Hmmm, well, in the Greek Olmypics the fighters boxed each other bare-knuckle and the fighting went on for hours, without rounds and without water. But the fights were also a lot more bloody and I don't think involved the kind of heavy-on punching modern boxing does. The punches were heavy and hard, but I mean there wouldn't be soooooooo many done to each fighter every 3 minutes the way there are in modern boxing (I don't think so anyways).
I saw on a kung-fu documentary a guy who went to Shaolin Temple to train and he saw a monk doing western boxing, so he said to the monk, "Why are you doing western boxing??" and them monk said, "Well, overall, kung-fu is superior, but western boxing is more practical."
Boxing is very good also because punching is like humanity's most primal fighting instinct. Any idiot knows about making a fist, in every culture. Granted, not everyone knows HOW to properly make a fist, but everyone knows the technique: "Curl up fingers into ball, punch at opponent, damage occurs to them hopefully."
I saw on a kung-fu documentary a guy who went to Shaolin Temple to train and he saw a monk doing western boxing, so he said to the monk, "Why are you doing western boxing??" and them monk said, "Well, overall, kung-fu is superior, but western boxing is more practical."
Boxing is very good also because punching is like humanity's most primal fighting instinct. Any idiot knows about making a fist, in every culture. Granted, not everyone knows HOW to properly make a fist, but everyone knows the technique: "Curl up fingers into ball, punch at opponent, damage occurs to them hopefully."
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