A "Boxing" Robot…Sometimes
Truth is stranger than fiction! According to news sources (ABC News Online),
reported in Dec. of 2002, they reported that
Chinese scientists have constructed a boxing robot. Apparently a team of
scientists from Beijing University have constructed a life size robot
capable of playing China’s traditional for of shadow boxing – TaiChi.
The robot has 32 joints and walks at one kilometre per hour.
Husband - Wife Make Pro
Debuts on Same Card!
October 9, 2008
On Thursday, October 9th, at the Battle in the Ballroom boxing event,
held at the Irvine Marriott Hotel, in Irvine, California, an interesting
combination of scheduled bouts made this card unique. On the undercard,
they featured a history-first when married couple, Ana Tangero and Ricky
Tangero, both made their pro debut. Bantamweight Ana Tangaro, 116¾, won
her pro debut by unanimous decision over Michelle Nelson, 116¼, while
her husband did not fare as well when he lost by a decision.
Paret Defeats Emile
Griffith September 30, 1961-and dies six months later in
rematch
September 30, 2008 Video
of fatal 12th Round!
(SEPT 30) Forty-seven years ago, on
September 30, 1961, Benny ‘Kid’ Paret, 35-12-3 (10KO), fought Emile
Griffith in a world title welterweight bout, defeating Griffith on
points in New York. Paret then rematched Griffith on April 3, 1962,
and was stopped in the 12th round, after taking on a barrage of
punishment..Full Story
A father, son and
daughter fight on same boxing card by Mike
Collins
News-Gazette Sports Writer
November 14, 2006
MUNCIE – It was another history making
evening Saturday night at the downtown Muncie Horizon Center as
Richard Crabtree Entertainment hosted yet another outstanding King
of the Ring boxing program.
A large majority of the fine crowd on hand came to witness boxing
history. Full Story
with Photos
Women Boxing Outlawed
After Male
Boxer Dies After the
death of a male fighter in October of 1997, the
Federazioni Pugilistica Italiana outlawed female boxing
entirely. They even stopped a televised WIBF flyweight fight
that was to be in Milan to enforce this ban. The police were
brought in to restore the peace and order.
Woman Boxer Goes on a month long hunger
strike against Don King....1987!
Lady
Tyger Trimiar, former World lightweight champion, made
headlines in April of 1987, when she went on a "hunger
strike" for over a month, losing 30 lbs., in protest to
how women boxers were treated and paid. Her hunger strike was
directed at infamous DON KING. Two other female fighters were
also on a hunger strike along with Trimiar, but the other two
backed out. TRIMIAR said that if women did not get more
recognition, that they would continue to be regarded as a
"Novelty" act, and that there would be no future for
women boxers. The women picketed the RAY LEONARD-MARVIN HAGLER
fight on April 6, 1987 in Las Vegas, protesting promoter
ROBERT ARUMS refusal to work with female boxers.
Laila Ali may not have been able to spar
with her famous dad--but Tonawanda did in 1976
Jackie Tonawanda got the
opportunity to work out in the gym and spar with MUHAMMAD ALI On
September 2, 1976,
at his training camp at the Concord Hotel Kiamesha Lake, N.Y.
TONAWANDA'S remarks about ALI: "Ali's hands were faster than
ever, I'm glad they weren't touching me. His combinations were
beautiful--a jet plane would do second to him."
Jackie Tonawanda Spars With
Muhammad Ali - September 26, 1976
got the
opportunity to work out in the gym and spar with MUHAMMAD ALI at his
training camp at the Concord Hotel Kiamesha Lake, N.Y. TONAWANDA'S
remarks about ALI: "Ali's hands were faster than ever, I'm glad they
weren't touching me. His combinations were beautiful--a jet plane would
do second to him."
Fredia "The Cheetah" Gibbs Makes
Movie
FREDIA "THE CHEETAH" GIBBS made her debut in a movie
that is based on a "Rocky" type story, about a Latino family who loses
their young son that is a fighter. The daughter decides to following
the boy's footsteps in an effort to fulfill his dream vicariously.
