- Joined
- Aug 13, 2013
- Messages
- 25,292
- Reaction score
- 4,098
People think soccer kicks are worse. To the brain it's honestly no worse than this.
People think soccer kicks are worse. To the brain it's honestly no worse than this.
![]()
![]()
Plus, you'll rarely be going into a ground strike like you might with a standing one.
Here is a list of boxing's fatalities. You might have to flip through a bit, it can only list 200 per page.
http://boxrec.com/media/index.php/Category:Ring_Fatalities
So... I'm gonna say boxing is more dangerous.
(edit: Just in case anyone doesn't bother to read the list it's mostly very old fights, modern boxing is much safer than it used to be.)
I don't know enough about the intricacies of either to make an educated comment. However, there is always this to consider:
![]()
Unless you fight palhares
and Overeem
I remember having the realization a few years back that in terms of long term brain damage football is almost certainly worse than MMA. Concussions pile up similarly, but football involves a lot more subconcussive damage; players are hitting each other at speed with their full weight on every play. The numbers coming out of autopsies on NFL players are staggering, with over 90% of players showing permanent damage from repeated brain trauma.
That made me feel a lot better about MMA and a lot worse about football.
Boxing has also been around more than 100 years longer. And it was held in a time with almost no governance on rules. Of course many would die over that time period (given it's brutal nature).
I'm not undercutting it's danger, because it definitely has it. I'm just saying, grain of salt there buddy.
OK, lets look at sanctioned boxing vs the worst most unsanctioned era of MMA 93-94. Back when MMA was human **** fighting.
1993: Yasuji Hamakawa died after being knocked down twice in one round.
1994: Wangila Napunyi collapsed after being stopped by David Gonzalez. He died after an operation to remove a blood clot from his brain.
1994: British bantamweight Bradley Stone died from a massive blood clot on the brain after losing to Richie Wenton.
1994: Michael Bentt was rushed to hospital and had to retire after his WBO heavyweight title defeat against Herbie Hide in London.
MMA had 0 in the same time frame.
In fact MMA regardless of sanctioning has had about 10 known deaths. Boxing has had over 100 deaths since UFC 1 (with the data set cutting out at 2008). It's a ratio of 10 to 1 in the modern era. It's just not close.