Ringside Boxing Glove
![]() |
![]() |
RINGSIDE HANGING GLOVES 5' x 5' GYM BANNER-bag boxing mma training | ![]() |
![]() |
US $11.95 | 5d 7h 6m |
![]() |
RARE Ringside Lace Red Competition Boxing Gloves 10 oz | ![]() |
![]() |
US $55.00 | 2d 20h 12m |
![]() |
RARE Ringside Lace Red Competition Boxing Gloves 12 oz | ![]() |
![]() |
US $55.00 | 2d 20h 13m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE 5' x 5' BANNER-handwrap bag glove mma boxing-2 | ![]() |
![]() |
US $14.50 | 9d 2h 39m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE CLASSIC HANDWRAPS-glove mma hand wrap boxing-b | ![]() |
![]() |
US $7.50 | 20d 3h 50m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE KIDS HANDWRAPS-glove boxing hand wrap bag mma | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.75 | 26d 12h 19m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE CLASSIC HANDWRAPS-glove mma hand wrap boxing-r | ![]() |
![]() |
US $7.50 | 20d 1h 22m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE JUNIOR HANDWRAPS-glove boxing hand wrap mma | ![]() |
![]() |
US $7.25 | 26d 8h 43m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE PUERTO RICAN BOXING GLOVE KEYRING | ![]() |
![]() |
US $3.95 | 26d 4h 1m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE - MEXICAN - MINIATURE BOXING GLOVES | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.95 | 24d 4h 50m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE MEXICAN BOXING GLOVE KEYRING | ![]() |
![]() |
US $3.95 | 28d 40m |
![]() |
Ringside USA Grappling Gloves MMA/BOXING Workout (L) Large | ![]() |
![]() |
US $18.99 | 25d 2h 53m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE - PUERTO RICAN - MINI BOXING GLOVES | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.95 | 19d 6h 35m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE - USA - MINIATURE BOXING GLOVES | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.95 | 24d 4h 22m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE RED MINIATURE (MINI) BOXING GLOVES | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.95 | 13d 6h 39m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE "GLORY" BOXING BANNER-gloves training mma gym | ![]() |
![]() |
US $14.50 | 22d 19h 42m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE - BLACK - MINIATURE BOXING GLOVES | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.95 | 20d 6h 14m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE SPARRING BOXING BANNER-gloves mma training gym | ![]() |
![]() |
US $14.50 | 17d 20h 53m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE USA BOXING GLOVE KEYRING | ![]() |
![]() |
US $3.95 | 17d 19h 11m |
![]() |
Ringside 10oz Boxing Bag Gloves - Large Size - Used | ![]() |
![]() |
US $16.99 | 15d 22h 5m |
| Powered by phpBay Pro |
Ringside Boxing Glove

Grant Boxing Gloves.?
Anyone recommend these gloves? What's different about Campeon gloves?
If not these gloves, what other kind?
Grant vs. Reyes - am I looking at the wrong brand?
http://www.ringside.com/detail.aspx?ID=25889
All professional gloves have the same corresponding oz.'s( 8,10,12),but it's the cut and the way the gloves are manufactured and sewn as to their unique differences.Boxers choose their gloves as to sponsers,fight contracts,or general likness.Grant is thought to be a padded glove as many w/ hand issues will use them.Reyes in the sport are called "punchers gloves"and are thought to not take as much off of a fighters punches.Everlast also makes a worthy ring glove.