GIBBS is the villain in the movie, and the movie is called "Knockout."
Boxing is a Manly Science and Art
- January 1995
STEVE ACUNTO, who served on the
NEW YORK STATE ATHLETIC COMMISSION for 49 years, proclaimed that BOXING
is a manly science and art, who at the time in 1995 was teaching the
only accredited boxing course in the country at Westchester Community
College. He went on to say that he had women begin to sign up for his
class in the last three years, and were entering the ring. ACUNTO who
fought as a professional in the 1940’s declared that he DOES NOT THINK
women should box.
Zambia Decides to
Introduce Bill to Allow Women to Boxing and Wrestle - November 1994
Zambia’s Sports Minister
Patrick Kafumukache took a jab at tradition as he promised to introduce
a bill that would allow women to participate in boxing and wrestling.
The sports minister felt that it would cause a few cultural and
traditional anxieties, but that the country needed to move forward with
the rest of the world.
On the day
another man dies of injuries suffered in fight-female amateurs win the
right to take part in the sport - Nov. 1996
Boxing faced renewed criticism when on the day another male fighter
died after fighting, women and girls aged 10 and over would be allowed
to fight as amateurs for the first time in Britain. The coincidence of
the announcement from the Amateur Boxing Association of England and the
death of the Italian Fabrizio De Chiara, a 25 year-old middleweight,
after collapsing at the end of a title fight, sparked an angry reaction
from campaigners against the sport. But among the voices raised in
concern about women’s new rights to fight was a medical expert who has
been one of boxing’s highest-profile defenders. Dr. Adrian Whiteson,
chief medical adviser to the British Boxing Board of Control, said: "I’m
terribly concerned about this. I don’t think enough is known about the
potential risks to women for such a decision to be made. Blows around
the breast or chest can induce bruising, and the nodule which is created
is difficult to distinguish from cancer.
MAN VS. WOMEN BOUT
WAS IT REALLY SANCTIONED?
OCTOBER 9, 1999
This fight
was declared "Internationally" and from the
"state of Washington" as the "first-ever sanctioned" bout between a male and
a female, Margaret MacGregor vs. Loi Chow. But,
few knew that the Association of Boxing Commissions (ABC)
instructed Fight Fax, the official boxing record-keeper
designated by the ABC under federal law, to list this event as
an "exhibition" for both boxers.
They were quoted as saying in a press release, "It is
the position of the ABC not to recognize the results from the
proposed male vs. female match-up scheduled for this weekend
in Seattle, Washington. The ABC has informed Fight Fax,
the official boxing record-keeper designated by the ABC under
federal law, to list this event as an exhibition for both
boxers. This action is being taken to
express the ABC's strong opposition to any type of male vs.
female boxing event that will be recognized by the standard
set by this Association." Dated October 6, 1999,
three days before the fight! TL Fox
Mia "The Knockout" St. John got
an Opportunity to be on Pacific Blue - October 10, 1999----But WHO
DO YOU THINK she played?
Pacific Blue featured Mia St.
John as herself.... It's was an episode about
Mia St. John and all the criticism she was getting as a fighter, and
it turns out that another female fighter is so jealous of her that
she tried to kill her.
You have seen the mixed match fight--the
0-3 fighters on major boxing cards ---but have you seen "Foxy Boxing?"
--It's been tried also- 1979
"Foxy Boxing
Era" In 1989, These women would set
the trend in boxing in skimpy bikinis. Bikini-clad female boxers
punched and pounded their way in clubs like the Coconut Club in
Southampton. They call themselves the "Foxy Fighting
Knockouts." The weekly two-hours shows had created a not to
favorable response with the community. Apparently before foxy boxing
took hold in Hampton, it had been a rage for a long time in other
Long Island and New York area nightspots.`
So did you really think that no other women ever tried to get into a Mixed
Match before the Margaret Macgregor versus Loi Chow bout?
