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How boxing promoters are hurting the sport, and how they could help revive it

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  • How boxing promoters are hurting the sport, and how they could help revive it

    I bolded the good points.

    Kevin Iole

    About 21 percent of Americans approve of the job that Congress is doing, according to the aggregate of six major polls, compiled by Real Clear Politics. About 65 percent disapprove.

    I suspect that if you similarly polled boxing fans about the job promoters are doing, the numbers would be similar, if not slightly worse.

    There are a lot of good things happening in boxing. There already have been several sensational fights that will deserve serious consideration as Fight of the Year, and we’ve already had a number of jaw-dropping knockouts.

    In the ring, the action has been very good to excellent.

    But as has become the case with boxing, even when things go well, they go wrong.

    First, let’s take the case of Keith Thurman, the wonderful unified welterweight champion who lifted the WBC belt from Danny Garcia in a fight viewed on March 4 by more than 5 million people on CBS.

    That was a career-defining win, but Thurman hasn’t been heard of publicly since. It was a lost opportunity to help him become a star.

    Fighters who win big fights or who compete in outstanding events have a short window of opportunity afterward to capitalize on it. Nobody, though, explained that to Thurman.

    There was no post-fight tour. He didn’t appear on the cover of any magazines, or even make himself available the following week for interviews.

    Thurman is not only an outstanding fighter, he’s a charismatic personality who is thoughtful and well-spoken. Someone needed to be out there pounding the drum for him after the fight, not just before it, but the PBC completely blew it.

    The PBC is doing many great things, but it is beyond horrible at public relations thanks to Al Haymon’s distrust of and lack of interest in the media.

    The problem is, those 5 million fans who watched Thurman-Garcia were the biggest prime-time audience boxing had since 1978 and the second biggest overall since 1978. Many of them hadn’t seen Thurman before, and didn’t know enough about him.

    Their interest was piqued by his performance in the ring, but he’s now on the shelf, not to be seen again until the next time he has something to sell.

    That’s the short-sighted thinking that permeates boxing.

    It’s been a strange year. Promoter Bob Arum and adviser Michael Koncz have made a farce out of Manny Pacquiao’s next fight. First, his opponent was going to be Jeff Horn in Australia. Then, it was going to be Amir Khan in the Middle East.

    Now, it’s neither and no one knows when the one-time superstar is going to fight again. And who will believe Arum and Koncz when they do say?

    HBO continues to be stingy with dates and its money. It took, it seemed, an act of Congress to get HBO to approve the money to tab 2008 Olympic gold medalist Felix Diaz as Terence Crawford’s next opponent.

    Crawford is a star inside the ring, but he is not particularly well-known outside of his hometown of Omaha, Neb. He needs the exposure that big fights bring, and even after beating previously unbeaten Viktor Postol in a title unification bout last summer, he was fed journeyman John Molina Jr. in the fall.

    And then there’s the case of Canelo Alvarez and Gennady Golovkin, arguably the best fight that could be made in boxing right now.

    It’s been spoken about for two years, but it still hasn’t become a reality.

    Golovkin won the most significant fight of his life on March 18 when he defeated Daniel Jacobs in a IBF-WBA-WBC middleweight unification bout. But he hasn’t been seen or heard from since.

    Oscar De La Hoya, who promotes Alvarez, has certainly been heard from and has used his time in front of the media to try to gain a negotiating advantage. Golovkin should have spent the next four or five days after his win over Jacobs pounding the pavement, making the argument over and over for a fight with Alvarez in the fall.

    Fortunately, indications are good that the fight may yet occur, but Golovkin should have been out there mounting a campaign and putting pressure on De La Hoya and Alvarez.

    Fighters want to rest after a hard training camp and a grueling fight, but when they’re in their primes and are striving for mainstream status, they need to sacrifice a few more days. And while they’re training, the promoters need to be quietly behind the scenes pulling strings to take advantage.

    Thurman defeated Garcia in New York. So why not on the day after the fight, hold a small media gathering where the reporters had one final shot to talk to him? Many of those 5 million who watched weren’t all that familiar with him, but may have become interested by his performance in the fight. Ride that wave and see where it takes you.

