The Boxer was developed in Germany as a medium size security dog.
The breed is valued as a spirited pet and guardian of home and
family. Developed to serve the multiple purposes of guard, working
and escort-dog, he must combine elegance with substance and amble
power, not alone for beauty, but to ensure the speed, dexterity
and jumping ability essential to ardurous hike, riding expedition,
police or military duty.
General Appearance
The Boxer is a medium-sized, sturdy dog, of square build, with
short back, strong limbs, and short tight-fitting coat. His musculation,
well developed, should be clean, hard and appear smooth (not bulging)
under taut skin. His movement should denote energy. The gait is
firm yet elastic (springy), the stride free and ground covering,
the carriage proud and noble. Only a body whose individual parts
are built to harmonious whole, can respond to these combined demands.
Therefore, to be at his highest efficiency he must never be plump
or heavy and, while equipped for great speed, he must never be
racy. The head imparts to the Boxer a unique individual stamp peculiar
to him alone. It must be in perfect proportion to his body, never
small in comparison to the overall picture. His muzzle is his most
distinctive feature and the greatest value to be place on its being
of correct form and in absolute proper proportion to the skull.
Faults
Head not typical, plump bull-doggy appearance, light bond, lack
of balance, bad condition, lack of noble bearing.
Character and Temperament
These are of paramount importance in the Boxer. Instinctively
a "hearing" guard dog, his bearing is alert, dignified
and self-assured even at rest. His behavior should exhibit constrained
animation. His temperament is fundamentally playful, yet patient
and stoical with children. Deliberate and wary of strangers,
he will exhibit curiosity but, most importantly, fearless courage
and tenacity if threatened. However, he responds promptly to
friendly
overtures when honestly rendered. His intelligence, loyal affection
and tractability to discipline make him a highly desirable companion.
Faults
Lack of dignity and alertness, shyness, cowardice, treachery and
viciousness (belligerency toward other dogs should not be considered
viciousness).
Size
Adult males - 22 1/2 to 25 in. (57 to 64 cm) at the withers. Females
- 21 to 23 1/2 in. (53 to 60 cm) at the withers. Males should not
go under the minimum nor females over the maximum.
Coat and Colour
Coat - short, shiny, lying smooth and tight to the body.
Colour - the colours are fawn and brindle. Fawn in various shades
from light tan to stag red or mahogany, the deeper colours preferred.
The brindle coat in the Boxer is of two opposite types. The first
of these includes those dogs having clearly defined dark stripes
on a fawn background. The second type has what is best termed reverse
brindling. Here the effect is of a very dark background with lighter
coloured fawn stripes or streaks showing through. White markings
in fawn or brindle dogs are not to be rejected: in fact, they are
often very attractive but must be limited to one-third of the ground
colour and are not desirable on the back of the torso proper. On
the face, white may replace a part or all of the otherwise essential
black mask. However, these white markings should be of such distribution
as to enhance and not detract from the true Boxer expression.
Head
The beauty of the head depends upon the harmonious proportion
between the muzzle to the skull. The muzzle should always appear
powerful, never small in its relationship to the skull. The head
should be clean, not showing deep wrinkles. Folds will normally
appear upon the forehead when the ears are erect, and they are
always indicated from lower edge of the stop running downward on
both sides of the muzzle. The dark mask is confined to the muzzle
and is in distinct contrast to the colour of the head. Any extension
of the mask to the skull, other than dark shading around the eyes,
creates a somber undesirable expression. When white replaces any
of the black mask, the path or any upward extension should be between
the eyes. The muzzle is powerfully developed in length, width and
depth. It is not pointed, narrow, short or shallow. Its shape is
influenced first through the formation of both jawbones, second
through the placement of teeth, and third through the texture of
the lips. The Boxer is normally undershot. Therefore, the lower
jaw protrudes beyond the upper and curves slightly upward. The
upper jaw is broad where attached to the skull and maintains this
breadth except for a very slight tapering to the front. The incisor
teeth of the lower jaw are in a straight line, the canines preferably
up front in the same line to give the jaw the greatest possible
width. The line of the incisors in the upper jaw is slightly convex
toward the front. The upper corner incisors should fit snugly back
of the lower canine teeth on each side reflecting the symmetry
essential to the creation of a sound non-slip bite. The lips complete
the formation of the muzzle, should meet evenly. The upper lip
is thick and padded, filling out the frontal space formed by the
projection of the lower jaw. It rests on the edge of the lower
lip and, laterally, is supported by the fangs (canines) of the
lower jaw. Therefore, these fangs must stand far apart and be of
good length so that the front surface of the muzzle shall become
broad and squarish and, when viewed from the side, form an obtuse
angle with the topline of the muzzle. Over-protrusion of the overlip
or underlip is undesirable. The chin should be perceptible when
viewed from the side as well as from the front without being over-rependous
(rising above the bite line) as in the Bulldog. The Boxer must
not show his teeth or tongue when his mouth is closed. Excessive
flews are not desirable. The top of the skull is slightly arched,
not rotund of flat nor noticeably broad, and the occiput must not
be too pronounced. The forehead forms a distinct sop witht he top
line of the muzzle, which must not be forced back into the forehead
like that of a Bulldog. It should not slant down (down-faced),
nor should it be dished, although the tip of the nose should lie
somewhat higher than the foot of the muzzle. The forehead shows
just a slight furrow between the eyes. The cheeks, though covering
powerful masseter muscles, compatible with the strong set of teeth,
should be relatively flat and not bulge, maintaining the clean
lines of the skull. They taper into the muzzle in a slight, graceful
curve. The ears are set at the highest points of the sides of the
skull, cut rather long without too broad a shell, and are carried
erect. The Boxer's natural ears are define as: moderate in size
(small rather than large), think to the touch, set wide apart at
the highest points of the side 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. The dark brown eyes,
not too small, protruding or deep-set and encircled by dark hair,
should impart an alert, intelligent expression. The nose is broad
and black, very slightly turned up; the nostrils broad with the
naso-labial line running between them down through the upper lip
which, however, must not split. Their mood-mirroring quality combined
with the mobile skin furrowing of the forehead gives the Boxer
head its unique degree of expressiveness.
