I believe it is possible, but especially with today's laws it would be nearly impossible to have a bird that possessed true gameness from crossing in Phoenix or other birds. I have heard of it being done, in the gamecock years ago there was a story of a woman's rooster that was 1/4 Leghorn winning everywhere he went until sold for brood stock. But, that bird still carries 1/4 junk blood and has the possibility to throw junk a lot more easily than say; A good hatch cock that has been on a fellows yard for 50 years and selected properly.Explain which part you think is wrong..
As far as adding non-game blood, it is possible to get gameness from a non-game hybrid. Its a trait just like any other, it can bred into or out of any bloodline. I have seen it personally. Where do you think muffed games came from? It wasnt creationism, it was bred with non-game blood and bred back with game.
I have had numerous non-game X games. Junglefowl X American game, Silkie X American Game, Australorp X Game, and even some junk American game X game American games. And I have personally never had one show true gameness. I've seen Silkie X AG's fight for about 30 minutes to an hour on the yard years ago before running; but if ever put to the real test they wouldn't last long and I would expect this of the rest as well when even "pure" American games are not always game (notoriously known, any sweater strain).
Gameness is not only aggressive nature to other birds. If that is a fact, my Leghorns are game. My Kraienköppe are game. My aunts EE is game, and so are the silkies and Brahmas she had. That freaking EE rooster will try his hardest to beat anything that crosses his path but it will usually only last a few minutes and he's running away while true gamefowl will fight for days if they live that long.
That being said, is this breeding "Wrong"? It depends on the goals. If you are looking to preserve true gamefowl, stop now. If you are doing like I am now and not really worried about breeding games anymore so you like to have surrogate mothers and free rangers or some crap like that. It's perfectly fine, I've got pullets all over the yard now that are crosses of games X EE, games X Buff Leghorn, etc. But they will only be surrogate mothers and chicken and dumplings; they are not to be bred back to gamefowl as it can never make them better in anyway. I wouldn't just assume either that muffed games got their muffs from yard fowl, if I recall correctly there is a study out there somewhere that the muff genes came from Oriental gamefowl (which inhabits most production/heavy breeds veins: Orloff, Rhode Islands, Kraienköppe, etc) but someone like Saladin or some of the other greater poultry historians can probably correct me on this. Trust me though when I say it isn't 50/50, I have seen numerous game hybrids (even ones I did not own) and I never saw a true game bird come out of them first hand and accounts that have are very rare- to most peoples view non-existent.
I'm not encouraging cockfighting or anything like that, but I assume that you have not had the opportunity to truly see real gamefowl and as a result just do not and possibly cannot understand. But to people like me that have been around them for four generations and seen basically everything there is to see with primarily American gamefowl (years ago, like I said I don't breed them pure anymore), I can assure you that by the breeding practices you mentioned you will very rarely (maybe 1 in a million) get a true gamecock from such a cross.
So: If you want gamefowl, decide if you want to preserve true gamefowl- then research what it takes and if it's worth it from good breeders on this forum and others. If you just want project birds to play with like I do, go ahead and cross them with yard fowl even better just find another breed like I also did. I rather like my Buff Leghorns and Kraienköppe; the Kraienköppe meet basically everything the games did except on one thing: I can allow more than one cock to free range without ending up with only 1 or no cocks left.
If you want the traits in true gamefowl you're crossing for, do some research on some of the old game strains that are very rare and need breeders. Blue berg muffs for muffed birds, Silver quill (like Fayoumi's) you have the Joe Redmond greys; Flerry eyed greys or Claibournes for Toppy's; Miner Blues for blue blood; Hainan Gamefowl or Herman Pinion Yellow legged hatch for long tails; there are many out there with every shape, size, and color imaginable pretty much. It just doesn't have much reason to add production fowl other than for sometimes interesting free rangers or project birds.
God bless,
Daniel.
ETA: No hatchery will have true game stock. They may have "Gamey" birds, but the birds will not be game. But like I said, if you just want something to have on the yard or if it is a pure muffed OEG you want for show. Go for it, but keep in mind they will never be "game" by terms of true gameness in many gamefowl breeders terms.
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