GENERAL APPEARANCE
The Boxer is a medium sized, sturdy, smooth-haired
dog of short square figure and strong limb. The musculation is clean
and powerfully developed and should stand out plastically from under the
skin. As a service and guard dog he must combine a considerable degree
of elegance with the substance and power essential to his duties; those
of an enduring escort dog whether with horse, bicycle or carriage and as
a splendid jumper. Only a body whose individual limbs are built to
withstand the most strenuous "mechanical" effort and assembled as a complete
and harmonious whole, can respond to such demands. Therefore to be
at its highest efficiency, the Boxer must never be plump or heavy.
Whilst equipped for great speed, it must not be racy. When judging
the Boxer the first thing to be considered is general appearance, the relation
of substance to elegance and the desired relationship of the individual
parts of the body to each other. Consideration, too, must be given
to colour. After these, the individual parts should be examined for
their correct construction and their functions. Special attention
should be devoted to the head.
CHARACTERISTICS
The character of the Boxer is of the greatest
importance and demands the most careful attention. He is renowned
from olden times for his great love and faithfulness to his master and
household, his alertness, and fearless courage as a defender and protector.
The Boxer is docile but distrustful of strangers. He is bright and
friendly in play but brave and determined when roused. His intelligence
and willing tractability, his modesty, and cleanliness make him a highly
desirable family dog and cheerful companion. He is the soul of honesty
and loyalty. He is never false or treacherous even in his old age.
TEMPERAMENT
(See under Characteristics)
HEAD AND SKULL
The head imparts to the Boxer a unique individual
stamp peculiar to the breed. It must be in perfect proportion to
his body; above all it must never be too light.
The muzzle is the
most distinctive feature. The greatest value is to be placed on its
being of correct form and in absolute proportion to the skull. The
beauty of the head depends upon the harmonious proportion between the muzzle
and the skull. From whatever direction the head is viewed, whether
from the front, from the top or from the side, the muzzle should always
appear in correct relationship to the skull. That means that the
head should never appear too small or too large. The length of the
muzzle to the whole of the head should be as 1 is to 3.
The head
should not show deep wrinkles. Normally wrinkles will spring up on
the top of the skull when the dog is alert. Folds are always indicated
from the root of the nose running downwards on both sides of the muzzle.
The dark mask is confined to the muzzle. It must be in distinct relief
to the colour of the head so that the face will not have a "sombre" expression.
The muzzle must be powerfully developed in length, in breadth and in height.
It must not be pointed or narrow, short or shallow. Its shape is
influenced through the formation of both jaw-bones, the placement of teeth
in the jaw-bones, and through the quality of the lips. The top of
the skull should be slightly arched. It should not be so short that
it is rotund, too flat, or too broad.
The occiput should not be too
pronounced. The forehead should form a distinct stop with the top
line of the muzzle, which should not be forced back into the forehead like
that of a Bulldog. Neither should it slope away (downfaced).
The tip of the nose should lie somewhat higher than the root of the muzzle.
The forehead should show a suggestion of furrow which, however, should
never be too deep, especially between the eyes.
Corresponding with
the powerful set of teeth, the cheeks accordingly should be well developed
without protruding from the head with "too bulgy" an appearance.
For preference they should taper into the muzzle in a slight, graceful
curve.
The nose should be broad and black, very slightly turned up.
The nostrils should be broad with a naso-labial line between them.
The two jaw-bones should not terminate in a normal perpendicular level
in the front but the lower jaw should protrude beyond the upper jaw and
bend slightly upwards.
The Boxer is normally undershot. The
upper jaw should be broad where attached to the skull, and maintain this
breadth except for a very slight tapering to the front.
EYES
The eyes should be dark brown; not too small or protruding;
not deep set. They should disclose an expression of energy and intelligence,
but should never appear gloomy, threatening or piercing. The eyes
must have a dark rim.
EARS
Some American and Continental Boxers are cropped and are
ineligible for competition under Kennel Club Regulations. The Boxer's
natural ears are defined as: moderate in size (small rather than large),
thin to the touch, set on wide apart at the highest points of the sides
of the skull and lying flat and close to the cheek when in repose.
When the dog is alert the ears should fall forward with a definite crease.
MOUTH
The canine teeth should be as widely separated as possible.
The incisors (6) should all be in one row, with no projection of the middle
teeth. In the upper jaw they should be slightly concave. In
the lower they should be in a straight line. Both jaws should be
very wide in front; bite powerful and sound, the teeth set in the most
normal possible arrangement. The lips complete the formation of the
muzzle. The upper lip should be thick and padded and fill out the
hollow space in front formed by the projection of the lower jaw and be
supported by the fangs of the jaw. These fangs must stand as far
apart as possible and be of good length so that the front surface of the
muzzle becomes broad and almost square; to form an obtuse (rounded) angle
with the top line of the muzzle. The lower edge of the upper lip
should rest on he edge of the lower lip. The repandous (bent upward)
part of the under-jaw with the lower lip (sometimes called the chin) must
not rise above the front of the upper lip. On the other hand, it
should not disappear under it. It must, however, be plainly perceptible
when viewed from the front as well as the side, without protruding and
bending upward as in the English Bulldog. The teeth of the under-jaw
should not be seen when the mouth is closed, neither should the tongue
show when the mouth is closed.
