Tuesday, July 31, 2007

The Legality of Boxing

I finally got my hands on a book that challenges our entire world, The Legality of Boxing: A Punch Drunk Love?, by Jack Anderson. It was published in England this year and retails for $130, so it's not the kind of thing you pick up at the airport on the way to Tacoma. But if it were cheaper and easier to find, I'd put it on the required reading list for boxing journalists.

I had just started reading TLOB when I sat through the lovely evening of brutaliffic bouts in Atlantic City on July 14, headlined by Alfonso Gomez's gruesome destruction of Arturo Gatti, with backup from Kermit Cintron's scary Round 2 plastering of Walter Matthysse. Those fights were preceeded by four other early stoppages in painful mismatches. A week later, fights on the undercard of the Bernard Hopkins-Winky Wright match sent both Czar Amonsot and Oscar Larios to the hospital with bleeding on the brain, after they both took severe beatings that may end their careers.

So I was kind of warmed up to read Anderson's dissertation on how the profession of beating people up for sport came to be legal (despite all other laws of civilized society) and whether it still makes sense to keep it legal.


The book, unsurprisingly, recounts the saddest tales from boxing, including boxers who were killed in fights -- Davey Moore, Benny Paret, Duk-Koo Kim, Leavander Johnson -- and many more whose lives suffered after their best days in the ring were done (Muhammad Ali, Riddick Bowe, and what more do you need to say?). But the book isn't a biased screed supporting boxing's abolition. It's a measured account of facts and history.

"I am a fan of boxing," Anderson writes in the introduction (this Jack Anderson is a law professor in Belfast). "I like its characters, its courage and its mimimalism. Nonetheless, my love of the sport is uncomfortable and frequently unfaithful. Many aspects of the professional code unsettle me, and it is that sense of unease that this personal study seeks to confront."

The book at times feels like a well-researched term paper. I'm not kidding: there are 686 footnotes and a 14-page bibliography. But it reads briskly and is a terrific narrative of the sport's evolution. I never knew Bob Fitzsimmons killed an opponent in the ring, or that in 1881 John L. Sullivan, to avoid the law, fought John Flood by candlelight on a barge on the Hudson River, "in front of a select audience of professional gamblers and a sympathetic press."

The laws on public fighting, Anderson explains, have always been sketchy but have almost always made an exception for consensual combat sport. Anderson looks back to Ancient Greece to show how, even then, enlightened lawmakers made sports an exception to normal prohibitions against violence. Accidental killing in sport was, hey, something that might just happen.

Anderson's basic premise is that every time public fighting has seemed to become more trouble than it's worth (in Sullivan's bareknuckle days, for example), supporters have stepped up with regulations to make the sport safer and more palatable. The Queensbury rules were written in 1865 by John Graham Chambers, a sportsman and journalist, who got Sholto Douglas, the eight Marquis of Queensbury, to endorse them. Those rules, which took decades to catch on, set up the ten second knockdown count, three minute rounds, and gloves. Later came state boxing commissions, and, despite the occasional death or backroom scandal, it pretty much became no problem for two consenting fighters to go at each other in regulated sporting events.

But Anderson makes a case that boxing's self-regulation has often failed its athletes, allowing promoters to sign fighters to restrictive contracts that might be viewed as coercive and have made the question of "consent" less than clear-cut. Boxers banned in one state for health or other reasons can often still go to another to fight, as Sullivan did. A national boxing commission would have helped boxers in and out of the ring, but it was shot down in the House of Representatives in 2005, partly by lawmakers' "states' rights" argument.

In the end Anderson realizes the abolition of boxing isn't realistic but he holds out hope that reforms, including better regulation, medical research and fighter education, are possible.

And he hardly lets boxing journalists and fans off the hook. The book opens with a cutting quote from James Ellroy: "Writers approach boxing as idolators, inquisitors, wannabes and manques. They see boxing as an enclosed society and a groovy, blood-and-guts lifestyle....The fighters themselves chase an always fleeting glory through the sustained cultivation and infliction of pain."

Toward the end, Anderson quotes British journalist Kevin Mitchell, in a piece about the sad, endless career of the once-great Thomas Hearns. "There is a lot to love about boxing. It teaches kids discipline and respect. It can be spellbinding and heroic. But there's a lot to loathe -- like the romanticism often attached to what is a deadly enterprise, the wallowing in other people's bravery and the exploitation of notoriety."

Friday, July 27, 2007

The Thrilla in Tacoma

Sure, you thought Tacoma was just a AAA affiliate of the Seattle Mariners, or a Toyota pick-up truck. But hang on. They're getting boxing fever this week in The City of Destiny (Tacoma's official nickname). On Saturday night Tacoma hosts the Vernon Forrest - Carlos Baldomir fight, which is for the WBC light middleweight belt that neither Floyd Mayweather nor Oscar De La Hoya has anymore. The Tacoma Weekly suggests it might be the biggest boxing match in Washington State history -- but that's what you get when you quote the promoter (in the headline!).

