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Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 11:56
by Ruthless-RKO
Sad news.

RIP

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 11:57
by diddy
So sad. My God.

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 12:01
by Ruthless-RKO
Maxim Dadashev has died from injuries suffered during Friday's fight, according to trainer Buddy McGirt and Donatas Janusevicius, Dadashev's strength and conditioning coach.

Dadashev, 28, had been in UM Prince George's Hospital Center since the 11th-round loss to Subriel Matias. He underwent a two-hour surgery to relieve a subdural hematoma, or bleeding of the brain, and had been in a medically induced coma.

Early Saturday morning, neurosurgeon Mary IH Cobb told Dadashev's manager, Egis Klimas, and Janusevicius that the boxer had suffered a brain bleed on his right side, that his head was shaved and his scalp opened up, and that he was showing signs of severe brain damage. He had been given medication to decrease swelling.

Dadashev, from St. Petersburg, Russia, was 13-1 as a professional boxer.

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 12:02
by BEZPREDELIUS
R.I.P. but stutus not updated. Image uploads

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 12:06
by dagilechia
Sad.. Maybe i'm wrong but i feel like serious brain injuries happen more often in last 10-20 years than it did in past.

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 12:10
by oogiebe
Tragic and sad.

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 12:16
by JMac
Horrible news...so sad. May he RIP.

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 12:17
by margaret thatcher
f@cking awful

boxing is f@cking unforgiving. these cases happen every year. you follow a guys career, thinking what the future might hold, then you see them die from the ring not long after,

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 12:28
by lookingaround87
I hope the guy he fought was clean, because if he was on anything he shouldn't have been, he should be charged with manslaughter. With a 100% KO ratio, there is suspicion.

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 12:47
by tiny_acres
The absolute worst part of the sport.
RIP

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 13:00
by Noxy
Terrible, terrible news that. RIP

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 13:15
by lagako10
very sad day for boxing today RIP champ :verysad:

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 13:31
by world ranked
lookingaround87 wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 12:28 I hope the guy he fought was clean, because if he was on anything he shouldn't have been, he should be charged with manslaughter. With a 100% KO ratio, there is suspicion.
There quite a few prospects with undefeated records with all by stoppage and by looking at resume he hadn't really stepped up previously so there shouldn't be any suspicion.

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 14:17
by Cent0089
This sad story just remind us that boxing is not sport for p*ssies. This is so sad :(

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 14:19
by oogiebe
Cent0089 wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 14:17 This sad story just remind us that boxing is not sport for p*ssies. This is so sad :(
Also reminds us to never use the words 'coward,' 'scared,' or even 'bum.'

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 14:26
by ValMar
tiny_acres wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 12:47 The absolute worst part of the sport.
RIP
Yes !

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 14:28
by boxing_rocks
dagilechia wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 12:06 Sad.. Maybe i'm wrong but i feel like serious brain injuries happen more often in last 10-20 years than it did in past.
Maybe because boxers are more depleted at the time of weigh-ins and not recovering completely/correctly.

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 14:34
by oogiebe
boxing_rocks wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 14:28
dagilechia wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 12:06 Sad.. Maybe i'm wrong but i feel like serious brain injuries happen more often in last 10-20 years than it did in past.
Maybe because boxers are more depleted at the time of weigh-ins and not recovering completely/correctly.
Why is that? Does the protective fluids cushioning the brain deplete as well? Don't mean to change the subject matter, but I'm curious to know.

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 14:38
by Cent0089
oogiebe wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 14:19
Cent0089 wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 14:17 This sad story just remind us that boxing is not sport for p*ssies. This is so sad :(
Also reminds us to never use the words 'coward,' 'scared,' or even 'bum.'
This is true, man :box:

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 15:22
by Deleted_Scenes
oogiebe wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 14:34
boxing_rocks wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 14:28
Maybe because boxers are more depleted at the time of weigh-ins and not recovering completely/correctly.
Why is that? Does the protective fluids cushioning the brain deplete as well? Don't mean to change the subject matter, but I'm curious to know.
Not quite. Cutting water weight causes the body to lose water from everywhere, including from within the brain.

The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) surrounding the brain is not water, so none of this is lost. What happens instead, is the loss of water from within the brain causes it to shrink slightly. The extra space around the brain is occupied by an increase in the volume of CSF.

