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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Gamecock

Gamecock \Game"cock`\ (g[=a]m"k[o^]k`), n. (Zo["o]l.) The male game fowl.

Wiktionary
gamecock

n. A fighting cock: a rooster used in cockfighting.

WordNet
gamecock
  1. n. a cock bred and trained for fighting [syn: fighting cock]

  2. someone who is a very fierce fighter [syn: hell-kite, hell-rooster]

Wikipedia
Gamecock (disambiguation)

A gamecock is a type of rooster. Gamecock may also refer to:

  • The Daily Gamecock, a daily student newspaper of the University of South Carolina
  • Gamecock Media Group, a video game publisher based in Austin, Texas
  • Gloster Gamecock, a biplane fighter of the Royal Air Force
  • HMS Gamecock, a Royal Air Force station near Nuneaton, Warwickshire, now known as RAF Bramcote
  • South Carolina Gamecocks, the varsity sports teams of the University of South Carolina
  • Sumter Gamecocks, the varsity sports teams of Sumter High School in Sumter, SC
  • Thomas Sumter, the Carolina Gamecock, a South Carolina military leader during the American Revolution
Gamecock

A gamecock is a type of rooster with physical and behavioral traits suitable for cockfighting. Male and female chickens of such a breed are referred to as game fowl. However, game birds are wild birds, such as turkeys and quail, that are hunted for food and sport, not a type of fighting bird. The first use of the word gamecock, denoting use of the cock as to a “ game”, a sport, hobby, or entertainment, was in 1646 after the term “cock of the game” was used by George Wilson, in the earliest known book on the sport of cockfighting in The Commendation of Cocks and Cock Fighting in 1607. Cockfighting may be 5,000 or more years old. Game fowl appear more like their wild ancestor the Red Jungle Fowl, a shy wild chicken from forests in South Central and Southeastern Asia, than do other domestic chickens. This is because game fowl have been bred to promote the fittest individuals rather than to promote mutations which increase egg production, feed conversion for meat or fancy chickens bred for exhibition. The territorial instinct among sexually mature males is the driving force behind their desire to dominate and eliminate other males that would compete for breeding rights in their territory.

"Gameness" describes not only initial aggressiveness in the males but also the requirement to remain aggressive even when severely injured, as this is necessary to win a fight in "the pit", coliseum, etc. The hens of fighting breeds typically also show above average aggression compared to other domestic breeds and introduction of a hen into a confined space with another will result in a fight and introduction into a group may result in injury to the newcomer. Other breeds of domestic chickens that are bred primarily for egg and meat production have been bred over many generations to cohabitate on farms or other smaller pieces of land and gameness has largely been bred out of them.

Game fowl actively used in cockfighting are not a recognized breed by poultry associations, although they are known by many names which could be confused with breed names. Those names are most often the name of a successful breeder or a name a successful breeder has applied to his fowl. Some of those names have come to be associated with fowl having certain physical characteristics, often some combination of feather color, shank color and comb type, although rarely do breeders actually breed game fowl to breed true, so that they all look alike. They are generally bred from unrelated individuals, known for their fighting style. The broodcock often having been a winner in the pit and from hens that are close relatives of winners.

Pullets (young females) and stags (young males) are typically free-ranged because it promotes a better diet, better exercise opportunities and better protection against communicable disease although with greater risk from predators. When the stags on free range begin to fight all of the stags of that age group will require being housed separately to prevent injuries from fighting each other and preventing contact with penned cocks or cocks on tie cords. Separate housing includes separation by more than wire fencing because males will fight against a wire fence and this will result in injury to feet and legs. Sometimes sexually mature stags less than one year old are "pitted" in stag contests but more often cocks are 1 1/2 to 2 years of age before being engaging in serious competition. Cocks are selected by fitness, build, weight and by observing their sparring with another cock, often with their natural spurs covered with a soft "muff" to protect both birds from injury. Their natural spurs are sawed off to a length of about 3/8 inch which minimizes the risk of injury to people handling them and to their own kind. For serious combat, they are very rarely unarmed as most organized contests are conducted under rules allowing their being armed with metal spurs called gaffs which have a socket which fits over the reduced-length natural spur. These contests often result in fatal injuries to one of the combatants. Spectators viewing these competitions are often interested in wagering on these contests.