Shirley "Zebra
Girl" Tucker - Matches
between male and female were approved in November
of 1982 -After the legality of boxing matches between
women and men was argued by the American Civil Liberties
Union, the California Athletic Commission voted to approve
professional boxing matches between the sexes effective
immediately. DON FRASER, the commissions
executive officer said that they had no recourse but to
approve it. The only female at the time that expressed an
interest into fighting men was Shirley "Zebra Girl"
Tucker.
Mama’s manly art; once the best female boxer in
Cuba, Silvia Torrer now manages a mean-Street Gym. Even at 81, she still
packs a wallop,
BY MATT SCHUDEL
Six mornings a week, without fail,
a tiny, fierce and lovable woman comes to work in a steamy cinder-block
shell that holds the heart like a boiled egg. Before 12 noon, the
thermometer in Silvia Torres’ office registers 90 degrees. By 4 pm, her
stifling domain is filled with men sweating toward a perfection of
fitness, alertness and deadly strength. And ageless Silvia, who claims
to be one year older than she really is, scurries across the concrete
floor carrying a bucket full of spit. She is the only woman in this raw,
unreformed world of masculine power. "My entire life is boxing," she
says. " This is what makes me happy."
Woman Has to Box on the Job -
She Files Lawsuit - June 17, 1994
A Cliffside Park Woman, Vivian
Mondello, went to work as a saleswoman at a Manhattan company. She
said that she was not advised that her job description included boxing.
She claimed that she was left "disfigured for life" by a match she
alleged her bosses ordered. The woman sued for $6 million. In her
lawsuit, first filed in state court and then moved to federal court in
Manhattan. Unknown about outcome of the case.
Two Women were
"Knocked out" before even getting in the ring! - February 19, 1994
Two women due to compete in
Britain’s first full-scale women’s boxing event were "knocked out"
before even getting into the ring. Both contestants were unable to
participate after getting broken noses prior to their scheduled fight.
One fighter got a broken nose when she was sparring a man and the other
was hurt in a street attack.
Boxing Isn't
Good for your Health -
Growing Evidence
Copyright 1990 The Jerusalem Post, The Jerusalem Post, November
4, 1990, Sunday, Features, 1277 words, BOXING ISN'T GOOD
FOR YOUR HEALTH, JudySiegel-Itzkovitch, GROWING EVIDENCE, Report of the
health dangers to amateur and professional boxers has moved doctors to
call for limits on the practice of the sport and demand better
protective measures for the fighters. Under pressure from the medical
profession, boxing has been banned in Poland, Sweden, Norway and
Nicaragua, and in England it is forbidden in schools and the army. Here,
according to Nora Hanne-Paparo of the Wingate Institute, the Hapoel
sports organization eliminated boxing from its sports program, but it
was reintroduced about five years ago. Writing in the latest issue of
Harefuah, the journal of the Israel Medical Association, Hanne-Paparo
found that there were 353 recorded boxing deaths around the world
between 1945 and 1983, but in recent years, this rate has decreased.
More frequent are serious injuries, especially to the brain and eyes
(longtime world-champion boxer Muhammed Ali developed symptoms of
Parkinson's disease that experts say were caused by his injuries).
Autopsies of boxers who died in the ring showed that every blow that
results in a knockout or knockdown causes brain damage and - potentially
- death.
Women Boxers Must Wait Beyond 1996 Olympics - March 1990
Even though women's boxing had
been sanctioned in the United States in 1994, the sport still did not
attract enough women for the sport's governing body to allow them to box
in the 1996 Olympics. Susannah Nix, speaking for the U.S. Amateur
Boxing Inc. in Colorado Springs, Colorado, said that as of February 28,
1995, there were 317 registered female boxers compared to 24,000 men.
Husband and Wife Fight A lot!
