The massive problems I see with Katie are a lack of head movement, headhunting, overuse of round punches, and almost always gets stuck in a “left right left right left” alternating rhythm instead of doubling or tripling up on the same side and varying up to the body and head EDIT: and OBVIOUSLY… leading with her head. See the Serrano rematch for an unbelievably shocking example of blatant use of her massive dome as a wrecking ball.
Dick Swaab, a Dutch neurologist specializing in these problems, discussed the consequences of boxing in his book 'We are our brain': the origin of a neurological lesion: gait instability, language disorders, constantly moving eyes, some classic epileptic seizure , memory alterations due to being knocked out, loss of consciousness after KO, and sometimes coma or death".
Katie Taylor like a female Sugar Ray Leonard with hand speed and using jabs and multiple combination of punches classic example and movement not being a stationary target.
Over time, psychotic behaviors can appear and even lead to dementia or Parkinson's. Continuous exposure to blows poses a continuous risk of neurological and cognitive injuries, which is why boxing is a risky sport. Between 40% and 80% of boxers suffer from chronic traumatic encephalopathies, and 17% have Parkinson's, as was the case with the great Mohammed Ali
Este"deporte" debería estar prohibido Es inhumano y tiene estas consecuencias No esperemos que suceda una muerte para que se llegue a su total prohibición tanto el boxeo como las artes marciales en varones y chicas ¿QUIÉN PAGA LAS CONSECUENCIAS? En primer lugar la persona afectada y su familia,amistades y la humanidad en su conjunto Hagamos una campaña para prohibirlo
Luché en el boxeo amateur desde los 6 años hasta los 15. Gané la plata olímpica 83'AAU Jr y el oro 84'AAU. A los 15 luché "abierto" y enfrenté a hombres de 20 a 35 años. A los 42 años desarrollé problemas repentinos del habla y tartamudeo. Ha empeorado ahora a los 53. Sin duda, tiene efectos persistentes y generalmente no se ven hasta los últimos años. En mi opinión, fue el combate constante con compañeros mayores y más grandes.
What consequences does it cause? The first symptoms are a decrease in mental agility, lack of motor coordination, difficulties in ordering thoughts, that is, problems when making a speech
It has been very, very painful for me to see that even the girls practice this cruel sport. Every blow they hit on the head without any mercy hurts. Instead of "sport" it is an exercise in sadism practiced by people from very poor economic backgrounds , although with great dignity as people, who want to be something before others and enter that world. I find the environment surrounding the fight hurtful. Very primary, childish. They would already accept the same thing if those who fought were their children or daughters Let's make a campaign requesting the prohibition of this cruel "sport"
It's a choice to step in the ring , the refs are they to stop before anyone get hurt , it's not war , better than street fight then you can do any fight moves you want
@@Spectorghost-j2k What consequences does it cause? The first symptoms are a decrease in mental agility, lack of motor coordination, difficulties in ordering thoughts, that is, problems when making a speech
Dick Swaab, a Dutch neurologist specializing in these problems, discussed the consequences of boxing in his book 'We are our brain': the origin of a neurological injury: gait instability, language disorders, eyes that move constantly, some classic epileptic seizure , memory disturbances due to knockout, loss of consciousness after KO, and sometimes coma or death. "
Over time, psychotic behaviors can appear and even lead to dementia or Parkinson's. Continuous exposure to blows poses a continuous risk of neurological and cognitive injuries, which is why boxing is a risky sport. Between 40% and 80% of boxers suffer from chronic traumatic encephalopathies, and 17% have Parkinson's, as was the case with the great Mohammed Ali
Over time, psychotic behaviors can appear and even lead to dementia or Parkinson's. Continuous exposure to blows poses a continuous risk of neurological and cognitive injuries, which is why boxing is a risky sport. Between 40% and 80% of boxers suffer from chronic traumatic encephalopathies, and 17% have Parkinson's, as was the case with the great Mohammed Ali
Sanchez is a beast...she look small but mighty💪💪💪
Well done girls👏
The massive problems I see with Katie are a lack of head movement, headhunting, overuse of round punches, and almost always gets stuck in a “left right left right left” alternating rhythm instead of doubling or tripling up on the same side and varying up to the body and head
EDIT: and OBVIOUSLY… leading with her head. See the Serrano rematch for an unbelievably shocking example of blatant use of her massive dome as a wrecking ball.
Dick Swaab, a Dutch neurologist specializing in these problems, discussed the consequences of boxing in his book 'We are our brain': the origin of a neurological lesion: gait instability, language disorders, constantly moving eyes, some classic epileptic seizure , memory alterations due to being knocked out, loss of consciousness after KO, and sometimes coma or death".
Ok there are physical consequences of any sport known to man. So what's your point?
PERO ES DECISIÓN DE CADA CUAL Y NO PODEMOS CAMBIAR NADA.