Faults
Lack of nobility and expression, somber face, unserviceable
bite, Pinscher or Bulldog head, sloping top line of muzzle, muzzle
too
light for skull, too pointed a bite (snipey). Teeth or tongue
showing with mouth closed, drivelling, split upper lip. Poor
ear carriage,
light ("bird of prey") eyes. Wry mouth, that is when
the upper and lower jaws are not in parallel straight lines.
Neck
Round, of ample length, not too short; strong and muscular and
clean throughout, without dewlap, with a distinctly marked nape
and an elegant arch running down to the back.
Fault
Dewlap.
Chest and Forequarters
The brisket is deep, reaching down to the elbows; the depth of
the body at the lowest point of the brisket equals half the height
of the dog at the withers. The ribs - extending far to the rear,
are well arched but not barrel-shaped. Chest of fair width and
forechest well defined, being easily visible from the side. The
loins are short and muscular; the lower stomach line, lightly tucked
up, blends into a graceful curve to the rear. The shoulders are
long and sloping, close-lying, and not excessively covered with
muscle. The upper arm is long, closely approaching a right angle
to the shoulder blade. The forelegs, viewed from the front, are
straight, stand parallel to each other, and have strong, firmly-joined
bones. The elbows should not press too closely to the chest wall
or stand off visibly from it. The forearm is straight, long, and
firmly muscled. The pastern joint is clearly defined but not distended.
The pastern is strong and distinct, slightly slating, but standing
almost perpendicular to the ground. The dew claws may be removed
as a safety precaution. Feet should be compact, turning neither
in nor out, with tightly arched toes (cat feet) and tough pads.
Faults
Chest too broad, too shallow or too deep in front, loose or over
muscled shoulders, chest hanging between shoulders, tied-in or
bowed out elbows, turned feet, hare feet, hollow flanks, hanging
stomach.
Body
In profile the build is in square proportions in that a horizontal
line form the front of the forechest to the rear projection of
the upper thigh should equal a vertical line dropped from the top
of the withers to the ground.
Back
The withers should be clearly defined as the highest point of
the back; the whole back short, straight and muscular with a firm
topline.
Faults
Roach back, sway back, thin lean back, long narrow loins, weak
union with the croup.
Hindquarters
Strongly muscled with angulation in balance with that of forequarters.
The thighs broad and curved, the breech musculature hard and strongly
developed. Croup slightly sloped, flat and broad. Tail attachment
high, rather than low. Tail clipped, carried upward. Pelvis long
and in females especially, broad. Upper and lower thigh long, leg
well angulated with a clearly defined, well let-down hock joint.
In standing position, the leg below the hock joint (metatarsus)
should be practically perpendicular to the ground with a slight
rearward slope permissible. Viewed from behind, the hind legs should
be straight with the hock joints leaning neither in or out. The
metatarsus should be short, clear and strong supported by powerful
rear pads. The rear toes just a little longer than the front toes,
but similiar in all other respects. Dew claws, if any, may be removed.
Faults
Too rounded, too narrow or falling off croup, low-set tail, higher
in back than front; steep, stiff or too slightly angulated hindquarters,
light thighs, cow hocks, bowed and crooked legs, over-angulated
hock joint (sickle hocks), long metatarsus (high hocks), hare feet,
hindquarters too far under or too far behind.
Tail
Tail attachment high, rather than low. Tail docked, carried upwards.
Gait
Viewed from the side, proper front and rear angulation is manifested
in a smoothly-efficient, level-backed, ground-covering stride
with powerful drive emanating from freely operating rear. Although
the
front legs do not contribute impelling power, adequate "reach" should
be evident to prevent interference, overlap or "side-winding" (crabbing).
Viewed from the front, the shoulders should remain trim and the
elbows not flat out. The legs are parallel until gaiting narrows
the track in proportion to increasing speed, then the legs come
under the body but should remain straight, although not necessarily
perpendicular to the ground. Viewed from the rear a Boxer's breech
should not roll. The hind feet should "dig-in" and
track relatively true with the front. Again, as speed increases,
the
normally broad rear track will become narrower.
Faults
Stilted or inefficient gait, pounding, padding or flailing out
of front legs, rolling or waddling gait, tottering hock joints,
crossing over or interference-front or rear, lack of smoothness.
Disqualifications