‘Purest form of fighting': Mundine launches bare knuckle boxing in Australia
No stranger to controversy during a dual-sport career that lasted nearly 30 years, Mundine anticipates there will be resistance to the introduction of the raw and intense discipline, which has attracted large audiences in the US and UK.
There was backlash to the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship, co-owned by UFC superstar Conor McGregor, coming to Australia. The Australian Medical Association's WA state president Michael Page called it the 'human equivalent of dog fighting' and warned against the proliferation of more sports that could cause head injuries.
The state's sport minister said she saw no difference between bare knuckle boxing and UFC cage fighting, which has been held in arenas around Australia, but the WA Combat Sports Commission ultimately ruled that the McGregor-backed proposal did not meet its criteria.
Mundine hopes a successful outing in Brisbane, where World Bare Knuckle Fighting is looking to draw a crowd of up to 4000, will help convince decision makers in other jurisdictions to give his bare knuckle organisation a chance.
It will have a full medical team in place and has been endorsed by veteran ringside doctor Lou Lewis.
He has told the Combat Sports Authority of NSW that, while there was a higher risk of hand injuries, cuts and more acute damage per punch in bare knuckle boxing, it posed less risk of brain trauma than fighting with gloves due to shorter blows and fewer repeated blows to the head.
'In my opinion, bare knuckle boxing stands as a legitimate combat sport practised globally, with established rules and regulations that prioritise the safety of its participants,' Lewis wrote in the Mundine team's application.
Loading
Mundine said:, 'Obviously, it's going to be bloodier because it's bare knuckle and the skin can split quite easily. It's going to look more scary, but it actually isn't. We're doing it at a professional level where the fighters train for this type of fight.'
He added that wider weight divisions would also mean that fighters would not be left drained by having to lose body mass and would be better placed to absorb a blow to the head.
There are plans for 10 bouts on the inaugural bare knuckle Australian card in Logan, in Brisbane's southern suburbs. Fighters are expected to include Ben Horn, the brother of former world boxing champion and Mundine opponent Jeff Horn, and NRL player turned boxer Curtis Scott.
Never one not to talk a big game in his decades in the limelight, Mundine has ambitions well beyond that.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Mideast wars inflict psychic wounds on Arab-Aust women
Worrying sick about loved ones under bombardment in Gaza induces acute anxiety and stress for Arab-Australian women trying to make it through the day. Research published in The Lancet journal has examined the mental health impacts of ongoing wars in the Middle East and how they affect women connected to the region living in Australia. University of NSW researchers found panic disorder symptoms, poorer quality of life and other psychosocial stress indicators only increased for the women affected by the current carnage, compared to other Australian-born and migrant women. Symptoms appeared suddenly in multiple ways including rapid heart rate, dizziness, trembling, sweating and nausea. "It's like a panic attack, but it's very much tied to a particular event," lead author Susan Rees told AAP. "In this case, the prevailing mass deaths, injuries and starvation." The events were prompting direct, visceral reminders for the women of their own experiences. "Such as having their house bombed, fleeing for safety, having family members injured or killed, which was the most extreme," Professor Rees said. About 17,000 children are among almost 60,000 people killed in Israel's retaliatory military assault on Gaza since October 7, 2023, the United Nations said. It followed militant group Hamas attacking Israel, killing about 1200 people and capturing some 250 hostages. The longitudinal study assessed 410 women living in Australia about 12-18 months before and during the ongoing war on Gaza, extending from October 2023 until December 2024. The women were directly connected by birth or family to Gaza, the occupied Palestinian Territories and Lebanon, as well as migrant women from other non-Middle East countries and Australian-born women with no connection to the region. One participant from the Middle East-connected group, which made up one-fifth of the total study, told researchers she felt like a robot: functioning but not fully engaging with her surroundings. "This experience indicates that the person may be emotionally alienated and disconnected from daily life and routines," Prof Rees explained. "You're just thinking all the time about your family and what's going on, and you're trying not to communicate it to children because you don't want them to get upset." Another woman said she spent many sleepless nights telling her family in southern Lebanon to evacuate, after hearing radio reports saying Israeli forces were attacking their particular area. "They can't protect them directly on the ground and are trying to do it from thousands of kilometres away," Prof Rees said. The dire mental health consequences for such a large population in Australia could be prolonged unless there were targeted clinical interventions as well as political ones, she said. Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636


