Archive for June, 2009

History of Boxing

Sunday, June 14th, 2009
Timothy Hampshire asked:


Boxing was among the most popular sports practiced in ancient Greece and was one of the former disciplines inside the Olympic Games. Romans adopted this sport as they did with almost all the Greek culture, but in Rome, the contenders wore metal protectors for fighting in order to protect their hands. Such protectors were called “cestus” and they had nail in the exterior so more than once the rival was killed during a boxing match.

Although boxing and fighting have been always confused as exchangeable terms they are different sports since what it was generically called fighting more often refers to wrestling. However, boxing is as older as over 4,000 years BC. The first boxing records come from Egypt and East before it became a classic sport in Greece. In modern times, boxing appears in the records after the Duke of Alberman organized in England a fight between his butler and the butcher around 1681.

From then onwards, boxing only appears, as we know it today until the 18th century when it was practiced for money, but the boxing gloves were not part of the equipment of a boxer yet. However, it is known that the money involved in those matches came from the spectators making bets on the contenders.

In 1719 boxing had its first heavyweight champion, the English James Figg, and another champion John Broughton formulated the first boxing regulations in 1743, regulations that were modified and changed for about a whole century.

In 1865, the Marquess of Queensberry implemented the regulations that remain until today that require wearing gloves, hence the last bare fits heavyweight champion was John L. Sullivan who fought against Jake Kilrain in 1889. Even thought, he lost the championship in New Orleans, Louisiana on September 7, 1892 when he was defeated by James Corbett in a fight in which he had to wear gloves.

The first lighter-weight world champion recognized was the English boxer Billy Edwards who won the title fighting against the U.S. boxer Tom Collins, in a historic fight that began on May 24, 1871 and ended on December 6 of that same year. The day of the fighting the police appeared on the scene and the boxers were arrested, but resumed the match two days later after paying S1000, but later they were taken to prison and only after appealing to the court they regained their freedom and the right to conclude the match that year.

With the turn of the century, boxing became popular worldwide and the first remarkable fighting of 1900 took place in Coney Island with a match between Jeffries versus Corbett. In 1908, Jack Johnson defeated Tommy Burns in Sidney, Australia, and became their first black boxer to win a heavyweight title in the boxing story.

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BoxingBetting

Boxing: 80’s Vs 00’s?

Saturday, June 13th, 2009
steve h asked:


With all the so called/self proclaimed great boxers around at the moment/recent History. I thought it would be interesting to compare them to one of my favourite era’s of boxing the 80’s. Below I have matched up 2 boxers from each era from most divisions to see how they fare,let me know what you think. The 80’s wins by some distance for me.

Heavyweight

Larry Holmes v Lennox Lewis (Lewis)
Mike Tyson v Vitali Klitschko (Tyson)

Cruiserweight

Evander Holyfield ( No current competition)

L.Heavyweight

Michael Spinks Vs Roy Jones Jnr (Spinks just)
Virgil Hill Vs Antonio Tarver (Hill)

S.Middleweight

Joe Calzaghe (No 80’s competition)

Middleweight

Marvin Hagler vs Bernard Hopkins (Hagler)
Michael Nunn vs Jermain Taylor (Nunn)

L.Middle

Thomas Hearns vs Felix Trinidad (Hearns)
Mike McCallum vs Ronald ‘Winky’ Wright (McCallum)

Welterweight

Sugar Ray Leonard vs Oscar De La Hoya (Sugar Ray)
Donald Curry vs Shane Mosley (Curry)

L.Welter

Aaron Pryor vs Ricky Hatton (Pryor)
Hector Camacho vs Miguel Angel Cotto (Camacho)

Lightweight

Alexis Arguello vs Diego Corrales (Arguello)
Pernell Whitaker vs Floyd Mayweather Jnr (Whitaker Just)

S.Feather

Julio Cesar Chavez vs Marco Antonio Barrera (Chavez)
Azumah Nelson vs Manny Pacquiao (Nelson)

Featherweight

Salvador Sanchez vs Erik Morales (Sanchez)
Eusebio Pedroza vs Juan Manual Marquez (Pedroza)

S.Bantam

Wilfredo Gomez vs Rafael Marquez (Gomez)

So as you see 80’s by a landslide. The list didn’t even include Roberto Duran, Julian Jackson,Wilfred Benitez to name a few. It just shows how strong boxing was back then.