NECK
The neck should be not too thick and short but of ample
length, yet strong, round, muscular and clean-cut throughout. There
should be a distinctly marked nape and an elegant arch down to the back.
FOREQUARTERS
The chest should be deep and reach down to the
elbows. The depth of the chest should be half the height of the dog
at the withers. The ribs should be well arched but not barrel-shaped.
They should extend far to the rear. The loins should be short, close
and taut and slightly tucked up. The lower stomach line should blend
into an elegant curve to the rear. The shoulders should be long and
sloping, close lying but not excessively covered with muscle. The
upper arm should be long and form a right-angle to the shoulder-blade.
The forelegs when seen from the front should be straight, parallel to each
other and have strong, firmly articulated (joined) bones. The elbows
should not press too closely to the chest-wall nor stand off too far from
it. The underarm (forearm) should be perpendicular, long and firmly
muscled. The pastern joint of the foreleg should be clearly defined,
but not distended. The pastern should be short, slightly slanting
and almost perpendicular to the ground.
BODY
The body viewed in profile should be of square appearance.
The length of the body from the front of the chest to the rear of the body
should equal the height from ground to the top of the shoulder, giving
the Boxer a short-coupled, square profile. The torso rests on trunk-like
legs with strong bones. The withers should be clearly defined.
The whole back should be short, straight, broad and very muscular.
HINDQUARTERS
The hindquarters should be strongly muscled.
The musculation should be hard and stand out plastically through the skin.
The thighs should not be narrow and flat but broad and curved. The
breech musculation should also be strongly developed. The croup should
be slightly sloped, flat arched and broad. The pelvis should be long
and, in females especially, broad. The upper and lower thighs should
be long. The hip and knee (stifle) joints should have as much angle
as possible. In a standing position the knee (stifle) should reach
so far forward that it would meet a vertical line drawn from the hip protuberance
to the floor. The hock angle should be about 140 degrees; the lower
part of the foot at a slight slope of about 95 to 100 degrees from the
hock joint to the floor; that is, not completely vertical. Seen from
behind the hindlegs should be straight. The hocks should be clean
and not distended, supported by powerful rear pads.
FEET
The feet should be small with tightly-arched toes (cat-feet)
and hard soles. The rear toes should be just a little longer than
the front toes, but similar in all other respects.
TAIL
The tail attachment should be high. The tail should
be preferably docked and carried upwards and should, preferably, be not
more than 5 cm (2 ins) long.
GAIT/MOVEMENT
Movement of the Boxer should be alive with energy.
His gait, although firm, is elastic. The stride free and roomy; carriage
proud and noble.
COAT
The coat should be short and shiny, lying smooth and tight
to the body.
COLOUR
The permissible colours are fawn, brindle and fawn in
various shades from light yellow to dark deer red. The brindle variety
should have black stripes on a golden-yellow or red-brown background.
The stripes should be clearly defined and above all should not be grey
or dirty. Stripes that do not cover the whole top of the body are
not desirable. White markings are not undesirable, in fact, they
are often very attractive in appearance. The black mask is essential
but when white stretches over the muzzle, naturally that portion of the
black mask disappears. It is not possible to get black toe-nails
with white feet. It is desirable, however, to have an even distribution
of head markings.
SIZE - Dogs: 56-61 cm (22-24 ins) at the withers.
Bitches: 53-58.5 cm (21-23 ins) at the withers.
Heights above or below these figures not to be encouraged.
Dogs around 58.5 cm (23 ins) should weigh about 30 kg (66 lbs) and
Bitches of about 56 cm (22 ins) should weigh about 28 kg (62 lbs).
FAULTS -
Viciousness; treachery; unreliability; lack of temperament; cowardice.
Head: A head that is not typical. A plump, bulldoggy appearance.
Pinscher or Bulldog head. Light bone. Lack of proportion. Bad
physical condition.
Lack of nobility and expression. "Sombre" face.
Unserviceable bite whether due to disease or to faulty tooth placement.
Showing the teeth or the tongue.
A sloping top-line of the muzzle.
Too pointed or too light a bite (snipy).
Eyes: Visible conjunctiva (haw). Light eyes.
Ears: Flying ears; rose ears; semi-erect or erect ears.
Neck: Dewlap.
Front: Too broad and low in front; loose shoulders; chest hanging
between the shoulders; hare feet; turned legs and toes.
Body: Carp (roach) back; sway back; thin, lean back; long, narrow,
sharp-sunken in loins.
Weak union with the croup, hollow flanks; hanging stomach.
Hindquarters: A falling off or too arched or narrow croup.
A low-set tail; higher in back than in front; steep, stiff or too little
angulation of the hindquarters; light thighs; cow-hocks; bow-legs; hind
dew-claws; soft hocks, narrow heel, tottering, waddling gait; hare's feet;
hindquarters too far under or too far behind.
Colour: Boxers with white or black ground colour, or entirely white
or black or any other colour than fawn or brindle.
(White markings are allowed but must not exceed one third (1/3) of
the ground colour.)
NOTE: Male animals should have two apparently normal testicles
fully descended into the scrotum.