I haven't seen the statistics on death/injuries for boxers trained by their fathers, so I'll take your word on that. Like you say, anything that might make the sport safer should be loked into.
Statistically, boxing is alrady one of the safest of all sports. But I guess that's because a certain degree of injury is inevitable in a sport which involves highly trained athletes punching each other in the head for long periods. So most of the damage/injuries boxers pick up doesn't even get reported and logged, as it would be in other sports.
And of course, the real danger for boxers - cumulative brain damage - is invisible and often doesn't manifest till years after they hang up their gloves.
Like I said, statistics can be misleading.
Statistically, boxing is alrady one of the safest of all sports. But I guess that's because a certain degree of injury is inevitable in a sport which involves highly trained athletes punching each other in the head for long periods. So most of the damage/injuries boxers pick up doesn't even get reported and logged, as it would be in other sports.
And of course, the real danger for boxers - cumulative brain damage - is invisible and often doesn't manifest till years after they hang up their gloves.
Like I said, statistics can be misleading.
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