Bxoing

please help can i view boxing on line or a clip?

Saturday, June 13th, 2009
lilloca5555 asked:


Apr 27, 2008 … Boxing Round By Round: Jessie Feliciano vs. Delvin Rodriguez. Foxwoods in Mashantucket, CT, welterweight …March 23, 2007

Boxint

Proper Packaging Design Can Improve More Than Your Bottom Line

Thursday, June 11th, 2009
Kenn Gividen asked:


Ron had a unique way of making boxes fit his custom-made marble sinks: He used a box knife.

Granted, it wasn’t the most efficient means of forming the folds over his precious cargo, but it served the purpose and, for Ron’s crew, it was good enough.

When I walked in his shop it was obvious Ron had a booming business. It was also obvious his current box supplier was lacking in creative design skills; hence the box knife.

And so, with Ron’s permission, we loaded a sink or two in the car and headed back to our design room in Seymour, Indiana. Our team of design experts whittled away — not with a razor-encased contraption, but with a high-priced, computer-driven cutting board.

The end result amazed Ron. The new box formed perfectly over his various products. It was stronger and cheaper to boot. What’s more, we added cut-out handles to accommodate Ron’s crew which included a few gals who toted the hefty boxes once they were filled with sinks. One handle on the side; one on the end — made perfectly to fit the arm spans of the Ron’s workers.

A common feat

It’s typical. Guys like Ron know that packaging is an important aspect of their business. But, alas, they’re serviced by box salesmen who know more about closing a deal than designing boxes.

That where I come in.

I earn my keep by showing manufacturing companies how to save money by improving their packaging.

A company in Columbus, Indiana — my home turf — was shipping its goods in plain brown boxes; the same boxes that displayed their products on store shelves.

The purchasing agent was encouraged to test white boxes (the color is actually clay, but looks white to shoppers) to see if sales improved. Scepticism was, of course, expected. Clay boxes are, after all, more expensive than the normal brown fare. But once the test was run, and furniture displayed in clay boxes out-paced identical product in brown boxes, the buyers saw the light. Gone were the brown boxes. They were replaced with the more expensive clay-colored boxes. The reason? The substantially increased furniture sales more than paid for the higher-priced new packaging.

Lone Ranger of boxes

When I was a kid I imagined myself being the Lone Ranger. One feat at a time I would save the day then ride off in the sunset with my faithful companion, Tonto.

Turns out that box selling differs little from the Lone Ranger, except I drive a car and not a horse, and my partner is a box designer, not a faithful Indian companion.

The scourge of the packaging industry isn’t the black-hatted villain from the old westerns. Rather, the problem lies in less-then-competent design. A few subtle changes in box design can save money in labor while earning money by presenting a positive product display.

At Boxes.me  our goal is to save our clients more than cold cash. We strive to remove the aggravation of working with poorly-crafted containers, shallow designs and, yes,  box knives. Our goal is to improve the entire packaging process. Sometimes we save our clients by providing them less expensive boxes. More often we target their bottom line with workable solutions that can only be delivered by a top-notch design team.



Boxing Beting

Should boxing fans ban Floyd Mayweather?

Thursday, June 11th, 2009
A.D. #28 2k yards asked:


Should we all unite until Floyd stops fighting old guys and little people? Should Floyd have to fight the top Welterweights on ESPN to gain some actual status in boxing history?
If Mayweather ever wants to be known as anything but a joke, he should fight Mosley, Cotto, Williams right now! If he wants to ever have Oscar’s resume, he should fight Pavlik like Oscar did Hopkins.

Fighting 35 year old JMM who is 3-4 weight classes smaller than him should earn Mayweather a trip to the Hall Of Shame!

Agree?

Boxxing