The year is 1894 and Thomas Edison films the legendary James J. Corbett in an exhibition, a visual first and occurs in Orange County, New Jersey...United States of America. Fast forward almost three decades and another first takes place, the first ever voice broadcast of a sporting event, an exhibition bout held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Another American first. It was a nation of boxing pioneers, the sport so intertwined with its nationhood that the heavyweight championship was viewed as the most prestigious of prizes, its holder a national icon.
Now HBO, boxing's greatest platform for decades retires from the sport. Friday Night fights to pay-per-view to its international deals with the BBC and Sky Sports are all now consigned to history. Was it inevitable? Maybe, some point down the line but in 2018? It seems to be a symptom of the time. Boxing is no longer intertwined with the American conscience and ever since the Klitschkos dominated the division, the heavyweight championship has been ignored, looked down upon even. It is no longer American, so why should they care?
This could possible be a sign of the times, an insular nation, looking inwards for its sporting heroes, no longer wanting the rising tide of Hispanic and increasingly European and Asiatic world beaters. The sport has moved on, stadiums are sold out in Germany, the UK, Russia and the eastern bloc...pay per view is not the only way and TV broadcasts made the Klitschkos household names across Europe. The biggest star in the sport has not even had a single fight on American soil.
As American boxing stands still, frantically eyeing up potential stars, HBO gives up. Why? The answer is simple. The sport has become too corrupted, to glossy, money floating around sub par fighters in sub par fights. HBO is to blame in part, paying Roy Jones huge sums of money to fight a string of bums...Joe Louis had the bum of the month, Roy Jones had a bum every month. Its natural predecessor, the Al Haymon run PBC, pays undeserving fighters millions to avoid each other and fight lesser names. It essentially owns the welterweight division but Thurman, supposedly the top fighter, may never fight again, Spence has yet to fight Garcia, Thurman or Porter and those three names only fought each other after 3 years of circling.
All the while, Anthony Joshua in 21 fights has almost cleared out the heavyweight division, Oleksandr Usyk is undisputed champion in less fights and Vasyl Lomachenko is the sports premier fighter. All the while, someone as talented as Gervonta Davis is known more for his spat with Floyd Mayweather than any fight.
HBO has left boxing because America not only turned its back on the sport but it allowed it to be contorted, twisted and corrupted beyond measure. The others will soon follow.
Now HBO, boxing's greatest platform for decades retires from the sport. Friday Night fights to pay-per-view to its international deals with the BBC and Sky Sports are all now consigned to history. Was it inevitable? Maybe, some point down the line but in 2018? It seems to be a symptom of the time. Boxing is no longer intertwined with the American conscience and ever since the Klitschkos dominated the division, the heavyweight championship has been ignored, looked down upon even. It is no longer American, so why should they care?
This could possible be a sign of the times, an insular nation, looking inwards for its sporting heroes, no longer wanting the rising tide of Hispanic and increasingly European and Asiatic world beaters. The sport has moved on, stadiums are sold out in Germany, the UK, Russia and the eastern bloc...pay per view is not the only way and TV broadcasts made the Klitschkos household names across Europe. The biggest star in the sport has not even had a single fight on American soil.
As American boxing stands still, frantically eyeing up potential stars, HBO gives up. Why? The answer is simple. The sport has become too corrupted, to glossy, money floating around sub par fighters in sub par fights. HBO is to blame in part, paying Roy Jones huge sums of money to fight a string of bums...Joe Louis had the bum of the month, Roy Jones had a bum every month. Its natural predecessor, the Al Haymon run PBC, pays undeserving fighters millions to avoid each other and fight lesser names. It essentially owns the welterweight division but Thurman, supposedly the top fighter, may never fight again, Spence has yet to fight Garcia, Thurman or Porter and those three names only fought each other after 3 years of circling.
All the while, Anthony Joshua in 21 fights has almost cleared out the heavyweight division, Oleksandr Usyk is undisputed champion in less fights and Vasyl Lomachenko is the sports premier fighter. All the while, someone as talented as Gervonta Davis is known more for his spat with Floyd Mayweather than any fight.
HBO has left boxing because America not only turned its back on the sport but it allowed it to be contorted, twisted and corrupted beyond measure. The others will soon follow.
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