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AIBA bans headgear

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  • #21
    This is nice along with the rule change.

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    • #22
      I like the move.

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      • #23
        Not only that, every time I was hit, the impact would move the headgear even lower to my eyes blocking my vision and I had to take a second to adjust it. I never liked wearing it, but the gym has rules.

        Originally posted by RiC-DiC View Post
        me too. I have a big head (23 and 3/4 inch circumference!) and I feel so uncomfortable with headgear on, can't see hooks coming and have to lift my chin up so I can see taller targets (pretty much everyone since I only spar CW's and HW's). The one time I was allowed to spar without headgear, it was much easier to bob and weave without getting hit and my head movement felt more "natural" without it. Hope we now have the option at training.

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        • #24
          Originally posted by RiC-DiC View Post
          The one time I was allowed to spar without headgear, it was much easier to bob and weave without getting hit and my head movement felt more "natural" without it. Hope we now have the option at training.
          Very doubtful, i cannot see any place allowing it

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          • #25
            i dont like these rules! yeah cal me a wimp but i dont agree at all with these new rules :/

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            • #26
              Originally posted by ИATAS View Post
              A major sports federation has mandated banning
              headgear in amateur boxing competition in an
              effort to reduce concussions and head trauma, a
              decision that is thought to be a first in the sports
              world.

              Starting June 1, amateur, elite male boxers who
              compete internationally no longer will be allowed
              to use headgear in competition, according to
              rules released this week by the International
              Boxing Association, known as AIBA, which
              oversees amateur boxing.

              Concussions and brain trauma in contact sports
              have been a concern for decades, and the risk
              has drawn increased scrutiny with growing
              evidence that they may be associated with a
              dementia-like condition called chronic traumatic
              encephalopathy among U.S. football players.

              Removing the use of helmets or headgear has
              been discussed as a counterintuitive way to
              decrease brain injuries, with the idea being that
              athletes wouldn't use their heads as weapons or
              hit as hard if they didn't feel as protected. In
              boxing, there also is the belief that headgear
              makes it harder to see to the side to avoid blows,
              and makes the head a bigger target.

              There has been limited research to support this
              change, but fresh data, still unpublished,
              suggests the removal of headgear in elite, male
              amateur boxing reduces the incidence of
              concussion, according to the chairman of the
              AIBA medical commission, Charles Butler, a
              retired cardiac surgeon and ringside doctor, who
              spearheaded the study that served as part of the
              basis for the recommendation.

              Concussion isn't much of an issue in women and
              younger fighters who often lack the strength to
              bring on concussions in competitors, and they
              should continue to wear headgear to protect
              themselves from cuts, according to Dr. Butler.

              Professional boxers don't compete wearing
              headgear.

              Competitors do appear to be at greater risk of
              cuts without headgear, according to the research
              of Dr. Butler and others, but concussion is the
              injury of greater concern, Dr. Butler said.

              "If you get a cut it will heal; if you break a bone it
              will heal," Dr. Butler said. "If you can't recognize
              your grandchildren, it's a disaster." In addition,
              glove technology has improved to help reduce the
              impact of blows, he said.

              "All available data indicated that the removal of
              headguard in Elite Men would result in a
              decreased number of concussions," the AIBA said
              in a statement.

              Some brain experts said they found the decision
              surprising, and said they worry about a boxer who
              gets hit and falls to the hard canvas.

              But overall, the evidence for the value of helmets
              is mixed.

              Blaine Hoshizaki, director of the Neurotrauma
              Impact Science Laboratory at the University of
              Ottawa, said his and others' research shows that
              headgear and gloves are able to decrease one
              type of force known as linear acceleration, but not
              rotational force, which comes from a twisting
              motion of the head, often from a blow to the side
              of the jaw or cheek. Boxing experts say
              knockouts often come from hits to the chin.

              Headgear was added to amateur boxing in
              response to health concerns in the 1980s.

              To help determine whether it has been beneficial,
              Dr. Butler studied boxers who competed in both
              AIBA-sanctioned events with headgear and the
              World Series of Boxing, which doesn't allow
              headgear.

              After collecting data on some 15,000 boxer
              rounds, Dr. Butler found that in the 7,352 rounds
              that took place with boxers wearing headgear, the
              rate of concussion was 0.38%, compared with
              0.17% per boxer per round in the 7,545 rounds
              without headgear.


              Dr. Butler, who plans to publish the findings after
              collecting additional data, cautioned that the
              findings are preliminary and need to be
              replicated.

              The International Olympic Committee said it was
              aware of the rule AIBA change but has made no
              decision yet about the use of headgear in Olympic
              boxing competition.
              http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...32339330457836
              0250659207918.html

              So what do you think, no head gear? Good read btw...

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              • #27
                George Foreman and every other Olympian before the 80s didn't need no stinking head gear.

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                • #28
                  Originally posted by ShoulderRoll View Post
                  George Foreman and every other Olympian before the 80s didn't need no stinking head gear.

                  George had the big afro to protect him though.

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                  • #29
                    The reasoning behind this change is flawed. Specifically, the gloves being "newly-padded" a certain way to lessen the impact of blows is actually more dangerous in terms of brain trauma. If you get hit in the head 100 times with subconcussive blows (from a more padded glove) you're much more likely to develop slurred speech, dementia, etc. than if you took one solid shot from a 4oz. glove.

                    These guys apparently haven't ever heard of sparring or gym wars.

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                    • #30
                      The reasoning is horseshit. They're doing this in the hope of making it more spectator friendly.

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