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A digital graphic features a headline about professional boxer Jaime Munguía's failed drug test, with bold text stating “JAIME MUNGUÍA’S FAILED DRUG TEST: A BLOW TO BOXING’S INTEGRITY.” On the right side, Munguía is shown looking serious, while a gloved hand holds a drug test container in the foreground.

Jaime Munguia’s Failed Drug Test: A Blow to Boxing’s Integrity

Clean Record or Caught Out? So, Jaime Munguia has failed a drug test. Specifically, his A-sample came back positive for exogenous testosterone metabolites following his May 3 victory over Bruno Surace. His team were quick to push back, highlighting that Munguia has passed over 100 tests during his career and has “never previously tested positive.” […]

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An older, retired boxer sits on a bench in a dimly lit boxing gym, wearing gloves and a reflective expression. The image represents the emotional and mental challenges faced by boxers after retirement.

Boxers After Retirement: Why So Many Fighters Struggle Outside the Ring

It’s a topic we’ve tackled before on CMBoxing, and for good reason — boxers after retirement often face a brutal reality. From mental health battles and financial hardship to a complete loss of identity, life outside the ring can hit harder than any opponent ever did. It’s one of boxing’s most overlooked issues, and it’s

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A dramatic landscape image featuring a worn red boxing glove under warm lighting on the left, with bold text on the right reading “Is the 12-round limit still the right length for championship fights?” — visually supporting the theme of 12 round boxing debates.

Is the 12-Round Limit Still the Right Length for Championship Fights?

Boxing has never been shy about tradition — but in a sport that prides itself on toughness, heritage, and grit, when do you stop clinging to the past and start embracing what actually works? The current championship format of 12 rounds didn’t come out of nowhere. It was a direct response to tragedy, introduced as

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Two boxing commentators at ringside — one speaking animatedly with exaggerated gestures, the other listening intently with a serious expression — highlighting the divide in modern punditry and reflecting ongoing boxing commentary criticism.

Boxing’s Commentary Problem: Do Pundits Talk Too Much Rubbish?

Boxing commentary criticism isn’t new — fans have been shouting at their TVs for decades — but lately, it’s getting harder to ignore. From blatant bias to over-the-top hype and downright cringeworthy banter, many viewers are left wondering whether modern punditry is doing more harm than good. Are They Watching the Same Fight as Us?

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A split-screen image representing boxing towel stoppages: on the left, a visibly exhausted boxer with red gloves slumps on a stool, showing clear signs of fatigue and defeat; on the right, a trainer stands at the ropes mid-action, throwing in a white towel to signal the end of the fight.

Boxing Towel Stoppages: When Should the Corner Step In?

Boxing Towel Stoppages: When Should the Corner Step In? In boxing, there’s a brutal beauty to perseverance — the warrior spirit that keeps fighters pushing when their bodies scream for mercy. But that same spirit can be dangerous. Fighters rarely quit. That’s why we need boxing towel stoppages — because the corner is there to

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