
This Date in Baseball - Randy Johnson becomes the fourth pitcher to record 4,000 career strikeouts
June 29
1916 — The Chicago Cubs and Cincinnati Reds played a nine-inning game with just one baseball.
1923 — Brooklyn's Jacques Fournier went 6-for-6 with a home run, two doubles and three singles as the Dodgers beat the Philadelphia Phillies 14-5.
1937 — Chicago Cubs first baseman Rip Collins played an entire game without a putout or an assist.
1941 — In a doubleheader against the Washington Senators, New York's Joe DiMaggio tied and then broke the American League record of hitting safely in 41 consecutive games. DiMaggio doubled in four at-bats in the opener and singled in five at-bats in the nightcap to break the record set by George Sisler of the St. Louis Browns in 1922.
1968 — Detroit's Jim Northrup hit his third grand slam in a week as the Tigers beat the Chicago White Sox 5-2.
1990 — Dave Stewart of the Oakland A's pitched the first of two no-hitters on this day, beating the Toronto Blue Jays 5-0 at the SkyDome. Fernando Valenzuela of the Los Angeles Dodgers duplicated Stewart's feat by throwing a 6-0 no-hitter against the St. Louis Cardinals. It was the first time in major league history that two no-hitters were pitched in both leagues on the same day.
2003 — Eric Byrnes hit for the cycle and matched a franchise record with five hits as Oakland beat San Francisco 5-2.
2004 — Randy Johnson of the Arizona Diamondbacks became the fourth pitcher to record 4,000 strikeouts when he struck out San Diego's Jeff Cirillo in the eighth inning of the Padres' 3-2 win.
2007 — Barry Bonds hit his 750th career home run in San Francisco's 4-3, 10-inning loss to Arizona.
2007 — Aubrey Huff hit for the cycle in Baltimore's 9-7 loss to the Los Angeles Angels.
2010 — Whit Merrifield's RBI single with one out in the bottom of the 11th inning gave South Carolina its first baseball national championship with a 2-1 victory over UCLA in the College World Series. The Gamecocks won the last championship played at Omaha's Rosenblatt Stadium, the CWS' home since 1950.
2012 — Aaron Hill hit for the cycle for the second time in 12 days, leading the Arizona Diamondbacks to a 9-3 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers. The Arizona Diamondbacks' second baseman cycled on June 18 against Seattle. Brooklyn's Babe Herman was the only other major leaguer to hit for two cycles in one season since 1900. He accomplished the feat in 1931.
2014 — Felix Hernandez allowed one hit over eight innings while striking out nine for Seattle, and Robinson Cano backed him with a two-run homer in a 3-0 win over Cleveland. Hernandez allowed just Lonnie Chisenhall's single in the fifth inning and walked three. Fernando Rodney earned his 23rd save with a perfect ninth inning.
2019 — The first ever major league game to be played in Europe resulted in the Yankees defeating the Red Sox 17-13 in front of 60,000 spectators at London Olympic Stadium.
