Joe not much help for "dying" boxing...

Collapse
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • MELLY-MEL...
    Broken, Beat, Scarred
    Unified Champion - 10,00-20,000 posts
    • Dec 2007
    • 11274
    • 1,059
    • 1,667
    • 33,296

    #1

    Joe not much help for "dying" boxing...

    from yahoo, kevin iole!

    Calzaghe not much help for “dying” boxing
    By Kevin Iole, Yahoo! Sports
    26 minutes ago

    Buzz up! PrintMore From Kevin IoleDon't blame Klitschko for heavyweight woes Dec 11, 2008 Philly's Cunningham finally returns close to home Dec 10, 2008
    Joe Calzaghe has just finished a year in which he earned about the same amount of money that Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich was reportedly seeking in exchange for President-elect Barack *****’s Senate seat.

    Yet, Calzaghe not only had the temerity to declare that boxing, the sport that made him rich and (semi-) famous, is dying, but he complained about there being an excessive number of title belts.

    On a tour to promote a DVD about his life, Calzaghe whined about the politics in the sport, the proliferation of champions and said he felt the sport was on its way out.

    “I think boxing is a dying sport,” Calzaghe told the Associated Press. “Globally – in America, for instance – you’ve got UFC, which has taken a lot off boxing, business-wise.”



    He went on to voice a popular opinion that boxing is plagued by political machinations and said there are too many champions.

    While the major sanctioning bodies – the WBC, the WBA, the WBO and the IBF – are hardly good for the sport, Calzaghe is a hypocrite. He was plenty content to stay in the U.K. and hold the WBO super middleweight belt during the latter part of the 20th century and in the early portion of the 21st.

    Had he wanted to do something positive for the sport, he would have surrendered that WBO belt at the time, denounced the sanctioning body as corrupt and offered to fight anyone anywhere.

    But for much of the time Calzaghe was holding the WBO belt, he didn’t want to fight outside of the U.K. and he was perfectly happy to run off mundane title defenses without thinking of the bigger picture and what would have been best for the sport.

    He kept himself largely off-limits to media outside the U.K. and did nothing positive to promote the sport.

    That was certainly his right, but it looks classless now that the end of his career is at hand to be speaking out against abuses he could have helped to correct. The sanctioning bodies are rife with corruption. The sport needs a prominent boxer to publicly take them on and lead a campaign to at the least force them to operate more fairly and transparently.

    It would have been nice to see Calzaghe in, say, 2002, dump his WBO belt and give up fighting unworthy mandatory challengers in favor of seeking the best fighters in the world, wherever they may have been.

    That could have led to fights against Roy Jones Jr. and Bernard Hopkins much earlier than they happened. Calzaghe won a split decision over Hopkins in Las Vegas in April and routed Jones at New York’s Madison Square Garden in November. Hopkins was 43 and Jones 39, clearly not the fighters they were in their primes.

    He’s refusing to give Hopkins a rematch, even though Hopkins is willing to fight him in Wales, where a rematch would draw in excess of 50,000 and would garner worldwide attention.

    He’s turned up his nose at a bout against exciting WBC super middleweight champion Carl Froch, who has called him out. Froch is from Nottingham, England, and though he’s not well-known in the U.S., a fight between them not only would be an entertaining match but would also be a blockbuster in the U.K.

    Calzaghe co-promoted his Nov. 8 fight with Jones. If he were so concerned with the health of boxing, he might have played a stronger role in the promotion and guaranteed a better undercard for the fans who doled out big money to purchase the pay-per-view.

    The undercard of that show, which sold slightly less than 250,000 on pay-per-view, was one of the worst in boxing history for a show so expensive. It’s galling that Calzaghe has the chutzpah to remark that the sport is dying when he took the money and ran the way he did instead of putting on a quality show when he became a promoter and had it within his power to do so.

    He had the ability to insist on a compelling undercard, but instead chose to line his own pocket rather than make a statement about the way the sport should be run.

    You don’t hear Oscar De La Hoya complaining that the sport is dying. His Dec. 6 bout with Manny Pacquiao sold 1.25 million pay-per-view units. Boxing is alive and well for guys like De La Hoya.

    It’s easy to squawk about what’s wrong, but it’s more difficult to take the time to try to fix it.

    By virtue of his wins over Hopkins and Jones, Calzaghe has become one of the most prominent names in the sport. He commands attention like a Carl Froch never could.

    If he doesn’t want to fight again, it’s his choice and certainly a reasonable one. Boxing is a difficult and dangerous sport and no one should compete if they have any ambivalence about it.

    Retiring as an active fighter, though, wouldn’t preclude Calzaghe from trying to help the sport that has given him wealth and fame beyond measure.

    Instead of complaining that boxing is dying while hawking a DVD about his life story – another way he’s making money off the sport – he ought to lead a campaign to promote the many good things in the sport that are occurring.