    They could have pitched him to GQ, say, to expose him to a different type of audience. There are many ways to promote that boxing simply blows off.

    It’s hard work, and while many of the fighters want the glory, they’re not willing to do what it takes.

    One thing few people understand about Mayweather is how hard he worked pushing and promoting himself. Mayweather always worked extremely hard to sell himself, both before and after fights. The results are proof that it can work.

    The barrier to entry is low in promoting boxing; it’s not like the NFL, where the owners are billionaires and are still heavily vetted. In boxing, if you pay a small fee to an athletic commission and pass a minor background check, you’re able to promote.

    Read the rest at
    http://sports.yahoo.com/news/how-box...-sh&soc_trk=tw
    Last edited by Motorcity Cobra; 03-28-2017, 07:01 PM.

  • #2
    Yep. Thurman went quiet post-fight. Remember the days of ABC and early HBO, when they'd analyse a fight afterwards and invite both fighters into the studio (Ali-Frasier, SRL-Duran, Tyson-Ruddick, Tyson-Douglas...) and then the next opponent would be announced; none of this 2 fights a year crap. I'll never forget Cosell asking Duran on air if he thought the referee didn't break up the clinches enough, "Tell Leonard to be a man".

    Comment


    • #3
      HBO continues to be stingy with dates and its money. It took, it seemed, an act of Congress to get HBO to approve the money to tab 2008 Olympic gold medalist Felix Diaz as Terence Crawford’s next opponent.
      What? What's all this about?

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by iamboxing View Post
        Yep. Thurman went quiet post-fight. Remember the days of ABC and early HBO, when they'd analyse a fight afterwards and invite both fighters into the studio (Ali-Frasier, SRL-Duran, Tyson-Ruddick, Tyson-Douglas...) and then the next opponent would be announced; none of this 2 fights a year crap. I'll never forget Cosell asking Duran on air if he thought the referee didn't break up the clinches enough, "Tell Leonard to be a man".
        Yep and they would make the rounds on the late night talk shows. These guys fight then disappear until their next fight. I saw a cpl days after his fight Keith Thurman was in Japan watching fights.

        Comment


        • #5
          Seems like a slow news day bs article to me. Hey guy who spent 8-12 weeks in training & 36 minutes or less putting your life, potentially, on the line vs another man doing the same....go talk to the media just a lil bit more than when you were building up the fight lol.

          I mean it wouldn't hurt, but the problem with boxing is it makes no f#cking sense to most reasonable sports fans. The two best guys in a division almost never fight each other. Hell top 5 guys rarely seem to fight each other. Their are 4 cats calling themselves "world champions" in most divisions. And guys even many hardcore boxing fans haven't heard of & more often never seen randomly seem to be getting title shots all the time in every division damn near. Boxings problems got way more to do with guys not talking to the media the day after the fight or HBO's slow trigger finger with making fights.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Motorcity Cobra View Post
            I bolded the good points.

            Kevin Iole

            About 21 percent of Americans approve of the job that Congress is doing, according to the aggregate of six major polls, compiled by Real Clear Politics. About 65 percent disapprove.

            I suspect that if you similarly polled boxing fans about the job promoters are doing, the numbers would be similar, if not slightly worse.

            There are a lot of good things happening in boxing. There already have been several sensational fights that will deserve serious consideration as Fight of the Year, and we’ve already had a number of jaw-dropping knockouts.

            In the ring, the action has been very good to excellent.

            But as has become the case with boxing, even when things go well, they go wrong.

            First, let’s take the case of Keith Thurman, the wonderful unified welterweight champion who lifted the WBC belt from Danny Garcia in a fight viewed on March 4 by more than 5 million people on CBS.

            That was a career-defining win, but Thurman hasn’t been heard of publicly since. It was a lost opportunity to help him become a star.

            Fighters who win big fights or who compete in outstanding events have a short window of opportunity afterward to capitalize on it. Nobody, though, explained that to Thurman.

