Sailor Mike wrote:
Bad Wigins wrote:
You clearly never played football. All the fighting "disciplines" are specialized, limited mobility scenarios and translate poorly to the real world. But football translates perfectly.
Yes, this is why pro football players who haven’t put in years of boxing training always get clobbered when they hop into a boxing ring. Always. A pro mma fighter would easily destroy one of the football player’s knees before the ‘fight’ could get underway. Pro fighters are PRO FIGHTERS and will knock the tar out big lug football players.
OP is not talking about a boxing ring. PRO FIGHTERS can't even catch a football player. Even the linemen can run. And no PRO FIGHTER has ever trained to hit, take down or choke out someone moving 10mph or faster. None of their "martial arts" bother with the decisive military factor of mobility.
Even a casual football player who has learned to tackle can tackle anybody, including wrestlers, unless they also played football and learned to break tackles. Not likely with a small boxer. In a real-life, urban setting, simply being tackled onto pavement or bricks can easily result in a fight-ending injury.
Naturally most of the scrawny distance types who post here want the boxer to win, so they'll argue to the end for their great scrawny hope. But their hopes are misplaced. The best chance for the scrawny to fight well above their weight is tackling ability.
Suppose you weigh 125pounds and you slam into someone who weighs 200 pounds at 15mph. Slow enough to maneuver, fast enough that the 200 pounder will not long evade if they even try to. Unless they know how to break a tackle, the inelastic collision results in you both moving
125 x 15/(125 + 200)= 5.67mph
in the direction you were running. This is too fast to keep their center of mass over their feet moving backwards or sideways, so they will fall over.