Cutting too much weight, too quickly, or failing to properly rehydrate, means that when a blow to the head occurs, the brain has more distance to travel before impacting the side of the skull. That means more speed, and more force, increasing the likelihood of brain injury.

The best way to protect against this, is to restrict rapid weight cutting, by forcing a fighter to be within 10% of his fighting weight 30 days out, and within 5% 15 days out, or to ban dehydration altogether. The latter is easy to do. All that's required, is a simple urine test immediately before weighing in. Inadequate hydration level = no permission to fight.

This whole practice is why I'm always quick to speak out against rehydration clauses. A weight disadvantage in ring is still far less of a health risk, than having a drained fighter taking punches to the head.

http://greymattersjournal.com/cutting-f ... -the-brain

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 15:53
by oogiebe
Deleted_Scenes wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 15:22
oogiebe wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 14:34
Why is that? Does the protective fluids cushioning the brain deplete as well? Don't mean to change the subject matter, but I'm curious to know.
Not quite. Cutting water weight causes the body to lose water from everywhere, including from within the brain.

The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) surrounding the brain is not water, so none of this is lost. What happens instead, is the loss of water from within the brain causes it to shrink slightly. The extra space around the brain is occupied by an increase in the volume of CSF.

Cutting too much weight, too quickly, or failing to properly rehydrate, means that when a blow to the head occurs, the brain has more distance to travel before impacting the side of the skull. That means more speed, and more force, increasing the likelihood of brain injury.

The best way to protect against this, is to restrict rapid weight cutting, by forcing a fighter to be within 10% of his fighting weight 30 days out, and within 5% 15 days out, or to ban dehydration altogether. The latter is easy to do. All that's required, is a simple urine test immediately before weighing in. Inadequate hydration level = no permission to fight.

This whole practice is why I'm always quick to speak out against rehydration clauses. A weight disadvantage in ring is still far less of a health risk, than having a drained fighter taking punches to the head.

http://greymattersjournal.com/cutting-f ... -the-brain
Not too far off. :TU:

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 16:11
by Deleted_Scenes
oogiebe wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 15:53
Deleted_Scenes wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 15:22

Not quite. Cutting water weight causes the body to lose water from everywhere, including from within the brain.

The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) surrounding the brain is not water, so none of this is lost. What happens instead, is the loss of water from within the brain causes it to shrink slightly. The extra space around the brain is occupied by an increase in the volume of CSF.

Cutting too much weight, too quickly, or failing to properly rehydrate, means that when a blow to the head occurs, the brain has more distance to travel before impacting the side of the skull. That means more speed, and more force, increasing the likelihood of brain injury.

The best way to protect against this, is to restrict rapid weight cutting, by forcing a fighter to be within 10% of his fighting weight 30 days out, and within 5% 15 days out, or to ban dehydration altogether. The latter is easy to do. All that's required, is a simple urine test immediately before weighing in. Inadequate hydration level = no permission to fight.

This whole practice is why I'm always quick to speak out against rehydration clauses. A weight disadvantage in ring is still far less of a health risk, than having a drained fighter taking punches to the head.

http://greymattersjournal.com/cutting-f ... -the-brain
Not too far off. :TU:
:TU:

No, you were pretty close. I don't know how much weight Dadashev cut, or how quickly, but with what's known these days, it's criminal more isn't being done to protect the fighters from themselves. Modern weight cutting techniques are literally killing people.

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 16:22
by oogiebe
Deleted_Scenes wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 16:11
oogiebe wrote: 23 Jul 2019, 15:53

Not too far off. :TU:
:TU:

No, you were pretty close. I don't know how much weight Dadashev cut, or how quickly, but with what's known these days, it's criminal more isn't being done to protect the fighters from themselves. Modern weight cutting techniques are literally killing people.
I've seen a lot of discussion here on the topic, but this was the first time I actually thought about how that impacts the brain. Can't understand how anyone would take such a risk or why it's tolerated. Money, money, money. Terrible.

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 17:35
by Ruthless-RKO

Re: Maxim Dadashev has Died

Posted: 23 Jul 2019, 17:38
by Ruthless-RKO