West Australian
an hour ago
- West Australian
Mideast wars inflict psychic wounds on Arab-Aust women
Worrying sick about loved ones under bombardment in Gaza induces acute anxiety and stress for Arab-Australian women trying to make it through the day. Research published in The Lancet journal has examined the mental health impacts of ongoing wars in the Middle East and how they affect women connected to the region living in Australia. University of NSW researchers found panic disorder symptoms, poorer quality of life and other psychosocial stress indicators only increased for the women affected by the current carnage, compared to other Australian-born and migrant women. Symptoms appeared suddenly in multiple ways including rapid heart rate, dizziness, trembling, sweating and nausea. "It's like a panic attack, but it's very much tied to a particular event," lead author Susan Rees told AAP. "In this case, the prevailing mass deaths, injuries and starvation." The events were prompting direct, visceral reminders for the women of their own experiences. "Such as having their house bombed, fleeing for safety, having family members injured or killed, which was the most extreme," Professor Rees said. About 17,000 children are among almost 60,000 people killed in Israel's retaliatory military assault on Gaza since October 7, 2023, the United Nations said. It followed militant group Hamas attacking Israel, killing about 1200 people and capturing some 250 hostages. The longitudinal study assessed 410 women living in Australia about 12-18 months before and during the ongoing war on Gaza, extending from October 2023 until December 2024. The women were directly connected by birth or family to Gaza, the occupied Palestinian Territories and Lebanon, as well as migrant women from other non-Middle East countries and Australian-born women with no connection to the region. One participant from the Middle East-connected group, which made up one-fifth of the total study, told researchers she felt like a robot: functioning but not fully engaging with her surroundings. "This experience indicates that the person may be emotionally alienated and disconnected from daily life and routines," Prof Rees explained. "You're just thinking all the time about your family and what's going on, and you're trying not to communicate it to children because you don't want them to get upset." Another woman said she spent many sleepless nights telling her family in southern Lebanon to evacuate, after hearing radio reports saying Israeli forces were attacking their particular area. "They can't protect them directly on the ground and are trying to do it from thousands of kilometres away," Prof Rees said. The dire mental health consequences for such a large population in Australia could be prolonged unless there were targeted clinical interventions as well as political ones, she said. Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636

Sydney Morning Herald
3 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
You can now do a sleep apnoea test using your watch. Is it worth it?
If you've ever been unlucky enough to have a sleep apnoea test, you'll appreciate how challenging it is to get a decent night's sleep while hooked up to an array of contraptions and wires. You also might understand why up to 90 per cent of the 1 billion-odd people believed to have sleep apnoea go undiagnosed. Apart from potential cost and access issues, fatigue is so common we've normalised it – we live in the era of 'The Great Exhaustion', according to author and computer science professor Cal Newport. Besides, who wants another disturbed night's sleep for a test when they already feel dog-tired? Enter the growing number of wearables offering a minimally disruptive sleep apnoea test in the comfort of your own bed. But how does a device on your wrist detect obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA), in which throat muscles intermittently collapse and block the airway during sleep, causing a person's breathing to stop and start? How accurate are they? And, if they don't replace a formal diagnosis, what's the point? Last week, Apple announced the Australian release of its sleep apnoea feature, available on Apple Watch Series 9 and above and Apple Watch Ultra 2. In August, Samsung's sleep apnoea feature on the Galaxy Watch will become available in Australia. While other devices, such as Whoop, Oura, Garmin and FitBit, have sleep health features that can alert the wearer to disrupted sleep patterns, they do not have specific Therapeutic Goods Administration-approved features to detect breathing disturbances and therefore sleep apnoea. So how does it work? Dr Matt Bianchi, formerly an assistant professor in neurology at Harvard Medical School, is now a research scientist at Apple.