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Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Class of 2025 Hall of Famer and Seven-Time All-Star Dave Parker Dies
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Pittsburgh Pirates and the Cincinnati Reds announced Hall of Famer Dave Parker passed away before Saturday's games. Parker was set to be inducted into the Hall of Fame on July 27 after a 19-year career that started in 1972 and ended in 1990. CHICAGO, IL - CIRCA 1979: Dave Parker #39 of the Pittsburgh Pirates bats against the Chicago Cubs during a Major League Baseball game circa 1979 at Wrigley Field in Chicago, Illinois. Parker played for the... CHICAGO, IL - CIRCA 1979: Dave Parker #39 of the Pittsburgh Pirates bats against the Chicago Cubs during a Major League Baseball game circa 1979 at Wrigley Field in Chicago, Illinois. Parker played for the Pirates from 1973-83. More Focus"We are heartbroken to learn of the passing of Hall of Famer Dave Parker," the Pirates announced on social media. "A legendary Pirate, Parker spent 11 years in a Pirates uniform, winning 2 batting titles, an MVP award and a World Series Championship in 1979. The Cobra was part of the inaugural Pirates Hall of Fame class in 2022, and will be enshrined in the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown next month." Parker was known as one of the elite hitters that was part of the "Fam-a-lee" for the Pirates. His contributions to the team were significant, and it's hard to imagine the team winning the World Series without his efforts. He was 74 years old, and his impact on baseball will never be forgotten. The Cobra finished his career with 2,712 hits, a .290 batting average, 339 home runs and 1,493 RBI. Upon leaving the Pirates, he spent the next four seasons with the Reds followed by bouncing around several teams in his final two years. The seven-time All-Star made himself a staple in the mid-summer classic, and his performances led to winning three Gold Gloves, two batting titles and a Silver Slugger award. Parker will be missed deeply by the Pirates organization as well as the baseball community. More MLB: Phillies Insider Projects Twins 'Dangle' Closer, Utility Player as Trade Chips


New York Times
3 hours ago
- New York Times
Kayla Thornton, with career-best night, shows she's right at home with Valkyries
SAN FRANCISCO — The vibe in Ballhalla is different. Compared with Golden State Warriors games, Chase Center boasts a heartier roar when draped in Valkyries violet. Dancing. Chanting. Yelling. Novelty still exists. Excitement still rings organic. The crowd is proactive with its influence. It rewards productivity with delirium. Advertisement And it's fuel for Kayla Thornton. She inhales it. Absorbs it. Her personal reserves never seem to exhaust. Yet, replenishment is steady at Golden State. Always one shot, one rebound, one hustle play away from having adrenaline poured into her by the arena. Friday night, Thornton's cup filled to the brim in Golden State's 83-78 win over Chicago. A lathered Chase Center audience. The hype of Angel Reese, one of the league's magnetic stars, added some spice. And Thornton could still feel the sting of the gut-punch loss to her former team on Wednesday. So she was on one. Her motor pushed to its highest gear. During the decisive run against Chicago, Thornton grabbed a rebound in traffic and blistered up the middle of the court for a one-woman fast break. The Sky's Ariel Atkins, a quality defender, was the lone obstacle. After weaving in and out, turning around Atkins, Thornton lofted a runner off the glass for the bucket. It capped a 9-0 Valkyries run and forced a Chicago timeout. And Thornton turned to the crowd, flexing as she yelled. KT just high-fived the whole front row after scoring her career-high 25 points 💀#VotetheValks → — Golden State Valkyries (@valkyries) June 28, 2025 She produced a career-high 29 points, needing just 30 minutes and 15 shots to get them. It powered Golden State's return to the win column. And it continued the validation of Thornton, who at 32 years old and in her 10th WNBA season, has found a new peak for her game. 'Feels good,' she said, flashing her trademark wide smile. 'I put a lot of work in on the offseason, and to see it flourish and to have my coaches give me the confidence to do that, it's just great. I don't do anything that is spectacular. I'm still just doing the blue-collar work. But doing it more.' Advertisement It's enough to make you wonder how she was even available to the expansion Valkyries. But the truth is, Thornton caught lightning in a bottle with Golden State. It's an ideal match between player and franchise. Both with something to prove. Both defiantly rejecting expectations. The Valkyries' inaugural roster needs everything from every player on the roster. And Thornton doesn't know how to play another way. 'It goes beyond basketball,' Valkyries guard Kate Martin said. 