Boxing
 

Why There’s No Kangaroo Boxing

It truly is happenstance that kangaroo seems to kangaroo boxing (forgive the attempt at rhetoric), when in fact its natural defensive stance was to hold either forelimbs forward while tilting its head back. In doing so, the kangaroo affords more reach while protecting its upper body from harm and readies to catch its opponent with its sharp hind claws.

 

But it does mimic boxing.

A kangaroo’s stance, hands raised to protect the upper torso and face, depicts any human boxer’s attempt to protect these officially permitted weaknesses. The characteristic hops of a kangaroo boxing can be a caricature of a boxer doing quick footwork to evade an opponent. These personifications, especially when first observed during boxing’s heyday all the more promoted that kangaroo do kangaroo boxing.

 

Kangaroos don’t deliver a punch worthy of trepidation, because while these forelimbs aren’t weak, it’s the muscles in a kangaroo’s forelimbs that aren’t fitted for such maneuver. So there’s no need to fear for a kangaroo boxing every time you see these road signs over Australia, where it’s endemic.

 

Instead, when you see these signs, be scared of those hind claws. The purpose of their forelimbs is to hold on to their opponents while their hind legs attack the torso. These defensive maneuvers are found to be highly effective, and when it hits soft areas, like the belly it can disembowel any aggressor.

 

Here’s a kangaroo boxing video:

www.stupidvideos.com/video/animals/Boxing_Kangaroo

Kangaroo boxing is a novelty feature from the animal kingdom, even if it doesn’t do any real boxing besides attempt to lock you with their forelimbs for a gut-kick. It has been a feature in popular culture, appearing as a playable character in a popular video game Tekken, where it can, aside from kangaroo boxing effectively, grapple and choke opponents. It was once or twice a main character on several movies including Jack, the fighting Kangaroo with Professor Lendermann (1891) and The Boxing Kangaroo (1920).

Because kangaroos are endemic only in Australia, and when it became a popular culture, Australians are more than proud to make known it as being endemic to Oceania by making it its national personification. The boxing kangaroo, referred always as Jack, is a yellow colored kangaroo wearing red gloves first used by the Royal Australian Air Force. But it was not until 1983 that the Jack, the boxing kangaroo made international fame during the America’s Cup.

 

A kangaroo boxing may be weird, but for China to really sport a boxing tournament in a 2006 Animal Olympics is extremely sickening, because for all the hype of kangaroo boxing, these animals can’t box a mosquito to submission. And on the videos caught showing these clowns fighting gloved kangaroos, you can see the loons throwing punches for real, and poor kangaroos reeling backwards.