcome is determined by decision In the early days of boxing the referee decided the outcome by raising the winner s arm at the end of the bout a practice that is still used for some professional bouts in the United Kingdom In the early twentieth century it became the practice for the referee or judge to score bouts by the number of rounds won by each boxer To improve the reliability of scoring two ringside judges were added besides the referee and the winner was decided by majority decision Since the late twentieth century it has become common practice for the judges to be three ringside observers who award a score to each boxer for each round with the referee having the authority to deduct points for certain violations At the conclusion of the bout each of the three judges tallies the points awarded to each boxer A winner is declared if at least two judges score the bout in favour of the same boxer The result is either a win by unanimous decision by majority decision if the third judge scores a draw or by split decision if the third judge scores the bout in favour of the other boxer Otherwise the result is a draw a unanimous draw if all three judges scored the bout a draw a majority draw if two judges scored the bout a draw regardless of the result reached by the third judge or a split draw if each boxer was the winner on one scorecard and the third judge scored a draw 10 Point system Edit The 10 Point system was first introduced in 1968 by the World Boxing Council WBC as a rational way of scoring fights 12 It was viewed as such because it allowed judges to reward knockdowns and distinguish between close rounds as well as rounds where one fighter clearly dominated their opponent Furthermore the subsequent adoption of this system both nationally and internationally allowed for greater judging consistency which was something that was sorely needed at the time 12 There are many factors that inform the judge s decision but the most important of these are clean punching effective aggressiveness ring generalship and defense Judges use these metrics as a means of discerning which fighter has a clear advantage over the other regardless of how minute the advantage The development of the 10 Point System Edit Modern boxing rules were initially derived from the Marquess of Queensberry rules which mainly outlined core aspects of the sport such as the establishment of rounds and their duration as well as the determination of proper attire in the ring such as gloves and wraps 13 These rules did not however provide unified guidelines for scoring fights and instead left this in the hands of individual sanctioning organizations This meant that fights would be scored differently depending on the rules established by the governing body overseeing the fight It is from this environment that the 10 Point System was born 12 The adoption of this system both nationally and internationally established the foundation for greater judging consistency in professional boxing 12 14 How the System Works Edit In the event the winner of a bout cannot be determined by a knockout technical knockout or disqualification the final decision rests in the hands of three ringside judges approved by the commission The three judges are usually seated along the edge of the boxing ring separated from each other The judges are forbidden from sharing their scores with each other or consulting with one another 13 At the end of each round judges must hand in their scores to the referee who then hands them to the clerk who records and totals the final scores 13 Judges are to award 10 points less any point deductions to the victor of the round and a lesser score less any point deductions to the loser The losing contestant s score can vary depending on different factors The 10 point Must System is the most widely used scoring system since the mid twentieth century It is so named because a judge must award ten points to at least one fighter each round before deductions for fouls Most rounds are scored 10 9 with 10 points for the fighter who won the round and 9 points for the fighter the judge believes lost the round If a round is judged to be even it is scored 10 10 For each knockdown in a round the judge deducts an additional point from the fighter knocked down resulting in a 10 8 score if there is one knockdown or a 10 7 score if there are two knockdowns If the referee instructs the judges to deduct a point for a foul this deduction is applied after the preliminary computation So if a fighter wins a round but is penalised for a foul the score changes from 10 9 to 9 9 If that same fighter scored a knockdown in the round the score would change from 10 8 in his favour to 9 8 While uncommon if a fighter completely dominates a round but does not score a knockdown a judge can still score that round 10 8 Other scoring systems have also been used in various locations including the five point must system in which the winning fighter is awarded five points the loser four or fewer the one point system in which the winning fighter is awarded one or more points and the losing fighter is awarded zero and the rounds system which simply awards the round to the winning fighter In the rounds system the bout is won by the fighter determined to have won more rounds This system often used a supplemental points system generally the ten point must in the case of even rounds If a fight is stopped due to an injury that the