They Just Tore Floyds A$$ Up On PTI

Collapse
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • The Big Dunn
    Undisputed Champion
    Franchise Champion - 20,000+ posts
    • Sep 2009
    • 69275
    • 9,488
    • 7,834
    • 287,568

    #411
    Originally posted by Mr. Copeland
    I'm glad somebody gets it. To say those guys are casual fans and don't know **** about boxing is ridiculous. People fail to realize that they have to talk about the topics that are hot at the moment and unfortunately boxing is not one of them. The casual fans want to here about the world cup, Lebron going to the heat, Tiger Woods and other popular topics. It's comical to think that they are gonna chose to talk about the super 6, and fights like Williams vs Martinez and Mosley vs Mora over the more popular stories of the day.

    Again it's called catering to your audience and people act like wilbon and those guys come up with these topics themselves. ESPN gives them the topics that should be discussed, they do the research, and then talk about them on their shows. So if the guys at ESPN, that are behind the scenes, feel boxing isn't the topic people want to hear.....then guys like Wilbon and others won't discuss them.
    The funny thing is floyd fighting or not fighting has become bigger than the sport itself. Wilbon hates floyd (which is fine) but uses the time to trash him, making him the issue, rather than talk up the sport. Only time these shows discuss boxing is when the subject is floyd.

    Comment

    • crold1
      Undisputed Champion
      Super Champion - 5,000-10,000 posts
      • Apr 2005
      • 6347
      • 324
      • 122
      • 19,304

      #412
      Originally posted by baracuda
      cliff rold is one man, tho i like his aricles.....cyberboxingwhatevr and boxingsecne more credible than the ring?......i thought the ring is the bible of boxing!..it is the oledest keeper of boxing reps...the ring>>>>>>>>cyberwhatever, boxingscene(love boxingsene btw)....but it it what it is...what you said is like saying, the book of mormon is more credible than the bible itself....lol

      when did i ever say that youre not a big pacfan?...say when ?...find me a post saying that and stop making **** up....i know youre a huge pacfan tho i said youre a bigger imdazed nuthugger than a pacfan, that i said!....and **** el jesus thinking he can getaway with his insults coz he thought he was doing it politely....lol....and when did i ever say anything ignorant?....
      On the issue of current Welter lineage, there can be some debate though it leans to Floyd heavily. On some other lineage issues, yes, more credible and frankly Ring would acknowledge that they ignored certain lineages to avoid confusion. 126 and 112 HAD "Ring champs" when they folded briefly in the late 80s; those champs' lineages were still intact when they started titling again in the early 2000s but they chose to ignore the claims of Hamed and Wonjongkam.

      reprinted in the past on this question is the following:

      And on the topic:

      http://www.maxboxing.com/Cliff/Rold040908.asp

      What About Ring?

      Fans used to hearing more frequently about ‘real’ World champions on HBO and ESPN in recent years may be wondering why the lineages noted above don’t entirely line up with Ring Magazine since Ring is often the standard used by those media giants. That’s simple.

      When Ring decided to start naming champions again, they elected to ignore some established history, including their own.

      That’s a problem when considering that their policy is supposed to be about the notion that titles are won, and lost, only in the ring. In other words, Ring looks like it is all about restoring lineage to titles but, if there was an election that said they could just call a do-over on history, I missed it. While Ring left the game of tracing ‘the man who beat the man’ or at least the ‘man who became the man’ in the late 80’s, websites like the Cyber Boxing Zone (CBZ), and the magazine Boxing Illustrated well into the 90s, were still protecting Boxing’s history.

      So, with renewed discussion at this site, and around the sport, about the merits of Ring’s championships, it’s time to take another look at how things have played out on this front. Loyal readers will find this subject old territory for me, but MaxBoxing readers not as familiar with my work can quickly be caught up on the specifics.

      When Ring began recognizing champions again, sans alphabelts, earlier this decade, they did so by declaring, among others, the titles at 108, 112, 115, and 126 lbs. vacant and recognizing Roy Jones as Light Heavyweight champion. Jones was easy for most people to swallow because he was, well, Roy. However, his ‘undisputed’ title reign was built on sanctioning body recognition, stripped alphabelts, and occasionally top foes. They ignored the history passed from Hill to Dariusz Michalczewski.

      They reasoned, paraphrasing, that the other divisions were in disarray and it would be too confusing to retroactively trace the lines so vacant won. Was that really the case? Well, let’s say it wouldn’t have taken much looking to be un-confused.

      If any of you have the February 2008 issue of Ring handy, open it up to page 128 and you’ll see that Sot Chitalada and Barry McGuigan were, correctly, recognized as World champs at Flyweight and Featherweight respectively in March 1986. Those lines never broke, and they traced back farther than ’86. When Ring started noting champs again between 2001 and 2002, that would have meant Wonjongkam and Naseem Hamed.

      Since becoming a recognizer of championships again, other problems have arisen with Ring. Among them are:

      • Crowning Rosendo Alvarez at 108 while the lineage ran through Jorge Arce in a straight line from Michael Carbajal-Humberto Gonzalez;
      • Ignoring the lineage at 115 lbs. that belonged to Masamori Tokuyama in a straight line to the Jiro Watanabe-Payao Poontarat fight in 1984;
      • Crowning Paulie Ayala at 122 lbs. for his one clear win over Bones Adams in 2002 after three arguably bad decisions in a row for Ayala against Hugo Dianzo, Johnny Tapia and Bones Adams and with no other wins in the division. Ayala never defended his hollow crown; and let us not forget…
      • The coronation of big brother Vitali Klitschko as Heavyweight champion for his first win over a currently rated Ring top ten fighter, ever, against Corrie Sanders in 2004. Much as he was loathsome to watch, John Ruiz’s rebound from the Roy Jones loss with wins over Hasim Rahman and Fres Oquendo were more meritorious than anything Klitscko had actually finished when he entered the ring with Sanders.

      To their credit, they have been on the ball on other occasions. Their recognizing Jose Luis Castillo-Juan Lazcano as being for the then-vacant Lightweight title in 2004 appeared correct and was validated by an excellent series of fights that culminated in Castillo-Corrales I. Evidenced above, most of their titlists are accurate to date, so it's not as if they're way out of the ballpark there even if they did back into history rather than embracing it. Finally, through much of modern Boxing’s rich and unique history, Ring’s belts have been a constant from old pictures of Nat Fleischer and Ray Robinson to the casket of Apollo Creed. When a fighter proves to be his divisions true champion, having that belt there is a bonus and a cool aesthetic. But…

      This Ring review is inspired in large part by Steve Kim’s piece here at Maxboxing on Monday. Steve and I don’t approach this issue from the same direction or even reach all the same conclusions, but for those like Steve who might feel no obligation to recognize Bernard Hopkins or Joel Casamayor as sole champions, Ring provides the role model. After all, if Ring can decide that legitimate lineage is discardable, then why can’t their placebo lineage at 175 or decision to recognize the weight-skewed Casamayor-Corrales III also be discarded by knowledgeable boxing people based on the results unfolding before them?
      Last edited by crold1; 07-17-2010, 01:05 PM.

      Comment

      • mrsjt
        Contender
        Silver Champion - 100-500 posts
        • Nov 2009
        • 139
        • 2
        • 0
        • 6,191

        #413
        why cant i find any links?

        Comment

        Working...
        TOP