Boxing

Prizefighting Called 'Attempted Murder'


Saturday, October 15, 2005; Page E02

Immoral. Ruthless. Tantamount to legalized murder.

That "punch against prize fighting," as the newspaper Corriere della Sera called it, came from an unusual corner -- an influential Jesuit magazine close to the Vatican.


Leavander Johnson, left, takes a right from Jesus Chavez during the eighth round of their IBF lightweight title bout at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Saturday, Sept. 17, 2005. Johnson died Sept. 22, 2005, from injuries sustained during the title fight with Chavez. An influential Jesuit magazine that is close to the Vatican criticized the sport of professional boxing, calling it immoral, ruthless and a
Leavander Johnson, left, takes a right from Jesus Chavez during the eighth round of their IBF lightweight title bout at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Sept. 17, 2005. Johnson died Sept. 22, 2005, from injuries sustained during the title fight with Chavez. (Eric Jamison - AP)

Civilta Cattolica (Christian Civilization), in its edition scheduled to come out today, called professional boxing a "legalized form of attempted murder."

The article -- titled "The Immorality of Professional Boxing" -- compared the sport to the bloody gladiator contests in ancient Rome. It also criticized the business of boxing as equally ruthless, with the fighter "only a machine to make money."

The magazine provided advance copies of the article.

Boxing is a "legalized form of attempted murder, in the short or in the long run," the magazine said. It also noted that fighters who don't die in the ring often suffer long-term physical and psychological injuries. The article cited the deaths of hundreds of fighters in the last century.

The secretary-general of the Italian Boxing Federation, Riccardo De Girolami , said it sounded as if the magazine printed "cliches" about boxing, perhaps influenced by such films as "Million Dollar Baby," about a woman trying to become a prize fighter.

"They don't really know the sport," De Girolami said. "The competitive level is like any other sport."

-- From News Services


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