referee has ruled to be the result of an unintentional foul the fight goes to the scorecards only if a specified number of rounds usually three sometimes four have been completed Whoever is ahead on the scorecards wins by a technical decision If the required number of rounds has not been completed the fight is declared a technical draw or a no contest If a fight is stopped due to a cut resulting from a legal punch the other participant is awarded a technical knockout win For this reason fighters often employ cutmen whose job is to treat cuts between rounds so that the boxer is able to continue despite the cut 15 Judges do not have the ability to disregard an official knockdown If the referee declares a fighter going down to be a knockdown the judges must score it as such Championships EditMain article List of current world boxing champions 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 16 After 1920 the National Boxing Association NBA began to sanction title fights Also during that time The Ring was founded and it listed champions and awarded championship belts The NBA was renamed in 1962 and became the World Boxing Association WBA The following year a rival body the World Boxing Council WBC was formed 17 In 1983 the International Boxing Federation IBF was formed In 1988 another world sanctioning body the World Boxing Organization WBO was formed In the 2010s a boxer had to be recognised by these four bodies to be the undisputed world champion minor bodies like the International Boxing Organization IBO and World Boxing Union WBU are disregarded Regional sanctioning bodies such as the North American Boxing Federation NABF the North American Boxing Council NABC and the United States Boxing Association USBA also awarded championships The Ring magazine also continued listing the world champion of each weight division and its rankings continue to be appreciated by fans Major sanctioning bodies EditSee also List of boxing organisations Worldwide organisations International Boxing Federation IBF World Boxing Association WBA World Boxing Council WBC World Boxing Organization WBO Citations EditCombat sports Professional boxing championship rules Government of Ontario 2016 June 28 Retrieved November 11 2018 Did Lennox Lewis Beat Evander Holyfield Methods for Analysing Small Sample Interrater Agreement Problems Herbert K H Lee Cork D amp Algranati D 2002 Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series D The Statistician 51 2 pp 129 146 Rules for IBF USBA amp Intercontinental Championship and Elimination Bouts IBF O 2015 June Retrieved November 7 2018 WORLD BOXING FEDERATION RULES amp REGULATIONS OF CHAMPIONSHIP CONTESTS Archived 2019 04 10 at the Wayback Machine WBF 2009 Retrieved November 6 2016 ABC Unified Rules of Boxing WBO E amp ABC 2008 July 3 Retrieved November 6 2018 References Edit a b Hjellen Bjornar December 16 2014 Braekhus fikk drommen oppfylt BBC News Walker Christopher 5 April 2022 Professional boxing approved in Cuba for first time since 1962 DAZN News UK DAZN Retrieved 22 April 2022 Leonard Cushing fight Part of the Library of Congress Inventing Entertainment educational website Retrieved 12 14 06 boxing gyms com Archived from the original on 2017 04 04 Retrieved 2006 09 01 Jack Dempsey Boxer boxrec com Archived from the original on 2006 04 10 Retrieved 2006 09 01 a b Robert G Rodriguez The regulation of boxing p32 McFarland amp Co Jefferson NC 2008 Harpo Speaks pp 59 60 Limelight Editions New York 1961 Olver Ron Collins Nigel Boxing History Rules Weight Divisions Notable Fighters amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 12 07 Bianco Massimiliano Loosemore Mike Daniele Gianlorenzo Palmieri Vincenzo Faina Marcello Zeppilli Paolo 2013 Amateur boxing in the last 59 years Impact of rules changes on the type of verdicts recorded and implications on boxers health British Journal of Sports Medicine 47 7 452 457 doi 10 1136 bjsports 2012 091771 ISSN 0306 3674 Goodman Margaret November 13 2007 Ring tragedy from a doctor s perspective ESPN com a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Sugden John Peter 1996 Boxing and society an international analysis Manchester UK Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 4320 4 OCLC 35174810 a b c d Tom Kaczmarek 1996 You be the boxing judge judging professional boxing for the TV boxing fan Pittsburgh Pa Dorrance Pub Co ISBN 978 0805939033 OCLC 39257557 a b c Lee Herbert K H Cork Daniel L Algranati David J 2002 Did Lennox Lewis Beat Evander Holyfield Methods for Analysing Small Sample Interrater Agreement Problems Journal of the Royal Statistical Society series D the statistician 51 2 129 146 doi 10 1111 1467 9884 00306 JSTOR 3650314 How it works Bert Randolph Sugar 2001 Boxing Archived 2006 06 19 at the Wayback Machine World Book Online Americas Edition The Police Gazette Encyclopaedia Britannica Piero Pini and Professor Ramon G Velasquez 2006 History amp Founding Fathers WBCboxing World Boxing Council WBC Official Site Archived from the original on 2003 12 16 Retrieved 2006 06 06 External links EditBoxing Record Archive registration required TOP Boxing websites Archived 2013 05 11 at the Wayback Machine The Ring magazine at the Wayback Machine archived 2018 11 12 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Professional boxing amp oldid 1126182976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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