'She's a tremendous person. She's somebody you want to be around all the time. She's a great leader in the locker room, a great friend. So it's really fun whenever she's all of that, but also a phenomenal basketball player. You can learn a lot from KT and how she plays.' Thornton went undrafted out of UTEP in 2014. She didn't make a roster until 2015 with the Washington Mystics. She was out of the WNBA for 2016 before landing with the Dallas Wings in 2017. Thornton found a home in Dallas, spending six seasons there. She started more than 70 percent of the games but averaged double-figures just once. Dallas never had a winning season in her six years. However, she did put up 20 points in a playoff win over Connecticut in 2022. She was traded to New York along with Jonquel Jones in a three-team trade in 2023. With the Liberty, she held a smaller role. She was primarily a reserve for New York and saw a significant decrease in minutes. But she contributed to winning. The Liberty made the WNBA Finals in each of her two seasons, winning the franchise's first championship last season. That's what made the Valkyries' loss to the Liberty on Wednesday sting a little more. Thornton is only with Golden State because New York chose not to protect her from the expansion draft. Like a true competitor, she wanted to beat the team that deemed her expendable. Advertisement But the move has worked wonders for Thornton, who has the liberty to flex her full game. She's got all the minutes and shots she can handle. Thornton now has four 20-point games this season. She had six in her career before joining the Valkyries. She has the responsibility for which she's been worthy but never granted. Thornton is filling in the role of a first option and doing so capably. So much so, her team is above .500 (8-7), holding the No. 6 seed in the W, and she's getting All-Star buzz for the first time. A big W & a new number to beat for @KBT_5Blessed 😤#VotetheValks → — Golden State Valkyries (@valkyries) June 28, 2025 Her conditioning and physical prowess are worthy of the role. Thornton is a strong 6-foot-1 and moves with power. She's athletic enough to get where she needs to on the court. However, her skill work has paid off, producing a three-level volume scorer. Her percentages from 3-point range (28.3) and the free-throw line (81.1) have taken dips with the increased opportunity. But she's proven to be a weapon. Friday, after a slow start, her coaches turned to her for energy. They wanted it vocally. They wanted her to lift the Valkyries out of their first-half malaise with her voice. 'And then boom, she responds,' head coach Natalie Nakase said. 'And you saw her out there commanding, but also supporting — because when we're not playing our best, we need to hear some support. So that's what we lean on KT for. Not even about her performance. It's more to me what she means and how she commands and demands the team to move. But obviously, hitting those big shots at the end, I'm taking it. And reliability. We completely rely on KT, and I love that she stays consistent for us.' One of those big shots Thornton hit came late in the fourth quarter and illustrated her relationship with this fan base. Reese and Atkins were doing their best to take over down the stretch. Reese inhaled rebounds and started imposing her will inside. Atkins, one of the league's better isolation players, put her head down and put pressure on the Valks. Atkins drew a pair of free throws one trip after converting a three-point play. She missed the second of the pair, and Thornton outmuscled everyone for the rebound. She hit the ground hard with the ball in her possession, making sure the vacuum paws of Reese wouldn't get the board. Chase Center salivated over the effort. Advertisement Fittingly, the ensuing offensive possession ended with Thornton wide-open for 3 from the right corner, in front of the Golden State bench. She drilled it with two minutes left, putting the Valkyries up eight and sending the ninth sellout crowd in nine home games into a frenzy. Thornton's cup runneth over. (Photo of Kayla Thornton celebrating a made 3-pointer in Friday's win over Chicago: Matthew Huang / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Julio César Chávez Jr. and the burden of nepotism
July 7, 2001: As he looked for a way out between Rounds 5 and 6, Héctor Camacho Jr. focused only on the slender cut above his right eye and the story he would soon have to tell. He tried as best he could to ignore the boos ringing out inside Brooklyn's KeySpan Park, and he also ignored the fact that his father, a three-weight world champion known as 'Macho' Camacho, had never been stopped in 88 professional fights. Because this, you see, was not your ordinary stoppage. It was instead one Camacho Jr. was about to engineer himself, a wound self-inflicted. It was, for a boxer, as far from macho as one can possibly get. It's true that there had been a head-butt; an accidental one in Round 5. However, the cut it produced above Camacho Jr.'s eye appeared to be manageable; of more concern to Camacho Jr. in that moment was not the blemish itself but rather what it did to his opponent, Jesse James Leija. Now, you see, Leija was all of a sudden invigorated and shifting the momentum. He poured it on. He sensed Camacho Jr. wanted out. 