Prior to physical conditioning, a gamecock that is to be fought or shown is groomed. The comb (the red skin on top of the head) and wattles (skin under the beak) is usually trimmed at around a year old. This process is called “ dubbing”. Dubbing eliminates a potential billhold the opponent may use to advantage during competition. The feathers are sometimes groomed as well. The sickle feathers of the tail may be trimmed or any long feathers that a cock might trip on during a fight. In some cultures (particularly among Cuban game fowl enthusiasts), the feather trimming is much more extensive. The feathers of the chest and the back are sometimes shorn completely off. The reason for this extensive trimming is to help prevent a bird from overheating during a longer match. The reasons for this vary among individual game fowl enthusiast. Some trim their birds according to a tradition and others do it because they believe that losing the “bulky” feathers improves mobility during a fight.

A gamecock will undergo a conditioning process in preparation for a fight. The conditioning process is referred to as the "keep" and is designed to ensure that the bird is physically and mentally fit for its upcoming match and usually last for 7–10 days. The keep includes a special diet as well as physical exercise. The handling also tames the cock so that he can be handled during a fight with no attention given to his handler. Cocks that are aggressive to people are called man fighters and are not well tolerated as it makes exercising them while in the keep more difficult and a cock that turns to face his handler in the pit is usually immediately taken down by his actual opponent.

Cockfighting is a seasonal sport. From September to November, gamecocks go through their molting stage (lose old feathers and grow new ones). This is a sensitive time for the gamecock, so no fighting occurs. In exhibitions where fowl are judged for their apparent physical attributes, there are classes for several breeds which have "Game" as part of their breed name such as the Modern Game and Old English Game, as well as several bantam breeds, such as American Game Bantam. These are actually breeds that are recognized by the American Poultry Association (APA), and they are not used cockfighting. The APA does not recognize what is sometimes referred to as the American Game (standard size), which is the breed used in the United States in cockfighting.

Usage examples of "gamecock".

The deflected energies of the gamecock found new outlet in a sudden and sustained attack on the sleeping and temporarily inoffensive pigling, and the duel which followed was desperate and embittered beyond any possibility of effective intervention.

The pigling, as though aware that it might have outstayed its welcome, dashed out at the door, and the gamecock followed it at a more dignified pace.

He thanked Gamecock and the woman for their help and went off with the Frenchman to the front of the grogshop.

When you and Gamecock heard I was looking for him, offering money on behalf of the Vice President, you found someone to pass off as Facon in hopes of making an easy profit.

But if any of them knew the name Prester Gamecock they were reluctant to admit it.

By the time he reached the Purple Seal they told him Gamecock had been there and gone.

Alex peered through the window and saw Gamecock collecting some coins from the barber.

The turkey-cock, with the bronzed sheen of his feathers and the purple-red of his wattles, the gamecock, with the glowing metallic lustre of his Eastern plumage, the hens, with their ochres and buffs and umbers and their scarlet combs, and the drakes, with their bottle-green heads, made a medley of rich colour, in the centre of which the old woman looked like a withered stalk standing amid a riotous growth of gaily-hued flowers.

Latimer showed a belated firmness on the subject of Hartlepool Helen, and Vera withdrew without pressing the point, having first settled the gamecock on his extemporised perch and taken an affectionate farewell of the pigling.

The gamecock, who may have fancied that he was being rocked in the branches of a pine-tree, bore the motion with greater fortitude than Latimer was able to command.

King Geoffrey, had got him the command of this army when Geoffrey sacked Joseph the Gamecock outside of Marthasville.

Joseph the Gamecock was doing in the Marthasville campaign before King Geoffrey relieved him and appointed me in his place.

Peachtree Province the year before as Hard-Riding Jimmy was using now, and Count Joseph the Gamecock had matched it time after time.

Geoffrey plans to send part of your army to Count Joseph the Gamecock, who is gathering forces in Palmetto Province to try to hold off the southrons.

Joseph the Gamecock was trying to build might mean his force was outnumbered only four to one.