MrIncredible - as I, and others, have outlined before, fatalities in all the sports mentioned, in fact any other sport at all, are an unintended tragic by-product usually caused by a freak accident which could not have been prevented.
In boxing, the entire object of the exercise is to render the opponent unable to continue - either by concussion leading to unconciousness, or sufficient damage to the face and body to make continuation impossible.
Aside from the deaths immediately attributable to boxing - in other words death within hours or days, there are numourous examples of a long slow death from brain damage which can take years to reveal its effects, but can still be traced back to brain damage sustained in a boxing career - Muhamed Ali being the most obvious and high-profile example.
How sad that he is lauded as a champion and example to young people to follow, when what he is is a monument to tbe barbaric sport in which he partipated, and the price he and his family must pay watching his long slow undignified decline and death.
If MA was the only single boxer to suffer like that, he would be one boxer too many, but he is one of hundreds of not thousands of unknown and unrememebred men who died in this way, and that is the most barbaric side of all that this sport offers to its supporters.