'We're going to find out what Héctor Camacho Jr. is made of tonight,' said HBO's Larry Merchant, and it would be no stretch to say Leija was probably thinking the same. New to a crisis, the unbeaten Camacho Jr. had now lost control of both Leija and his own plan, and in Round 5 landed only two punches. On the retreat, he was even at one point admonished by the referee, Steve Smoger, for holding the top rope, often a sign of a boxer ill at ease. By the end of the round, there was no longer any doubt. 'I can't see,' Camacho Jr. said in his corner, attributing his loss of vision to the accidental head-butt. 'It's all blurry.' Though cajoled by the doctor to carry on, Camacho Jr. looked everywhere but at Leija and was reluctant to start Round 6. He knew as well as anyone that with just five rounds completed he had a narrow lead, and that the decision, should the fight end now, might yet bump his record to 33-0. He couldn't be quite so sure if it continued. With the fighter's mind made up, Smoger leaned out of the ring to tell the commission, 'We have to go to the cards,' and seemed exasperated by it all. Then, when he said, 'He claims he can't see,' the cynicism and contempt was palpable, impossible to hide. Camacho Jr., meanwhile, listened to the boos and rehearsed his lines. As his gloves were removed, he could be seen checking out his face on the big screen, perhaps hoping the cut would appear more significant when magnified than it felt to touch, having now stopped bleeding. He then chose to wear sunglasses for his post-fight interview, not to hide any deformation, but to conceal the reason he had quit and protect it from judgement. 'This is boxing,' said Leija. 'When you get cut, you bleed. He was fine. I heard the doctor say, 'You're good to go.'' Héctor "Macho" Camacho Jr. (right) and his father, seven-time world champion Héctor "Macho" Camacho Sr., pose in February 2001, just five months before Camacho Jr.'s infamous night against Jesse James Leija. (RHONA WISE via Getty Images) Dec. 20, 2019: Eighteen years after the son of Héctor 'Macho' Camacho searched for a way out of a tough fight, Julio Cesar Chávez Jr. went through the same thought process and book of excuses in Phoenix, Arizona. Sporting a bleach blonde and bubble-gum blue hairdo, Chávez Jr. was by this stage of his career content to pose as a fighter and collect money rather than live as a fighter and collect titles. Not just that, he had entered a super middleweight fight against Daniel Jacobs both heavy and uninspired. He had also repudiated the need for drug testing, meaning he and Jacobs ended up in Phoenix, where the testing was a little less stringent and Chávez Jr. felt more comfortable. As for the fight itself, Chávez Jr. had a go early, landed a few right hands, then started getting bloody and bored. By Round 5, in fact, the look on his face was that of a child wanting to go home, an image with which his father, sitting ringside, was apparently familiar. His father, the great Julio César Chávez, was wearing the same red headband he himself used to wear into battle, and between rounds was caught on camera shaking his head and then burying it into the palm of his hand. It was almost as if Chávez Sr., a three-weight world champion, knew what was going to happen next. It was almost as if what happened next would be more shameful than everything that came before it. In the Chávez Jr. corner, they conferred and got their stories straight. There was blood inside the Mexican's nose, which could have been broken, and there was a cut by his left eye, which had been caused by a head-butt. Yet wouldn't it be better, Chávez Jr. thought, to say that his hand and not his nose was broken? A hand, after all, is more important than a nose in a fight. 'Do you want to continue?' asked the referee, Wes Melton, sensing what everybody sensed. 'OK,' he said, upon getting no response. 'I'm calling it.' It had by then become the preferred way for Chávez Jr. to cut short the mission and expedite his journey home. He had done the same in 2015, against Andrzej Fonfara, when he complained of a knee injury between Rounds 9 and 10, having been knocked down in the ninth. In fact, twice Chávez Jr. has been stopped as a pro and both times he was the one to call the stoppage and decide that enough was enough. Which is perhaps why the fans in Phoenix showered him with cans of beer and other projectiles as he scurried away from the ring that night. It is perhaps also why he struggled to look his father in the eye on the way out. Julio César Chávez Jr.'s decision to quit against Daniel Jacobs nearly ignited a riot inside Phoenix's Talking Stick Resort Arena. (Manuel Velasquez via Getty Images) 'It's an enviable thing, to be able to receive your identity from your father,' wrote Marilynne Robinson in "Gilead," and to some extent that is true. In some lines of work nepotism opens more doors than wounds and tends to be viewed as only a privilege. It creates job opportunities and it offers a degree of comfort which means the essentials are not so essential. It also reduces the desperation and urgency which fuels everybody else, leaving the spawn of the rich and famous with time, space and bountiful options. On the flip side of that is the neglect. This is more common in instances of proper fame, and more common in certain professions, but it is part of the