Bare-knuckle boxing is best described by its many contradictions. It has been touted as the worldâs fastest-growing combat sport and, simultaneously, an ancient practice whose origins have been lost to prehistory. It is bloody, yet arguably less harmful for the brain than its gloved counterpart. In terms of fan numbers, it remains a relative minnow in the world of professional sports, but is nevertheless doing impressive box-office numbers in the US, UK and elsewhere.
âItâs humane enough to be mainstream, but itâs borderline brutal,â says David Feldman, founder and president of the Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship (BKFC). Bare-knuckle boxing is exactly what it sounds like. Two fighters enter a ring without gloves and, over a series of two-minute rounds, attempt to punch the other athlete into unconsciousness. Winners in fights that donât end in knockouts are decided by judges. Most fighters do wear cloth wraps around the wrist and thumb to reduce the risk of injuring their own hands, but their fistsâ striking surfaces â their knuckles â remain completely free of protection. It makes for compelling spectator sport, even to this initially hesitant observer.
Gloveless fists draw blood quickly. In the BKFC, cuts emerge on fightersâ faces and hands early in nearly every fight. It makes for cinematic imagery. Cameras capture the boxersâ bloodied hands resting on ropes between rounds and fightersâ blood-smeared faces as they focus on their opponentsâ movements. Itâs all reminiscent of the dramatic closeups fictional gladiators receive in sword-and-sandal epics. Feldman, whose own life story seems drawn straight from a Hollywood B-Movie (and the younger brother of a notorious celebrity boxing supremo), recognizes the BKFCâs visceral appeal.
âLetâs face it,â he says, âIf theyâre watching a fight, they like blood. ⊠We have blood.â Heâs quick to claim, however, that the BKFCâs surface-level damage does not translate into higher rates of long-term damage. Yet another contradiction at the heart of the sport.
âI never say âsafe.â Anytime you get into a ring, a cage or anything, and your object is to knock the [other] person out, itâs not safe,â Feldman says, adding that itâs âno more dangerous than any other combat sportâ. Most BKFC fights, for example, donât feature anything as one-sidedly violent as, say, the âground and poundâ submissions found in mixed martial arts promotions like the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). Feldman and other BKFC officials go on to suggest that brain injuries, such as concussions, are less prevalent in bare-knuckle fights than in gloved boxing matches.
The logic goes like this: in addition to damaging an opponentâs body, punching hurts the puncherâs hand. This is particularly true of punches to the face, where there is little muscle covering the skullâs hard bones, as well as teeth evolved specifically to tear into flesh. Boxing gloves protect a puncherâs hand, thus permitting fighters to hit harder without increasing the risk of damaging their hands. Harder punches lead to increased risks of causing the brain to move within the skull after impact, causing concussions. The argument may seem convoluted, or even counterintuitive, but itâs supported by evidence.
Although a 2021 study found lacerations (particularly facial lacerations) to be more prevalent in bare-knuckle boxing, it also determined that only 2.8% of fighters studied experienced concussions with symptoms. In gloved boxing, that number can reach as high as 12.3%. It is certainly tempting to take this information with a grain of salt â after all, the 2021 studyâs lead author, Dr Don Muzzi, is also the BKFCâs chief medical officer. Experts unaffiliated with bare-knuckle boxing, however, claim that the studyâs conclusions are sound.
Dr Nicole Reams, an Illinois-based neurologist who serves as the Medical Chair for the US Intercollegiate Boxing Association (a gloved boxing organization) as well as an independent neurological consultant for the NFLâs Chicago Bears, has stated the studyâs claims are âreasonableâ. She also notes that data comparing actual impacts between gloved and bare-knuckled matches (ie the number of strikes to the head a boxer receives in a given fight) would help clarify the matter further. Given bare-knuckled boxingâs relative novelty, the number of peer-reviewed studies remains low.
In reviewing the 2021 study, Reams specifically draws attention to the reduced fight times in bare-knuckle boxing as a potential reason for the sportâs reduced concussion rate. BKFC matches consist of five two-minute rounds. For comparison, championship bouts in menâs professional (gloved) boxing are typically scheduled for 12 three-minute rounds, meaning that BKFC fighters are exposed to their opponentsâ fists for less than one-third the time as gloved boxers.
â[The BKFC] was built for action,â says Feldman. âThatâs why we only do five two-minute rounds.â Increased action is further encouraged by the BKFCâs relatively small fighting space. Prowling around a circular ring with a 16ft diameter, BKFC fighters compete over an area noticeably smaller than even the smallest rings used in traditional professional boxing, and several times smaller than the octagon used in the UFC.
The combination of condensed rounds, close quarters and bare knuckles has successfully caught the attention of combat sport fans, including former UFC champion Conor McGregor, who now is a part-owner of the BKFC. What started with a single event featuring eight fighters in Wyoming has since grown into a multi-continent brand organizing multiple events per month. BKFC 66, a fight card scheduled for Friday night in Hollywood, Florida, marks the 100th event the organization has put on since its 2018 founding. (Some fights, such as those for new prospects, arenât included in the running tally of numbered events.) Such growth, however, hasnât come without the growing pains of increased visibility.
