British Boxing Board of Control explained

British Boxing Board of Control
Sport:Boxing
Abbrev:BBBofC
Founded:1929[1]
Location:Cardiff
Replaced:National Sporting Club
Url:bbbofc.com/
Countryflag:United Kingdom

The British Boxing Board of Control (BBBofC) is the governing body of professional boxing in the United Kingdom.[2]

History

The British Boxing Board of Control was formed in 1929 from the old National Sporting Club and is headquartered in Cardiff.

Until 1948, it had a colour bar in effect by means of its Rule 24, which stated that title contestants "must have two white parents".[3] [4]

The British Boxing Board of Control initially refused to grant Jane Couch a professional licence on the sole ground that she was a woman, and argued that PMS made women too unstable to box.[5] [6] Claiming sexual discrimination and supported by the Equal Opportunities Commission, Couch managed to have this decision overturned by a tribunal in March 1998.[7] [8]

The British Boxing Board of Control gives out the British Boxer of the Year award. Natasha Jonas became the first woman to win this award upon winning it for the year of 2022.[9]

Councils

The Board divides the country into seven Area Councils: the Scottish Area, the Northern Ireland Area, the Welsh Area, the Northern Area, the Central Area (including the Isle of Man), the Southern Area, and the Midlands Area.[10] There was previously a Western Area, which was merged with the Southern Area.

Lonsdale Belt

See main article: Lonsdale Belt.

The Board also sanctions bouts for British boxing's most prestigious title: the Lonsdale Belt. The Lonsdale Belt is awarded to the champion of the United Kingdom in each respective weight class and to win the belt outright it must be defended against a British challenger on at least three occasions.

Scoring

The Board is known for its unique scoring system. Except for title fights (where the bout is scored by three judges, none of whom serve as fight referee), the referee is the sole scorer. After the bout (if the fight goes to points decision), the referee hands his decision to the MC and the winner is announced, the referee then raising the arm of the winner – or, in the event of a draw, both boxers' arms.

Current champions

Male

Weight class:Champion:Reign began:
HeavyweightFabio Wardley26 November 2022
CruiserweightCheavon Clarke25 May 2024
Light-heavyweightJoshua Buatsi3 February 2024
Super-middleweightCallum Simpson3 August 2024
MiddleweightBrad Pauls20 July 2024
Super-welterweightSamuel Antwi1 September 2023
WelterweightHarry Scarff18 November 2023
Super-lightweightDalton Smith6 August 2022
LightweightSam Noakes10 February 2024
Super-featherweightReece Bellotti10 February 2024
FeatherweightNathaniel Collins10 March 2023
Super-bantamweightDennis McCann16 March 2024
BantamweightAndrew Cain 20 July 2024
Super-flyweightMarcel Braithwaite20 October 2023
FlyweightJay Harris5 May 2023

Female

Weight class:Champion:Reign began:
Welterweight
Super-bantamweightTysie Gallagher24 May 2024
Super-flyweightEmma Dolan22 June 2024

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Boxing. 9781442229914. 28 March 2016. Gems. Gerald R.. 13 March 2014. Rowman & Littlefield .
  2. Web site: Sport | Round one for women's boxing . BBC News . 1998-11-24 . 2015-09-30.
  3. Web site: Manchester - People - The uncrownable champion . BBC . 2008-11-04 . 2021-07-16.
  4. JOHNES . MARTIN . TAYLOR . MATTHEW . BOXING, RACE, AND BRITISH IDENTITY, 1945–1962 . The Historical Journal . Cambridge University Press (CUP) . 63 . 5 . 2020-02-14 . 0018-246X . 10.1017/s0018246x19000724 . 1349–1377. 213844092 .
  5. News: Round one for women's boxing . 24 November 1998 . 5 December 2008 . BBC News.
  6. Web site: 12 and 13 February 1998 – Tribunal 1, 100 London Road, Croydon, UK. . 12 February 2010 . Bentham . John . February 1998 .
    1. 4
    . Punkcast.
  7. News: March: Jane Couch . 22 December 1998 . 1 December 2008 . BBC News.
  8. Web site: Couch Interview . 19 September 1999 . 4 December 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200622005234/https://www.womenboxing.com/biog/interviews/jcouch_1.htm . 22 June 2020 . dead.
  9. Web site: Natasha Jonas becomes first woman to win British Boxer of the Year at British Boxing Board of Control awards. Sky Sports.
  10. Web site: British Boxing Board of Control. BBBofC. 6 June 2021. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20080725000731/http://www.bbbofc.com/area_councils.php. 25 July 2008. dmy-all.