Thursday, February 9, 2012

Boxing: Instruction At The Fitness Center

October 3, 2010 by  
Filed under Health Fitness

When competing in boxing, there is often a huge quantity of difficulty that 1 can encounter since boxing is a activity that requires full stamina and rigid coaching. It demands discipline to the highest level. If you don’t agree with the idea of being beaten down until your bones break, then you ought to quit even prior to the coaching begins. If you are up for it, then you have to start training your entire body, thoughts and soul. You have to really like and appreciate boxing in order to stay long in the game or sport.

Carlos Palomino: Mexico’s Welterweight Boxing Legend

June 14, 2010 by  
Filed under Hobbies

Its not whether you win or lose, its how you play the game. That may be the oldest sports cliche in the world, but for the mainstream sports media, and the fans that depend on them for their information, its just not true. Its all about whether you win or lose. Turn on any sports talk radio show and you’ll be subjected to all manner of banal discussion to reinforce my point. Karl Malone and Dan Marino weren’t truly great because they never won a championship. The Utah Jazz and Buffalo Bills weren’t great teams because they were unable to take their sports ultimate honor. If teams and players aren’t being berated for a failure to win, they’re simply forgotten. If you can name the losing team in the past ten NBA championships you’ve got a disturbing knowledge of meaningless sports trivia.

Memories Of A Champion: Alexis Arguello

May 11, 2010 by  
Filed under Hobbies

Alexis Arguello, one of the greatest boxers to ever compete , was found dead in his Managua, Nicaragua home in early July of an apparent suicide. He was 57 years old. Arguello was found with a gunshot wound to his chest, but his high political stature in the country meant that an investigation would be forthcoming to verify that it was indeed self inflected. Arguello was the mayor of Nicaragua’s capital city at the time of his death.

Boxing Flashback: Manny Pacquiao Vs. Oscar De La Hoya

April 14, 2010 by  
Filed under Hobbies

Fighters seldom grow old gracefully, at least in the competitive sense. The exceptions–Archie Moore, George Foreman, James Toney–are few and far between. More often than not a professional prizefighter goes from being a legitimate contender to the brink of retirement in a matter of minutes. It can happen that suddenly, and most recently Mexican superstar Oscar De La Hoya was the latest victim. He looked utterly lost as a relentless Manny Pacquiao used his speed and workrate to completely frustrate De La Hoya en route to a 8th round TKO victory at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

Sweden\’s Heavyweight Boxing Champ Ingemar Johansson

February 28, 2010 by  
Filed under Hobbies

Ingemar Johannson died in a Swedish nursing home in January 2009 at the age of 76. He’d lived in the nursing home in the Swedish coastal city of Kungsbacka since the mid’90′s when he was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and dementia, and had suffered from a tough case of pneumonia immediately prior to his death.

The Historical Roots Of MMA: Muhammad Ali Vs. Antonio Inoki

December 21, 2009 by  
Filed under Hobbies

Decades before mixed martial arts became popular in the United States, events matching fighters of different fighting disciplines were very common in Japan. They weren’t called “mixed martial arts” at the time, but that’s essentially what they were.There’s an entire history of pro wrestlers fighting specialists from other martial arts (particularly judo) that were leaving out, but during the’70′s Antonio Inoki began to put the concept of “mixed martial arts” on the map with his matches against fighters from other disciplines.