Shame on the promoter as well. 30lbs smaller and on a 5 fight losing streak and they give him a fighter with a combined fight record of 15-1
It was a clear cut squash match. There's no way a guy with a 6-18 record who recent fought at 175lb catchweight should be fighting 240lb 15-1 guy
They purposely sent that guy out there to get knocked out brutally
What have you ever done to come as close as to what he’s accomplished? Ladies and gentlemen we have a hero on this site.Why couldn’t this happen to Sterling instead ?
Shame on the promoter as well. 30lbs smaller and on a 5 fight losing streak and they give him a fighter with a combined fight record of 15-1
It was a clear cut squash match. There's no way a guy with a 6-18 record who recent fought at 175lb catchweight should be fighting 240lb 15-1 guy
They purposely sent that guy out there to get knocked out brutally
Apparently, 13 boxers die per year on averageHas MMA avoided serious situations like this before or am I just ignorant to it happening?
As far as I know, boxing is far worse than MMA because of the obvious.
Apparently, 13 boxers die per year on average
At its peak, there were 233 boxing-related deaths in the 1920s, while there were just 103 in the 2000s.
There was a steep decline in the number of fatalities following the death of South Korean lightweight Duk-koo Kim, who died in 1983 four days after being knocked out by Ray “Boom Boom” Mancini in Las Vegas.
Subsequent championship bouts were reduced from 15 to 12 rounds in an attempt to limit long-term head injuries potentially suffered as a result of exhaustion.
A 2009 American Medical Association report estimated that there is a fatality rate in boxing of 0.13 deaths per 1,000 participants per year.
“This fatality rate is lower than or similar to the rates of other high-risk sports, such as college football, motorcycle racing, scuba diving, mountaineering, hang gliding, sky diving, and horse racing,” said the AMA report.
“Fatalities occur less often among amateur than professional boxers, averaging at about three deaths per year compared with 9–10 deaths per year from professional boxing.”
https://www.cnn.com/2019/10/17/sport/boxing-deaths-patrick-day-spt-intl-trnd/index.html
If Justin does not make a full recovery this will absolutely be the end of Bare Knuckle FC in the United States.
As it should be since the UFC & Bellator have managed to go 18 plus years thankfully without a fighter sustaining an injury that left them paralyzed.
I hope Bare Knuckle has adequate catastrophic injury insurance because they are going to be bankrupted (and rightfully so) if this man was paralyzed during a "bare knuckle boxing match".
I thought I would post this here as the BKFC events get play by play in the heavies, but please mods, feel free to move it.
So I hadn't heard any updates from the event management myself, and have been doing a little digging and found this Reddit post.
According to this post, once he was knocked out and faceplanted the canvas, he didn't move a muscle at all, horrifying the audience there.
A post from a user earlier posted this:
Here is the Podcast, where she talks about it around the 15 minute mark.
https://www.facebook.com/watch/live...0T-GK1C&v=205651178246735&ref=watch_permalink
Please pray for Justin Thornton.
I hope he makes a full recovery, and my thoughts are with him, his friends and family at this tragic time.
Shame on the promoter as well. 30lbs smaller and on a 5 fight losing streak and they give him a fighter with a combined fight record of 15-1
It was a clear cut squash match. There's no way a guy with a 6-18 record who recent fought at 175lb catchweight should be fighting 240lb 15-1 guy
They purposely sent that guy out there to get knocked out brutally
Shame on the promoter as well. 30lbs smaller and on a 5 fight losing streak and they give him a fighter with a combined fight record of 15-1
It was a clear cut squash match. There's no way a guy with a 6-18 record who recent fought at 175lb catchweight should be fighting 240lb 15-1 guy
They purposely sent that guy out there to get knocked out brutally
boxing also has the 10 count and stop on knockdowns. so you might see someone get repeatedly rocked and concussed every round. MMA they may eat a few more punches but will likely get stopped without repeated trauma upon traumaApparently, 13 boxers die per year on average
At its peak, there were 233 boxing-related deaths in the 1920s, while there were just 103 in the 2000s.
There was a steep decline in the number of fatalities following the death of South Korean lightweight Duk-koo Kim, who died in 1983 four days after being knocked out by Ray “Boom Boom” Mancini in Las Vegas.
Subsequent championship bouts were reduced from 15 to 12 rounds in an attempt to limit long-term head injuries potentially suffered as a result of exhaustion.
A 2009 American Medical Association report estimated that there is a fatality rate in boxing of 0.13 deaths per 1,000 participants per year.
“This fatality rate is lower than or similar to the rates of other high-risk sports, such as college football, motorcycle racing, scuba diving, mountaineering, hang gliding, sky diving, and horse racing,” said the AMA report.
“Fatalities occur less often among amateur than professional boxers, averaging at about three deaths per year compared with 9–10 deaths per year from professional boxing.”
https://www.cnn.com/2019/10/17/sport/boxing-deaths-patrick-day-spt-intl-trnd/index.html
My guess is that MMA has been absurdly lucky not to have many high profile deaths. Having so many potential ways for a fight to end in MMA probably helps, tired guys get choked out and limbs can snap every ppv.
Boxing is more brutal in terms of prolonged punishment
yes. Are you new to prizefighting or something. Those guys are bodies they know what they sign up for.
this is a horrible situation but this isn’t caused by a punch it’s the way he fell down.