![]() |
![]() |
RINGSIDE HANGING GLOVES 5' x 5' GYM BANNER-bag boxing mma training | ![]() |
![]() |
US $11.95 | 5d 7h 6m |
![]() |
RARE Ringside Lace Red Competition Boxing Gloves 10 oz | ![]() |
![]() |
US $55.00 | 2d 20h 12m |
![]() |
RARE Ringside Lace Red Competition Boxing Gloves 12 oz | ![]() |
![]() |
US $55.00 | 2d 20h 13m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE 5' x 5' BANNER-handwrap bag glove mma boxing-2 | ![]() |
![]() |
US $14.50 | 9d 2h 39m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE CLASSIC HANDWRAPS-glove mma hand wrap boxing-b | ![]() |
![]() |
US $7.50 | 20d 3h 50m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE KIDS HANDWRAPS-glove boxing hand wrap bag mma | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.75 | 26d 12h 19m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE CLASSIC HANDWRAPS-glove mma hand wrap boxing-r | ![]() |
![]() |
US $7.50 | 20d 1h 22m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE JUNIOR HANDWRAPS-glove boxing hand wrap mma | ![]() |
![]() |
US $7.25 | 26d 8h 43m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE PUERTO RICAN BOXING GLOVE KEYRING | ![]() |
![]() |
US $3.95 | 26d 4h 1m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE - MEXICAN - MINIATURE BOXING GLOVES | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.95 | 24d 4h 50m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE MEXICAN BOXING GLOVE KEYRING | ![]() |
![]() |
US $3.95 | 28d 40m |
![]() |
Ringside USA Grappling Gloves MMA/BOXING Workout (L) Large | ![]() |
![]() |
US $18.99 | 25d 2h 53m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE - PUERTO RICAN - MINI BOXING GLOVES | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.95 | 19d 6h 35m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE - USA - MINIATURE BOXING GLOVES | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.95 | 24d 4h 22m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE RED MINIATURE (MINI) BOXING GLOVES | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.95 | 13d 6h 39m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE "GLORY" BOXING BANNER-gloves training mma gym | ![]() |
![]() |
US $14.50 | 22d 19h 42m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE - BLACK - MINIATURE BOXING GLOVES | ![]() |
![]() |
US $6.95 | 20d 6h 14m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE SPARRING BOXING BANNER-gloves mma training gym | ![]() |
![]() |
US $14.50 | 17d 20h 53m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE USA BOXING GLOVE KEYRING | ![]() |
![]() |
US $3.95 | 17d 19h 11m |
![]() |
Ringside 10oz Boxing Bag Gloves - Large Size - Used | ![]() |
![]() |
US $16.99 | 15d 22h 5m |
![]() |
Ringside Boxing Bag Gloves (different sizes) | ![]() |
![]() |
US $18.99 | 5d 14h 37m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE KIDS BAG GLOVES (RS) RED boxing muay thai kickboxing mma | ![]() |
![]() |
US $22.50 | 59m |
![]() |
RINGSIDE The Best In Boxing Open Thumb Bag Gloves L / XL | ![]() |
![]() |
US $24.99 | 4d 6h 12m |
| Powered by phpBay Pro |
![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
|
|
American Boxing Glove $44.99 American Boxing Glove - Giclee Print |
|
|
Viewing Boxing from Ringside $25.62 Big city boy grabs scholarship to escape L.A. insanity to smalltown America. Meets, wins, loses ? Author: Donelson, Thomas Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 172 Publication Date: 2002/08/01 Language: English Dimensions: 8.96 x 6.10 x 0.44 inches |
|
|
Woman wearing boxing glove $34.99 Woman wearing boxing glove - Giclee Print |
|
|
Miguel Cotto Autographed Boxing Glove $223.88 Miguel Cotto Autographed Boxing Glove Miguel Cotto Autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Gerry Cooney Autographed Boxing Glove $313.88 Gerry Cooney Autographed Boxing Glove Gerry Cooney autographed boxing glove |
|
|
Emile Griffith Autographed Boxing Glove $370.13 Emile Griffith Autographed Boxing Glove Emile Griffith autographed boxing glove |
|
|
Felix Trinidad Autographed Boxing Glove $370.13 Felix Trinidad Autographed Boxing Glove Boxing Glove autographed by Felix Trinidad |
|
|
Michael Buffer Autographed Boxing Glove $336.38 Michael Buffer Autographed Boxing Glove Boxing Glove autographed by Michael Buffer |
|
|
Pernell Whitaker Autographed Boxing Glove $280.13 Pernell Whitaker Autographed Boxing Glove Pernell Whitaker autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Earnie Shavers Autographed Boxing Glove $246.38 Earnie Shavers Autographed Boxing Glove Earnie Shavers autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Carmen Basilio Autographed Boxing Glove $246.38 Carmen Basilio Autographed Boxing Glove Carmen Basilio autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Aaron Pryor Autographed Boxing Glove $246.38 Aaron Pryor Autographed Boxing Glove Aaron Pryor autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Christy Martin Autographed Boxing Glove $246.38 Christy Martin Autographed Boxing Glove Christy Martin autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Virgil Hill Autographed Boxing Glove $246.38 Virgil Hill Autographed Boxing Glove Virgil Hill autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Kid Gavilan Autographed Boxing Glove $448.88 Kid Gavilan Autographed Boxing Glove Kid Gavilan autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Ken Buchanan Autographed Boxing Glove $246.38 Ken Buchanan Autographed Boxing Glove Ken Buchanan autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Cory Spinks Autographed Boxing Glove $246.38 Cory Spinks Autographed Boxing Glove Cory Spinks autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Alexis Arguello Autographed Boxing Glove $246.38 Alexis Arguello Autographed Boxing Glove Alexis Arguello autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Buddy McGirt Autographed Boxing Glove $246.38 Buddy McGirt Autographed Boxing Glove Buddy McGirt autographed Boxing Glove |
|
|
Pipino Cuevas Autographed Boxing Glove $246.38 Pipino Cuevas Autographed Boxing Glove Pipino Cuevas autographed Boxing Glove |
![]() |
Ringside Mexican-Style Boxing Handwraps |
DescriptionSlightly elastic, authentic Mexican style wrap material for a contoured fit. Extra long 180" for added protection. Exclusive hook and loop closure. |
![]() |
Ringside Kids Bag Gloves
List Price: |
DescriptionThe ideal glove for kids that aren't ready to box, but still want to be a part of the action. Durable vinyl construction with an easy slip-on elastic cuff. |
![]() |
Top Contender Classic Weave Handwraps - 10 Pack |
DescriptionDurable cotton wraps that help support and protect your hands. High end hand protection for boxers on a budget. Each wrap is 2' x 170" with a Hook & Loop Closure and thumb loop. |
![]() |
Boxing Glove Zipper Clasp |
DescriptionThis double-sided, boxing glove zipper pull features diamond-like inlays. It's a perfect, sport-specific embellishment for your jacket or gym bag. Comes in Silver or Gold |
![]() |
A Clenched Fist: The Making of a Golden Gloves Champion
List Price: |
DescriptionGRABBING A GOLDEN DREAM WITH GOLDEN GLOVES. Does boxing teach anything besides how to club someone into submission? Can it transcend its sordid reputation and instill love, compassion and honor in America's most troubled kids? In this raw yet uplifting memoir about amateur boxing, author Peter Wood tells of his begrudging return to a world he thought he'd left behind... |
![]() |
Confessions of a Fighter: Battling Through the New York Golden Gloves (Golden Gloves Classic Books)
List Price: |
DescriptionFROM BOY TO MAN, ONE PUNCH AT A TIME. Eighteen-year-old Peter Wood's home life is a battleground. He hates his stepfather, whose vicious comments open new wounds every day. He hates his mother for marrying the guy... |
![]() |
Everlast Heavy Bag Hanger
List Price: |
DescriptionAttach your Everlast heavy training bag securely to your ceiling with this wood-beam bag holder. It's made of steel and is intended as a mount point for single or double end heavy bags. It features a durable enamel powder coating and can be bolted to wooden floors or ceilings... |
![]() |
Everlast EverGel Hand Wraps
List Price: |
DescriptionEvergel handwraps that provide 3 layers of gel over the knuckles to absorb the impact. Comes with hook and loop wrist wrap support strap Color: Black |
![]() |
Everlast Hand Wraps
List Price: |
DescriptionThis Everlast® popular Mexican-style handwrap comes in a breathable cotton fabric for comfort and support. |
Ringside IMF Tech Training Gloves review at ratethisgear.com








































September 29th, 2010 at 5:34 am
I knew I would think of more old technologies I have a fondness for.Old-fashioned wet shaving. By which I mean dad’s double-edge razor (literally in my case: one of my two was my father’s, the other my father-in-law’s), complete with brush and shaving soap in a mug. I am very intermittently trying to master the straight razor, with little success so far.The Zippo lighter. Changed only in details since it first appeared in the 30s. Simple, reliable, rugged, easy to maintain. Still made in Bradford, Pennsylvania (Zippo now also owns the company, in the same town, that makes Case knives — another fine example of old technology), and has a real, no-weasel-words, lifetime guarantee. If you find a battered old Zippo at a garage sale that your neighbor found in her grandpa’s tackle box twenty years after he died, put in a new flint and fill it with lighter fluid and it will probably fire right up. If it doesn’t, send it to Zippo and you’ll get it back good as new, for the princely sum of … postage.Actually, the whole shadowy, semi-criminalized world of pipe smoking is kind of atavistic and gadgety. The pipe itself is a gadget, really. And then we’ve got our pipe cleaners, tampers, reamers, scrapers, three-in-one pipe tools, wind caps and God knows what all.What is it that draws some of us to these old technologies? I don’t think you can say we’re complete Luddites. I mean, here we are commenting on a blog and all. If I were to ask some guy like me, a pipe smoker with a bunch of Zippos in a drawer, I’d probably find there was some kind of high technology in his life: a computer, a cell phone, maybe even an iPod. But I’ll bet I’d also find he was into some other things that seem odd