Because boxing is dead. It requires knowledge to appreciate its strategy and heart. It seems slow and dull to those who rally to pro wrestling and so-called mixed martial arts and The Rock’s upcoming version of American Gladiators. Why is football more popular than baseball? People want the quick fix, and that which they can understand instantly.
Isn’t it interesting that hockey fans will watch their sport for the fights, not for the stick and skating skills, but they don’t watch boxing?
I understand your disappointment. I consider American boxing, like Gung Fu (Chinese boxing), to be a martial art. Fun fact: it is the only martial art in over 3,000 forms of martial art, to employ the uppercut as a technique. We who study the Asian fighting arts do well to learn from the arts of such as Sugar Ray Leonard and Muhammad Ali, whose “rope a dope” strategy helped him to overcome a MUCH more physically powerful opponent, George Forman. There are three types of opponents: the strong opponent, the aggressive opponent and the intelligent opponent. If you face a strong opponent, you use his strength against him. Ali relaxed against the ropes of the boxing ring, letting the ropes absorb the shock of Forman’s blows while he tried to pummel Ali. He used Forman’s aggression to tire his opponent. Ali used his pre-bout taunts to dull Forman’s intelligence, because anger triggers a hormone that actually lowers human intelligence. Muhammad Ali took George Forman apart by utilizing the three principals of martial arts combat; but the value of sport such as this is not apparent to, nor valued by, the masses.
PS If you face an opponent who is strong, aggressive AND intelligent . . . Good luck!
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