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more controversial family of dogs exists today than the Pit Bull. On one side you have Pit Bull owners and lovers who think they are angels on four legs. They love their dogs like their children and are justifiably upset when they feel Pit Bull haters may threaten them. On the other side you have Pit Bull victims and haters who think they are demons on four legs. Some have been victims of Pit Bull attacks and are justifiably frightened of them and want the breed to be banned.

      The truth is in the middle. No family of dogs comes close to being responsible for as many deaths as the Pit Bull has been. These deaths include human and canine family members and human and canine strangers. The attacks are committed by both well-raised and poorly raised Pit Bulls. But that doesn’t mean every Pit Bull is a mauler. In fact, most go through their entire lives being perfectly peaceful.

      MAKING A NEW BREED: THE AMERICAN BULLY

      In the early 1980s, several breeders began crossing American Pit Bull Terriers or American Staffordshire Terriers with Staffordshire Bull Terriers along with English Bulldogs, American Bulldogs, Olde English Bulldogges, and French Bulldogs. Their aim was to create a tougher-looking but sweeter-acting bully breed: the American Bully. By 2004, they had their own association, the American Bully Kennel Club (ABKC).

      The breed has four sizes: pocket, standard, classic, and XL. The UKC recognized the American Bully in 2013. As of this writing, you can single-register your dog with the UKC if it looks enough like an American Bully to probably be one. (Single registration means the dog is registered based on its appearance rather than parentage.) This rule has caused controversy, however, because some Pit Bull owners who don’t want the legal implications of Pit Bull ownership have single-registered their Pit Bulls as American Bullies. By doing so, they may be able to get around BSL that affects Pit Bulls but may not include American Bullies.

It’s up to Pit Bull owners to change the breed’s reputation by being extremely responsible. If you own a Pit Bull, your dog must be impeccably trained and well behaved, and if you allow your dog to spend time in your yard, the yard must be escape-proof. You may know for a fact that your Pit Bull is a sweetie, but you have to be prepared for the unexpected. Dogs are dogs, and they often act and react in ways we would never have imagined. True, another dog owner may be at fault for allowing her dog to run up to yours, but that’s not a deadly mistake with most dogs, and it can be with a Pit Bull. If your Pit Bull harms or kills another dog, you can be sure it will be the Pit Bull who gets the blame. As a Pit Bull owner, you must not only look out for your own dog’s actions, but the actions of others as well. This level of vigilance is a big responsibility, but it’s one every Pit Bull owner must assume.

      Sizing Up the Pit Bull

      IN THIS CHAPTER

      

Visualizing the ideal Pit Bull

      

Sizing up your dog — ADBA-, UKC-, and AKC-style

      You wouldn’t hire a Sumo wrestler to moonlight as a trapeze artist, and you wouldn’t ask a ballet dancer to do double duty as a weightlifter. Different body types excel at different athletic endeavors. It’s no accident that Pit Bulls look like Pit Bulls. They look like they do because they are built a certain way to do a certain job.

      But looks aren’t everything. The best-looking Pit Bull would, historically at least, be a dead Pit Bull if he lacked the intelligence, agility, and gameness required to make it through a match. Although, fortunately, most Pit Bulls today will never see a fighting pit, they carry with them a heritage of physical and mental characteristics that were once essential for their ancestors’ survival.

      Now that most Pit Bulls are no longer subject to such an unforgiving means of selecting breeding stock as pit fighting or bull-baiting, how do we ensure that the very essence of this noble breed is not lost for posterity? We do the best we can by breeding them according to a standard of perfection that — as nearly as possible — aspires to the ideal vision of a successful fighting Pit Bull.

Photo depicts the noble look of pit bull dog.

      FIGURE 2-1: You can’t deny the noble look of this dog.

      What did it take to win a dogfight? For the most part, it took intangible character qualities like gameness and attitude. In addition, it took wrestling ability, biting ability, and stamina — qualities based (at least in part) on the way the dog is built. Because a fighting dog is more likely to overcome shortcomings in build rather than shortcomings in character, the physique of winning fighters varied greatly from one dog to another. Nonetheless, the best of the fighters combined strong characters with strong bodies, and it is from these dogs that the ideals are drawn.

      The American Dog Breeders Association standard

      The ADBA standard was written by experienced dogmen (people who actually fought their Pit Bulls in dogfights) who realized that it was impossible to define the physical traits that make a dog a good fighter. Instead of trying to describe every part of the dog, as most breed standards do, they focused their descriptions on those physical characteristics that they felt related the most to fighting ability, while ignoring those they felt had little or no relationship. Thus the ADBA standard is less a standard of perfection than it is a checklist for evaluating a potential fighting dog.

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Category Point Value Criteria
Overall appearance 20 points Health, height-to-weight ratio, overall body shape
Attitude 10 points