in the modern world — Hemingway-era fishing gear, old Triumph motorcycles, player pianos, something. Probably several somethings.I think part of it may not be the technology so much as our relationship with technology. Something interesting I found out about the Amish after we visited their settlement at Arthur, Illinois some years ago: they’re not really anti-technology, not in a simplistic sense. A man might have a battery-operated shaver, for example; some communities have locally-generated electricity; and a settlement will often have a centrally located telephone specifically to call for help in an emergency. Rather they are careful about technology and evaluate it on different terms than most of us are accustomed to. If the community is considering adopting something new, the question goes to deacons, ministers, and bishops to consider how the technology would affect community life and the principle of separation from the outside world.Here are some things I look for, find value in, and am more likely to find with old than with new technologies:A connection with the senses. At the psychic level this might be the greatest loss that comes with electronically mediated devices. We aren’t evolved to stare at screens or listen to digitally-reproduced music while clicking keys or pressing tiny buttons on a white plastic box. We are evolved to grip rough sticks and rocks in our hands, to exert strength, to flick bugs off leaves, to smell the earth, the foliage, and our not-overwashed selves while working, to feel the hot sun or cool shade on our backs and the roots and tussocks under our feet, to taste cool water, berries, and our own sweat, to hear the wind, thunder eight miles off, the chattering and singing of a dozen kinds of birds, our own heavy breathing, the complaints or songs of our companions. The physicality of a fountain pen, a typewriter, a book, a bicycle ride is of a different order than that of a word processor or Kindle or even a drive in the family car. A book or a hammer has heft, a certain way it feels (different from the book we read last week or our neighbor’s hammer), a smell.A sense of direct control, and the pleasure of using skill. Sure, I’m controlling this computer I’m typing on. But I have no idea, or only the vaguest, what’s going on inside the box that links these movements on the keyboard to the letters I’m seeing on the screen. I couldn’t see the electrons bopping back and forth even if I opened the CPU. And if something goes kablooey, what am I going to do? Get my multitool out of my briefcase and reconnect the glammis to the furnistat? No, I’ll call one of the IT guys, who will stare at lines of code and either rewrite the code or tell me a board has to be replaced — not repaired — pulled out, sent (one hopes) to be recycled, and replaced with a new one. If the chain slips off the derailleur while I’m riding my bike, I can see what’s happened. I can probably get it back on, secure enough to limp home. Once home, I can either read a book and figure out what went wrong and how to fix it, or I can take it to the bike shop, and if the bike wizard lets me look over his or her shoulder I can see how it’s done. Guaranteed, even if sweating and cussing are involved, it’s a lot more fun than swapping out a board.Solidity, quality, repairability, sustainability. I think this may be hardwired into us too. I mean, field observations of chimps indicate that primates have been using disposable tools for millions of years, but on the other hand my twenty-times-great-grandmother didn’t want to go out into the field with a flimsy digging tool that would break off in her hand, and if my forty-times-great-grandfather set off down the river to trade, he sure wanted a boat he could fix if it started taking water. There is something, I think, cheapening to the soul in using things that are kinda flimsy, kinda shoddily made, just good enough to do the job over a fairly short life span — and then when they break, designed to just be thrown away, because they aren’t sturdy enough to take a repair, and they aren’t put together so you can take them apart and refasten them anyway, and when one crappy component snaps you can figure a half-dozen other crappy components are ready to go, and anyone with any love of craft would feel a sour taste in their mouth trying to work on such stuff to begin with. Cheapening and ecologically irresponsible, I might add. We are trapped by modern life into dealing with tons of such stuff, but it’s right and healthy to look for alternatives when we can. It is better for the world and better for the soul to work with things that feel good, that work well, that last and can be fixed.I’m reminded of Robert Pirsig’s Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, and the elusive but essential notion of Quality that obsessed his alter ego Phaedrus. How Phaedrus must hate our time, if in some way he still lives! — days drained even sparser of Quality than his own days of youth and madness.
October 29th, 2010 at 12:39 am
you guys should come back to the US and take a road trip across Interstate 80, it covers the almost the entire US, 2,900 miles long.