deal nonetheless. If you want pretty things, and you want opportunities, there is still a price to pay even for those who believe they can afford everything. In boxing, the price to pay is not so much neglect as a softness; something no boxer wants. After all, to be born to a famous fighter is to be born into a kind of privilege at odds with what drove that famous fighter to success in the first place. It is, in other words, counterproductive for a boxer to take to boxing from a position of comfort or, indeed, softness. They instead need to be hard, history suggests. They need to have had it hard and for hardship to now galvanize them. Otherwise, it just won't work. Otherwise, you get a boxer unaccustomed to hardship and therefore ill-equipped when things get tough. You get Héctor Camacho Jr. in Round 5. You get Julio César Chávez Jr. in Round 5. That is not to say these men are soft by everyday metrics, only the standards by which we judge boxers; these warriors, these gladiators. In that realm — and only that realm — they are soft, or at least softer than their fathers. They look for a way out because they know there is one, whereas their fathers, led by ignorance and empty bellies, had no idea that stopping was even an option. In addition to this softness, there are particular pressures boxing's nepo babies must face. There is the pressure to be as good as their father, or not disgrace them, and there is the pressure to quickly get involved in fights that allow them to truly monetize their famous name. This rush toward the light invariably comes at the expense of their development and throws them into situations for which they are unprepared, leading to defeat and, alas, disappointed dads. To be born to a famous fighter is to be born into a kind of privilege at odds with what drove that famous fighter to success in the first place. It is, in other words, counterproductive for a boxer to take to boxing from a position of comfort or, indeed, softness. Many go that way, but not all of them. Some manage to carve out a decent career for themselves and treat the sport with the seriousness and respect it deserves. Some, like Tim Tszyu and Chris Eubank Jr., display a hard-to-explain toughness which is almost tantamount to defiance; a refusal to be seen as soft. For fighters like that, there is perhaps a compulsion to go even harder, just because they know the tradition and the stereotype. 'At first my father was reluctant to allow me to attend training sessions,' said Eubank Jr., whose father, Chris, was a WBO champion at both middleweight and super middleweight. 'He didn't understand why I was doing it and, of course, he knew just how hard the sport was. He didn't want me to experience the same sacrifices and hardships he had to go through during his own career. 'As time went on, though, he began to see just how seriously I was taking boxing and how much I was improving, and that was when he started to warm to the idea. He needed to know I wasn't just mucking around and that I had some potential. 'Obviously, when he said he didn't want me to box, it only made me want to box more. Like any young kid, I wanted to know more about this thing he told me to stay away from. I wanted to see if it was as extreme as he said it was.' As a child, Eubank Jr. never even watched boxing. It was in fact only once he started training that he became interested in the likes of Muhammad Ali, Roy Jones Jr. and the Four Kings: Ray Leonard, Thomas Hearns, Marvin Hagler and Roberto Duran. As for his dad, Chris Jr. did not need to see his dad in action to know that he had been a fighter. He was reminded of it every day. He was reminded of it again, too, when his dad finally let him go to the gym at the age of 15. 'I got badly beaten up on my first day at the gym,' Eubank Jr. recalled. 'The kid must have been 18 or 19 and probably had 20 to 30 amateur bouts to his name. Everybody in the gym assumed that because of my name, and because of who my father was, I would be able to walk into the gym and handle myself. But I was thrown to the wolves that day and paid the price. I got absolutely battered for three rounds, left the gym and made a pact with myself that something like that would never happen to me again.' Chris Eubank Jr. alongside his Hall of Fame father, Chris Eubank Sr., ahead of April's second-generation fight against Conor Benn. (Action Images via Reuters / Reuters) Even if softness was not to blame, that baptism in Brighton was everything Chris Eubank, the boy's father, had feared. Though they shared a name, two of them, Eubank knew what hard looked like and he knew that his son didn't look like he did when he got into boxing. He didn't speak the same, he didn't live the same, he didn't wear the same clothes. In a word, he was privileged. The only burden he carried was the target on his back. It was for that reason Eubank Sr. decided to send his son to live in America at age 17, convinced that the experience would add callouses to soft hands. 'The time I spent in Vegas is what has made me the fighter I am today,' said Eubank Jr., who sparred the likes of Zab Judah, Chad Dawson and Montell Griffin while out there. 