Jennay, you know I love you, but I have no clue what that second sentence means.
Soldier and cops used to do this sort of boxing training. The point is often to teach the kids that getting hit is just getting hit. It isn't the end of the world and you can (and better) keep fighting. You'd be surprised how many in our current metrosexual society have never actually been hit in their lives. Some fear it way too much.
Yes, there is a risk but if training staff are nearby and the ensure that there are no haymakers to the head the risk is minimal. I'd have them in headgear regardless.
This sort of thing was taken out of law enforcement training due to injuries. It's probably a bad thing IMO because it weeded out some people who weren't fit for the job. It also contributes much to the "gun is the only option" mentality. Too many cops are just afraid to punch a guy and pull a gun too soon IMO. (Don't make me rant about the nearly useless flyweight "batons" that weigh little more than whiffle ball bats these guys get issued to appease the attorneys and leftists.) I know hands on is always a risk, if the cop gets knocked out the badguy is now armed, but there are many times when it is more appropriate than pulling a gun.
Law, I see the point from your perspective, which I interpret as mental and emotional conditioning to being hit and physical violence being inflicted on you, so that you can function with focus and efficiency- and stay alive.. And yes, I see how that is useful in some professions.
In my professional background, I see the consequences of life events, including various types of forces. on how our bodies, brains, nervous systems, glands work, and don't work, or more aptly, don't work in an efficient and integrated way. I see people often years after one or multiple events. Often, (usually) their health care professional has erroneously labeled the presenting problem, and either way, the actual causes are not even in the assessment variables that were considered. (because they were not taught)
So, my perspective when I see something like the video is from how the blows to those areas can alter cognitive, and many other body processes and the ways it can impact a person's quality of life, mental and physical functioning, health problems, 10, 20, 30 years after some of events. For someone in law enforcement, staying safe and focused is going to be more of an immediate issue than what happen years later.
The risk for concussion may not be high, but there are other consequences due to the amazing intricacies of interrelationships within our human bodies that produce various degrees of snowballing and spreading impairment of cognitive and autonomic, endocrine, and other systems through time. Due to the politics of health care business, the training staff and most medical people are not trained to recognize what is happening, much less assess causes and provide effective noninvasive non harmful drug correction either short term or years later, which is when most of this starts to show up,
To each his own. As long as the players are not boxing to settle a dispute, I don't see it hurting team relationships.