At a prospect fight earlier this year in Canada, BKFC debutant Sam Polkâs victory was celebrated by white supremacist organizations. Polk, who sports a pair of tattooed neo-Nazi symbols on his chest, knocked out fellow BKFC rookie Jake Craig in what one known white supremacist leader declared a âTotal Aryan Victoryâ. Feldman made it clear in a conversation with the Guardian that Polkâs views are not representative of the BKFC.
âIâm Jewish,â Feldman says. âLike, Iâm not supporting someone wearing swastikas. ⊠We didnât know [about Polkâs affiliations]. We found afterwards and then we, obviously, banned him from fighting. We donât support any of that kind of stuff.â
Politics arenât entirely absent from the BKFC â the organization sells T-shirts which read âMake America Brave Againâ â but Feldman claims that the relevant merchandise is unrelated to party politics and, instead, a nod to free speech.
âMake us brave again â stand up for yourself, man. Donât be afraid to say whatâs on your mind because a different group might get mad at you. You should be able to speak your mind. ⊠Be brave enough to hear it, not even be brave enough to say it. Be brave enough to let someone say whatâs on their mind and â look, if you donât like it? Donât listen to it.â Feldman goes on to mention limitations to such freedoms, such as around hate speech, that mirror his response to the Polk incident.
Polk aside, the BKFC features a number of likable athletes drawn from a wide range of fighting disciplines. American Ryan Reber, an undefeated bantamweight fighting in BKFC 66âs main event, comes from a traditional boxing background and has demonstrated extreme resilience in previous fights â he weathered multiple purposeful (and illegal) headbutts against Jack Grady in BKFC 32 on the way to his current 6-0 record. (Owing to the sportâs novelty, fightersâ bare-knuckle win-loss records are all relatively short. No fighters on the card at BKFC 66, for example, have more than 10 BKFC fights under their belt). Tonight, Reber has a chance to become BKFCâs bantamweight champion. To do so, however, he must defeat reigning champion Alberto Blas of Cuba, who Feldman describes as âa buzzsawâ. Even that strong comparison may be an understatement.
Blas fought MMA prior to joining the BKFC, going undefeated as an amateur before earning a losing record in the Titan Fighting Championships, a now-folded MMA promotion. Since transitioning to bare-knuckle fights, however, Blas has become unbeatable. Not only is he undefeated, like Reber, but Blas has yet to encounter a BKFC fightâs second round: all of his bouts have ended in first-round stoppages. Keith Richardson, Blasâs most recent opponent, was so dazed after 70 seconds with Blas that, in his confusion, he began trying to fight the referee. Reber, conversely, has had multiple fights last the full five-round distance.
âIf [Reber] can withstand the punishment, or the onslaught, of the first round,â says Feldman, then âheâs got a good shot.â Based on Blasâs record, thatâs a big if. A clash of two undefeated boxers with different fighting styles certainly makes for an appealing main event but, when asked about fighters who have the best chance of becoming breakout stars, Feldman refers to BKFC 66âs undercard.
âWe call him the âBare-Knuckle Tyson,ââ he says of Leonardo Perdomo, a Cuban heavyweight fighting against the heavier Steve Banks before this eveningâs main event. Like Blas, Perdomo has won each of his BKFC fights by first-round knockout. As a heavyweight, however, Perdomo is nearly twice Blasâs weight (literally) and, if bare-knuckled boxingâs heavyweight division proves to be the most marketable (which is often, although not always, the case in gloved boxing), then Perdomo seems poised to become the face of the BKFC. If he does so, his timing couldnât be better.
Six years in and with a track record of growth, the BKFC appears to be in rude health. The promotionâs success, however, begs the question: if stripping away traditional boxingâs rules has proved successful, isnât the BKFC likely be overtaken by yet another promotion that strips away even more rules? The threat isnât merely hypothetical. The still-in-development Dirty Boxing Championship promises to mix traditional boxingâs focus on punching with MMAâs smaller gloves and ground-and-pound techniques. The Enhanced Games, scheduled to start next year, plan to include combat sports in which fighters can use steroids and other currently outlawed perform-enhancing supplements. Feldman isnât worried by the potential for competition.
âI wish everybody good luck because it gets more and more people in love with combat sports,â he says, before adding, âIâve been doing this for a long time, and we have a very good recipe here. ⊠People donât understand what it takes to build [a sport]. ⊠Itâs not easy. Itâs hard. Itâs no joke, man. It takes a lot of money, a lot of time, a lot of work, a lot of effort to get it there.â When asked to identify the specifics within bare-knuckle fightingâs âgood recipeâ, Feldman suggests that the barrier to entry (for fans, at least) is lower in the BKFC than in other combat sports.
âItâs just relatable,â he says, before comparing the BKFCâs vocabulary to some of the more niche jargon that saturates MMA promotions. â[If] Iâm pitching an investor or something, I go, âYou know what an omoplata is?â [They say] no. You know what a Dâarce choke is? No. âYou know what a bare-knuckle punch is?â Yes.ââ
âImagine a really good street fight,â Feldman says, âbut with two really badass fighters that are trained to do this, not guys off the street.â Heâs right â the fightersâ clear training does remove some of the potential for unregulated violence that one might expect to see. At the same time, the previously mentioned, regular presence of cuts makes it so the âBâ in BKFC might more accurately stand for âbloodied,â possibly putting off many potential viewers. Then again, if future studies corroborate previous research on the relationship between bare-knuckled boxing and concussions, âbloodiedâ is probably preferable to âbrain-damagedâ.