'I spent about four years there in total and worked with some of the best trainers and fighters in the world. I started off with Mike McCallum and then worked with Floyd Mayweather Sr. I learned so much from everybody who took me on the pads or spoke in my ear. 'My dad played a massive part in coming to that decision. He knew it would be better for me to go to America as an unknown, with no pressure, in order to learn my trade away from the spotlight. 'But I wasn't with my family or friends, and that is always tough. I also didn't know a single soul out there to begin with. I just kept thinking that if I was able to survive that experience and come out the other side a better boxer and man, it would have been worthwhile. In boxing terms, I knew I'd be on another level to other young prospects when I returned to England.' Today, similar thoughts run through the head of super lightweight Emiliano Vargas. He is not only one of the brightest prospects in the sport but also happens to be the youngest son of Fernando Vargas, a former IBF and WBA super welterweight champion. 'My father never really thought I would box,' said Emiliano, who had 130 amateur bouts and was a seven-time national champion. 'He thought I'd pick it up and leave it alone. I was just the chubby kid who liked to eat. 'We opened a boxing gym and one thing led to another. A couple of amateur fights in I'm starting to take this really seriously and winning big tournaments. Now here we are. 'It's a beautiful dynamic, man. I love my father to death. He never had a father so this is special for him. He's kind of living through my eyes — how it would have been to have his father at fights, and to watch him cut weight. I know it's big for him and it's big for me, too. I love having that relationship with my father. There's nothing better than winning with people that you love.' Now 21, Vargas has reached the age at which distractions are both rife and legal. He is also the age his father was when, at 14-0, he stopped Mexico's Luis 'Yori Boy' Campas in seven rounds to win the IBF super welterweight title in 1998. Maybe, for Vargas (14-0, 12 KOs), that is the real distraction. Emiliano Vargas poses with his father, Fernando Vargas, after defeating Juan Leon in a super lightweight bout this past May. (Steve Marcus via Getty Images) Since cutting short his date with Daniel Jacobs, an ever-softening Julio César Chávez Jr. has boxed five times. He has won three fights, lost two, and shared a ring with both Anderson Silva and Uriah Hall, two former mixed martial artists who, like Chavez Jr., have in recent years experienced something of an identity crisis. No closer to his own answers, Chávez Jr., at 39, is still trying to figure out who or what he is, and knows only that he is not his father. He may have been blessed with his chin, and he may have won a world title in 2011, but time has shown not only the differences between father and son, but all that the son lacks: Hunger, discipline, persistence. Even toughness, that is a relative term. He showed it against Sergio Martinez, for instance, when almost evoking his father's last-gasp win against Meldrick Taylor, but after a while everything became too tough for Chávez Jr. Making weight became too tough. Doing drug tests became too tough. Finishing fights became too tough. His next fight, on Saturday against Jake Paul, is easier than most, though still feels emblematic of Chávez Jr.'s petulant, rebellious phase. On one level it offers an adult child the opportunity to show a cosplayer that he was never cosplaying at all, and in turn prove his authenticity. On another level it brings Chávez Jr. closer to the kind of boxer, or character, he himself has become and puts him in the only kind of fight he can manage these days: A brief and ultimately meaningless one, with exit signs everywhere he looks. Julio César Chávez Jr. (right) fights Jake Paul on Saturday night in Anaheim, California. (Anadolu via Getty Images) Of course, if the blonde-and-blue version of Chávez Jr. we saw for five rounds against Jacobs in 2019 is present on Saturday, he will be too much for Jake Paul. Flawed though he was, even that version of the Mexican would be enough to show any Disney child or YouTuber the difference between doing it and being it and reveal there are various degrees of 'softness' in this sport. However, there can be no guarantee that Chávez Jr., a pro for 22 years, is still capable of hitting those same notes in 2025. What is more, he now fights someone whose privilege is a weapon yet to be used against him; someone whose privilege has built muscles, bought opportunities, and enabled him to call out Saul 'Canelo' Alvarez and Anthony Joshua with a straight face and no fear of repercussion. In fact, while Chávez Jr. spent his entire career trying to prove himself worthy of a name, Paul (11-1, 7 KOs) has only ever had to prove that he is a boxer. Meaning: Just as their challenges are different, so too is their privilege. In the case of Chávez Jr., an already hard task was made harder by his privilege, whereas, for Paul, becoming a boxer has never been easier than it is today. It is now even an option for the softest of men. All one needs are gloves, a ring and an opponent happy to lose.