Originally posted by creekrat77
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Do Fighters Feel Guilty When Their Opponent Dies?
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Tomorrow’s Joe, a Japanese anime covered this real well. The protagonist fought his rival whom he lost to but a punch to the temple killed him. It traumatized him so bad that in future fights, he couldn’t commit a power shot to the temple for fear of killing his opponent again(until he got over his fear finding a new rival). I can imagine real pros go through that same thing
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Originally posted by Tatabanya View PostThe documentary about Ray Boom Boom Mancini, The Good Son, comprises footage of the meeting and embrace between him and Duk-Koo Kim's son and wife, after many years from Kim's death at the hands of Ray.
Mancini's another man who was not the same after that event.
I think Kim said he’ll win or die
here’s to the power of positivity
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Griffith is another one who felt bad about a dead opponent. The opponent called Griffith a f4g before the fight too
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Originally posted by GrandpaBernard View PostGriffith is another one who felt bad about a dead opponent. The opponent called Griffith a f4g before the fight tootritium_arma
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A person would have to be a true sociopath not to feel horribly after beating someone to death. Boxing is littered with stories of deaths and the resulting guilt the surviving fighter felt. My dad in his younger days was a bouncer in a pretty famous honky tonk in East Texas. He accidentally killed a guy who according to the story was huge. This was back in the day where they would just break the fight up and go back to drinking. The guy wouldnt stop starting fights and jumped my dad when he was trying to stop him. My dad lived with that until the day he died. He told me there wasnt ten minutes that went by that he didnt think about it. Its not a normal thing for us to kill each other and it takes part of you when you take a life. There is a reason combat vets have the issues they have, PTSD isnt a new thing. They used to call it shell shock, some handle it better than others.GrandpaBernard likes this.
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Originally posted by Sun_Tzu View PostA person would have to be a true sociopath not to feel horribly after beating someone to death. Boxing is littered with stories of deaths and the resulting guilt the surviving fighter felt. My dad in his younger days was a bouncer in a pretty famous honky tonk in East Texas. He accidentally killed a guy who according to the story was huge. This was back in the day where they would just break the fight up and go back to drinking. The guy wouldnt stop starting fights and jumped my dad when he was trying to stop him. My dad lived with that until the day he died. He told me there wasnt ten minutes that went by that he didnt think about it. Its not a normal thing for us to kill each other and it takes part of you when you take a life. There is a reason combat vets have the issues they have, PTSD isnt a new thing. They used to call it shell shock, some handle it better than others.
makes you question if people dgaf after killing someone who tried to rob them
bystanders always have a robber got what they deserved reaction
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Originally posted by GrandpaBernard View PostIt’s an interesting topic
makes you question if people dgaf after killing someone who tried to rob them
bystanders always have a robber got what they deserved reactionGrandpaBernard likes this.
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Originally posted by GrandpaBernard View PostI remember that documentary
I think Kim said he’ll win or die
here’s to the power of positivity
Not of us really knows how we would react if we had to kill another person. Combat vets will tell you that nobody knows how they'll react when bullets start whizzing by too, despite all the training and big talk. In the case of just boxing though, I could def see a lot of guilt. It's a violent sport, but nobody goes in there to kill a guy.
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