    If he chooses to fight, he ought to give Hopkins a rematch. It would be a huge event no matter where it occurred and he’d erase any doubts for those who hold them.

    If he chooses to fight, he shouldn’t dismiss Froch as beneath him and instead give Froch the opportunity he claims he was denied years earlier by men like Hopkins and Jones.

    He’d do all those things if he weren’t so self-centered and so focused on dragging in every last penny he could.

    Boxing isn’t dead, nor isn’t it dying.

    Its health isn’t being improved, though, by one of its biggest stars.

    And that’s a real problem.
  • MELLY-MEL...
    Broken, Beat, Scarred
    Unified Champion - 10,00-20,000 posts
    • Dec 2007
    • 11274
    • 1,059
    • 1,667
    • 33,296

    #2
    thoughts on this, and discuss

    Comment

    • Dan...
      Fredette About It
      Super Champion - 5,000-10,000 posts
      • Jun 2008
      • 7675
      • 454
      • 951
      • 19,200

      #3
      Yeah, Calzaghe's comments on this issue definately reeked of hypocrisy.

      Comment

      • Joe's left hook
        Contender
        • Dec 2008
        • 204
        • 11
        • 0
        • 6,259

        #4
        Boxing is becoming less and less popular and MMA and UFC begin to slowly take over.

        Calzaghe only said the truth.

        Comment

        • Check
          Banned
          Unified Champion - 10,00-20,000 posts
          • May 2008
          • 16585
          • 677
          • 132
          • 26,287

          #5
          There isn't much to say. We know Joe is an arrogant ass that spent a lot of his career fighting lesser talent. He now wants to be recognized as this great fighter and get the pub and the money. I will never understand why people like Joe Calzaghe. He is a boring fighter that will never be remembered as one of the best. I still say 95% of Joe fans are just Brits that have to hang on to something to thump their chest to think that their country is this amazing hotbed for fighting. No one outside of Joes home cares for him really and his blown up career. 46-0 and maybe 2 wins against solid or prime fighters.

          Comment

          • Dan...
            Fredette About It
            Super Champion - 5,000-10,000 posts
            • Jun 2008
            • 7675
            • 454
            • 951
            • 19,200

            #6
            Originally posted by Joe's left hook
            Boxing is becoming less and less popular and MMA and UFC begin to slowly take over.

            Calzaghe only said the truth.
            Perhaps. The point the article is making though is that for a guy with such incredible abilities Joe didn't exactly do everything he could to rectify that situation. So when he comes out and says the sport is dying, ppl are saying "oh ****, well, thanks Joe..."

            Comment

            • Check
              Banned
              Unified Champion - 10,00-20,000 posts
              • May 2008
              • 16585
              • 677
              • 132
              • 26,287

              #7
              Originally posted by Joe's left hook
              Boxing is becoming less and less popular and MMA and UFC begin to slowly take over.

              Calzaghe only said the truth.
              Naw. Boxing has been doing better than it has ever done. MMA is helping boxing when it comes to PPV numbers. Calzaghe has sour g****s in this article that he will never get the attention of a Pacquaio, a DLH, or a Floyd Mayweather. Hell, even Ricky Hatton is more known and beloved than this guy. Joe went through his career the wrong way. If he followed Hattons career he woulda made a lot more money.

              Comment

              • majestiC
                Banned
                Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
                • May 2005
                • 2810
                • 126
                • 51
                • 3,400

                #8
                OK name me some fighters that Calzaghe should of faced in the last 10 years in the Super Middleweight division? Ottke & Johnson, Ottke fight was never going to happen because lets face it hes Ottke. Johnson fight should of happened but Joe was injured twice, what was Joe suppose to do when Ottke held the other belts and every fight Ottke was in had some injustice or corruption linked with it. It's because the Europeans dominated this division for so long this ignorant writer knows nothing about it. He can slag Joe by saying he isn't much help but how many other fighters have sold 50,000 tickets to one fight, just the one other and thats Hatton. What a load of old ignorant **** this man has typed up.

                Comment

                • The_Visitation
                  Undisputed Champion
                  Platinum Champion - 1,000-5,000 posts
                  • Nov 2008
                  • 1570
                  • 49
                  • 24
                  • 7,791

                  #9
                  Originally posted by MELLY-MEL...
                  thoughts on this, and discuss
                  Didn't we do this a week ago?

                  As I recall, once the only-to-be-expected hater outrage was out of the way, the general opinion was that JC had a point. Does anyone here NOT believe that there are too many title belts or that boxing is "plagued by political machinations" ?!

                  Comment

                  • Pullcounter
                    no guts no glory
                    Franchise Champion - 20,000+ posts
                    • Jan 2004
                    • 42582
                    • 549
                    • 191
                    • 49,739

                    #10
                    Allow me to paraphrase kevin iole:

                    Calzaghe is an ass and a hypocrite!!!

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    TOP