            There was no post-fight tour. He didn’t appear on the cover of any magazines, or even make himself available the following week for interviews.

            Thurman is not only an outstanding fighter, he’s a charismatic personality who is thoughtful and well-spoken. Someone needed to be out there pounding the drum for him after the fight, not just before it, but the PBC completely blew it.

            The PBC is doing many great things, but it is beyond horrible at public relations thanks to Al Haymon’s distrust of and lack of interest in the media.

            The problem is, those 5 million fans who watched Thurman-Garcia were the biggest prime-time audience boxing had since 1978 and the second biggest overall since 1978. Many of them hadn’t seen Thurman before, and didn’t know enough about him.

            Their interest was piqued by his performance in the ring, but he’s now on the shelf, not to be seen again until the next time he has something to sell.

            That’s the short-sighted thinking that permeates boxing.

            It’s been a strange year. Promoter Bob Arum and adviser Michael Koncz have made a farce out of Manny Pacquiao’s next fight. First, his opponent was going to be Jeff Horn in Australia. Then, it was going to be Amir Khan in the Middle East.

            Now, it’s neither and no one knows when the one-time superstar is going to fight again. And who will believe Arum and Koncz when they do say?

            HBO continues to be stingy with dates and its money. It took, it seemed, an act of Congress to get HBO to approve the money to tab 2008 Olympic gold medalist Felix Diaz as Terence Crawford’s next opponent.

            Crawford is a star inside the ring, but he is not particularly well-known outside of his hometown of Omaha, Neb. He needs the exposure that big fights bring, and even after beating previously unbeaten Viktor Postol in a title unification bout last summer, he was fed journeyman John Molina Jr. in the fall.

            And then there’s the case of Canelo Alvarez and Gennady Golovkin, arguably the best fight that could be made in boxing right now.

            It’s been spoken about for two years, but it still hasn’t become a reality.

            Golovkin won the most significant fight of his life on March 18 when he defeated Daniel Jacobs in a IBF-WBA-WBC middleweight unification bout. But he hasn’t been seen or heard from since.

            Oscar De La Hoya, who promotes Alvarez, has certainly been heard from and has used his time in front of the media to try to gain a negotiating advantage. Golovkin should have spent the next four or five days after his win over Jacobs pounding the pavement, making the argument over and over for a fight with Alvarez in the fall.

            Fortunately, indications are good that the fight may yet occur, but Golovkin should have been out there mounting a campaign and putting pressure on De La Hoya and Alvarez.

            Fighters want to rest after a hard training camp and a grueling fight, but when they’re in their primes and are striving for mainstream status, they need to sacrifice a few more days. And while they’re training, the promoters need to be quietly behind the scenes pulling strings to take advantage.

            Thurman defeated Garcia in New York. So why not on the day after the fight, hold a small media gathering where the reporters had one final shot to talk to him? Many of those 5 million who watched weren’t all that familiar with him, but may have become interested by his performance in the fight. Ride that wave and see where it takes you.

            They could have pitched him to GQ, say, to expose him to a different type of audience. There are many ways to promote that boxing simply blows off.

            It’s hard work, and while many of the fighters want the glory, they’re not willing to do what it takes.

            One thing few people understand about Mayweather is how hard he worked pushing and promoting himself. Mayweather always worked extremely hard to sell himself, both before and after fights. The results are proof that it can work.

            The barrier to entry is low in promoting boxing; it’s not like the NFL, where the owners are billionaires and are still heavily vetted. In boxing, if you pay a small fee to an athletic commission and pass a minor background check, you’re able to promote.

            Read the rest at
            http://sports.yahoo.com/news/how-box...-sh&soc_trk=tw
            whats your address b1tch???

            Comment


            • #7
              you said you were going to shoot my kids..WHERE ARE YOU LOCATED???

              Comment


              • #8
                **** you b1tch...what is your address???? I will follow you to hell

                Comment


                • #9
                  Motorcity needs to answer me or i will track his ass down..WHAT IS YOUR ADDRESS???

                  Comment

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