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Boxing Betting

Boxing Betting - History - Tips - Glossary

Boxing Glossary

Bantamweight: A weight division, with an upper limit of 118 pounds.

Bout: A boxing contest, also called a "match."

Breadbasket: The stomach.

Break: A referee's order to step back from a clinch.

Clinch: To hold an opponent's body with one or both arms to prevent or hinder punches.

Combination: Punches thrown in sequence, such as a left jab, followed by a straight right, followed by a left hook

Corner: One of the two assigned corners of the ring where boxers rest between rounds.

Count: A referee's count to 10 after a boxer has been knocked down. If the boxer is still down at the end of the count, the fight is considered a knockout.

Counter-punch: A counterattack, begun immediately after an opponent throws a punch, exploiting the opening in the opponent's position.

Cross: A hook thrown over an opponent's punch.

Cup: The equipment protecting a boxer's genitals, lower abdomen and lower back.

Cut Man: The second who handles cuts sustained by a fighter during a bout.

Decision: The official outcome of the fight, as decided by the referee and/or judges.

Featherweight: A weight division, with an upper limit of 126 pounds.

Feint: To fake a punch in order to judge an opponent's reactions and force him to open into a vulnerable position.

Foul: Any infringement of boxing rules, such as hitting below the belt, holding or kicking.

Heavyweight: The highest weight division in boxing, with no upper weight limit.

Hook: A short power punch in which the boxer swings from the shoulder with his elbow bent, bringing his fist from the side toward the center. One of the most technically difficult punches to throw because it requires perfect precision, timing and coordination.

Jab: A quick, straight punch thrown with the lead hand. Often the most important punch in a boxer's arsenal because of its power and its ability to set up other punches. Can also be used as a way to gauge distance, to keep an opponent wary, or as a defensive move to slow an advancing opponent.

Judge(s): One or more officials who sit at ringside to score a bout.

Knockout: A ruling by the referee stopping a fight and declaring one boxer the winner if his opponent has been down for a count of 10.

Mouthpiece: A piece of plastic used to protect a fighter's teeth and prevent him from biting his tongue.

Lightweight: A weight division, with an upper limit of 135 pounds.

Neutral Corner: The two corners not assigned to either boxer.

No Decision: A bout in which no winner is declared by the judges.

Queensberry Rules: The set of rules that govern modern boxing, developed by the Eighth Marquess of Queensberry in the mid-19th century.

Referee: The official who stands in the ring to ensure that a bout is fair and that the fighters remain able to box.

Ringside Physician:  The doctor who checks the condition of competitors before the bout and determines whether a hurt boxer can continue. The physician has the power to stop a bout at any time.

Round: One of a series of periods, separated by rests, which make up a boxing bout.

RSC (Referee Stops Contest): An official result that follows when a boxer is outclassed, has been hurt, or reached the standing-eight count limit. In the official results the winner's name is given followed by RSC and the round the bout was ended in, ie. Jim Smith, RSC (4).

RSCH (Referee Stops Contest Head): A variation on RSC, which is the result when a referee ends a bout because a boxer has taken too many head blows.

Scoring blow:  A punch that lands cleanly on the opponent's head or torso and is struck with the knuckles, signified by the white stripe on the glove. If three judges agree within a one-second window that the blow was clean, the boxer gets a point

Second: A person other than the coach who stands in a boxer's corner and gives him advice and assistance between rounds.

Standing-eight Count: When a boxer is in trouble, or has been knocked down the referee stops the action and counts to eight. During this time the referee determines if the boxer can continue. If a boxer takes three standing-eights in a round or four in a bout, the contest is stopped and the opponent is declared the winner.

Throw in the Towel: The traditional declaration of defeat in boxing, where a second who feels his boxer cannot continue the bout throws a towel into the ring to end the fight.

Uppercut: An upwards-thrown punch designed to hit an opponent's chin, usually part of a multi-punch combination and best used when a boxer is very close to his opponent.

Warning:
Given by the referee to the boxer who commits a serious foul, or receives three cautions. When the referee signals a warning the ringside judges can decide whether to give a point to the opponent. Three warnings in a bout means disqualification.

Welterweight: A weight division, with an upper limit of 147 pounds.

 


 

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