Husband and wife, Curt
and Pauletta Muhl fought a lot. They started slugging it out in their
living room of their mobile home in Iowa in 1984. Their kids would watch
on as they boxed, and the children would make popcorn and watch. After
she started boxing with her husband who was an ex-golden gloves champ,
she walked into a a boxing gym, and found herself less than welcome.
Muhl did overcome the ups and downs of boxing, and eventually compiled a
boxing record as of 1987 of 3-2. She also won a title on Jan. 17, 1987
in a two-round decision in Battle Creek against Andrea Deshong of
Cambridge, Ohio, to win the Professional American Karate Assn.’s world
featherweight title.
Woman vetoed as
a judge in a world boxing title fight
- January 1995
A woman was vetoed in January 1985, as a judge in a world boxing
title fight because the challenger’s manager said that a
woman’s place was in the home. Carol Polis, an American,
was on a list of possible officials for the World Boxing association
welterweight match.
"Hardest Knockout in women's
boxing in the 80's"
This honor goes to none other than
GRACIELAS CASILLAS. The date was September 18, 1980. Her manager yelled to CASILLAS, "Tres Derechos" (three rights). CASILLAS proceeded to bomb her opponent, Cha Cha Wright with a powerful
and accurate right cross, followed by a right uppercut that seemed to
snap Wright's head back. Wright laid on the floor for nearly nine
minutes, before she finally rose to her feet.
Funniest Knock out in Female
Boxing - 1976
Caroline Svendsen vs
Ersi Arviso was knocked out 1:26 in the second round at Incline Village,
in Nevada, when she went to adjust her protective cups that had slipped
in her bra. She stopped to fix it, and Ersi KO'd Svendsen. She
delivered a smashing right to Svensen's jaw and that was the end of the
fight.
First
Husband - Wife fight on same
Boxing Card" - November 19, 1979
On November 16, 1979, Lilly Rodriguez, a kickboxer
and boxer, and William "Blinky" Rodriguez made history as the first
husband and wife to box on the same professional card. "You have
no idea the pressure she put on me," said Blinky Rodriguez.
"She (Lilly) went out there and dazzled them." Both Blinky and
Lilly won their matches. The event was promoted by Don Fraser.
Update: Lilly Rodriguez passed away on January 13, 2007 at the age of
59 years old.
Women's Boxing
promoter,
Before his time - 1970's / 1980's
VERN
STEVENSON had been a keen supporter of female boxing in
the 70’s and 80’s. STEVENSON, an old pugilist inducted into Canada’s Boxing
Hall of Fame in 1975, believed that women would one day fight for big money.
He also thought that women would some day fight men in the lighter weight
classes. Vern invested $200,000 toward the promotion of female boxing. In
1983, STEVENSON staged the women's first 15-round bantamweight world
championship before more than 1,000 crowd, in Albuquerque, New Mexico. (TL
Fox tried to locate Vern Stevenson, but unfortunately he passed away.
Fredia "The
Cheetah" Gibbs featured in Movie
FREDIA "THE CHEETAH"
GIBBS made her debut in a movie that is based on a "Rocky" type
story, about a Latino family who loses their young son that is a
fighter. The daughter decides to following the boy's footsteps in an
effort to fulfill his dream vicariously. GIBBS is the villain in the
movie, and the movie is called "Knockout."
Woman Has to Box on the Job -
She Files Lawsuit - June 17, 1994
A Cliffside Park Woman, Vivian
Mondello, went to work as a saleswoman at a Manhattan company. She
said that she was not advised that her job description included boxing.
She claimed that she was left "disfigured for life" by a match she
alleged her bosses ordered. The woman sued for $6 million. In her
lawsuit, first filed in state court and then moved to federal court in
Manhattan. Unknown about outcome of the case.
Cheryl Brown of Waterville, Maine, set a record for that state when she
stopped Pat Poland, in only ten seconds at the Augusta Civic Center.
(1982)
That was the quickest
kayo either among the pros or the amateurs. Ms. Brown's kayo
was even quicker than the one recorded by Al Couture over
Ralph Walton back on September 26, 1946,