SANCHEZ NEED MORE TRAINING.
Pommy commentators are one eyed pain in the arse 😡.
Dumb question. Point is take care of your health and don't take life threatening risks@@JeffCowey
Hader bos mantap 🙏👍👍👍❤
Taylor, Taylor. She fights 5 rounds and the remaining 5 rounds to hug her opponents.
I noticed this too
everytime she fights she does that. ig its to kerp her from losing even if it breaks them up momentarily
And leads with her head, throwing LRLRLRLRLRLR
Thành tích em áo trắng là vượt trội nhưng điểm không có 💙
Good thanks
Katie Taylor like a female Sugar Ray Leonard with hand speed and using jabs and multiple combination of punches classic example and movement not being a stationary target.
QUIERO VER A TAYLOR FRENTE A AMANDA SERRANO PAQUE SE LAMBA.
Amanda has been robbed TWICE against Katie now. A complete travesty to the sport.
💪💪💪💪💪
SANCHEZ NO KE COJAS MIEDO, PELEA CON CORAJE.
🤔👍👍
😅
Katie Taylor box on the body
The problem is it's guickly becoming a dog eat dog world out there!
Why Referees frequently trying to touch the girls.
How do you mean?
I can’t think of a single straight male that would be trying to touch Katie Taylor, so maybe he’s trying to touch Sanchez??? 😂
Over time, psychotic behaviors can appear and even lead to dementia or Parkinson's. Continuous exposure to blows poses a continuous risk of neurological and cognitive injuries, which is why boxing is a risky sport. Between 40% and 80% of boxers suffer from chronic traumatic encephalopathies, and 17% have Parkinson's, as was the case with the great Mohammed Ali
Worth it if got the passion and killer instinct
Box box Box box
SANCHEZM DAKW EN LA CARAM HAZKA CAER,
Este"deporte" debería estar prohibido Es inhumano y tiene estas consecuencias No esperemos que suceda una muerte para que se llegue a su total prohibición tanto el boxeo como las artes marciales en varones y chicas ¿QUIÉN PAGA LAS CONSECUENCIAS? En primer lugar la persona afectada y su familia,amistades y la humanidad en su conjunto Hagamos una campaña para prohibirlo
Ya, siéntese y cálmese
@@alchemist2529
Luché en el boxeo amateur desde los 6 años hasta los 15. Gané la plata olímpica 83'AAU Jr y el oro 84'AAU. A los 15 luché "abierto" y enfrenté a hombres de 20 a 35 años. A los 42 años desarrollé problemas repentinos del habla y tartamudeo. Ha empeorado ahora a los 53. Sin duda, tiene efectos persistentes y generalmente no se ven hasta los últimos años. En mi opinión, fue el combate constante con compañeros mayores y más grandes.
Katie Taylor est une excellente technicienne, mais elle doit améliorer ses esquives et relever sa garde pour mieux protéger son visage.
What consequences does it cause?
The first symptoms are a decrease in mental agility, lack of motor coordination, difficulties in ordering thoughts, that is, problems when making a speech
Get these wo en out of boxing total insane
It has been very, very painful for me to see that even the girls practice this cruel sport. Every blow they hit on the head without any mercy hurts. Instead of "sport" it is an exercise in sadism practiced by people from very poor economic backgrounds , although with great dignity as people, who want to be something before others and enter that world. I find the environment surrounding the fight hurtful. Very primary, childish. They would already accept the same thing if those who fought were their children or daughters
Let's make a campaign requesting the prohibition of this cruel "sport"
It's a choice to step in the ring , the refs are they to stop before anyone get hurt , it's not war , better than street fight then you can do any fight moves you want
@@Spectorghost-j2k What consequences does it cause?
The first symptoms are a decrease in mental agility, lack of motor coordination, difficulties in ordering thoughts, that is, problems when making a speech
Dick Swaab, a Dutch neurologist specializing in these problems, discussed the consequences of boxing in his book 'We are our brain': the origin of a neurological injury: gait instability, language disorders, eyes that move constantly, some classic epileptic seizure , memory disturbances due to knockout, loss of consciousness after KO, and sometimes coma or death. "
Over time, psychotic behaviors can appear and even lead to dementia or Parkinson's. Continuous exposure to blows poses a continuous risk of neurological and cognitive injuries, which is why boxing is a risky sport. Between 40% and 80% of boxers suffer from chronic traumatic encephalopathies, and 17% have Parkinson's, as was the case with the great Mohammed Ali
Over time, psychotic behaviors can appear and even lead to dementia or Parkinson's. Continuous exposure to blows poses a continuous risk of neurological and cognitive injuries, which is why boxing is a risky sport. Between 40% and 80% of boxers suffer from chronic traumatic encephalopathies, and 17% have Parkinson's, as was the case with the great Mohammed Ali