A bit more even keeled is the Tacoma News Tribune, which asks whether boxing in Tacoma can return to its heyday. Tacoma, after all, was hometown to champions Leo Randolph, Johnny Bumphus (pictured), Rocky Lockridge and Freddie "The Tacoma Assassin" Steele. The state's last title fight was in 1988 at the Tacoma Dome. Greg Haugen beat Miguel Santana to keep the IBF lightweight belt. The guess here is that neither Tacoma nor any other U.S. city is likely to return to its boxing heyday.

Outside of Tacoma, people are just wondering if Forrest or Baldomir will return to any kind of heyday. Well, Tim Smith in the New York Daily News is.

In other news: Catching up on some missed stuff...my colleague Frank Fitzpatrick did a nice piece in the Philadelphia Inquirer on the painter Thomas Eakins' work depicting circa-1900 boxing in the city. Dan Rafael at ESPN.com says a Miguel Cotto - Shane Mosley match is in the works for November. Kieran Mulvaney writes for Reuters that De La Hoya is looking to fight Ricky Hatton, though Hatton also is eyeing Mayweather.

On the Web: Among the online scorekeepers at FightJudge.com, 63 percent had Bernard Hopkins beating Winky Wright, 13 percent had Winky winning, and 25 percent scored it a draw. Boxrec.com has a clean and modern new look and a new (or maybe I just noticed it) way to list chronoligically the fights for any specific title, by sanctioning organization and weight class.

Web site of pick the day: lsavarese.com. Everything you need to know about Lou Savarese, whom I bumped into at Portobello's Pizza in New York on Thursday. He said he isn't sure when his horror movie, Knock Knock, is coming out (it may go straight to DVD) but that he was proud of his acting roles in episodes of The Bronx is Burning, The Sopranos and Rescue Me. He said he's pretty sure he's done boxing, but didn't seem surprised that Evander Holyfield may earn himself another title shot. "With Evander you never know," Big Lou said.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Ejected

The relationship between reporters and athletes is different in Japan, as a lot of things are. Hiroki Homma, covering the Yankees in the U.S. for the Fuji Evening News, asked Roger Clemens for an autograph. The Baseball Writers' Association of America -- they're the BBWAA -- found out and revoked his membership.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Truth in Boxing

One reason that mainstream sports fans have lost enthusiasm for following boxing is that what you see too often isn't what you get. Judges' scores sometimes seem to be outrageous. Title fights frequently are made, and belts taken away, for murky reasons that have nothing to do with athletes' skills. With all the sanctioning organizations, it's impossible to tell who's really a deserving champion. Unlike in other sports, it's hard to know what any given ring performance counts for in the big picture.

Last year, a promotion that lasted for a couple of months was built around Bernard Hopkins' farewell fight. The retirement was so elaborately planned, Merrill Lynch would be jealous, starting with Hopkins' tour around the country telling fans it would be his finale, all the way through Michael Buffer's announcement in the ring that it was Hopkins' final fight and a postfight press conference when Hopkins said he had nothing left to prove.
It's hard to say how much that theme helped sell the fight. Maybe it didn't matter to anyone. Boxers retire and come back all the time.

But, once again, in a way more highly orchestrated than most instances, viewers were led to believe something about the consequences of a fight that turned out not to be true at all. It wasn't a "Fight to the Finish." It was "never mind." It left boxing once again saying to sports fans: sorry, but what you thought you just saw, that wasn't really what it was.

On Saturday, Hopkins is fighting Winky Wright. The slogan for for the new bout is "Coming to Fight." Anybody ready to believe this one?

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Gatti Gatti Gatti (and other bouts)

Some press on HBO's tripleheader tonight:

It's still his town by David Weinberg, Press of Atlantic City.

A happier Gatti re-enters the ring by Keith Idec, Herald News.

Arturo Gatti-Micky Ward: Brothers In Arms by T.K. Stewart, BoxingScene.com.

Gatti's roller coaster career won't keep him out of the ring by Dan Rafael, ESPN.com.


Gatti fighting to show he can fight and School Bully Gets His Shot (on Paul Williams) by Tim Smith, N.Y. Daily News.

Big test for Gatti by George Willis, N.Y. Post.

Ward trains Gatti for 'Apollo' mission by Bernard Fernandez, Philadelphia Daily News.

Gatti keeps getting pounded - and keeps persevering by Don Steinberg, Philadelphia Inquirer.

Williams works his way up by Steve Springer, Los Angeles Daily News.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

The Ring's Hot List

The cover story of the excellent new issue of Ring (futuristically dated September 2007) brings back a neat idea tried twice before and now officially in the magazine every two years: handing out report cards that grade the star power of boxing's current leading men. Each of 20 selected boxers, from heavyweight to junior feather, is given a separate letter grade on five dimensions: talent, achievement, marketability, support system, and growth potential.

The write-ups are thorough, but it's a lot of grading. Before long you start getting that alphabet-soup feeling and wondering how it all adds up. A single, unified grade for each guy would have made it easier to compare the guys.

Probably more interesting than the individual grades (they're all high) is seeing which 20 boxers have made Ring's 2007 A-list (and who's left off). If you can guess 20 out of 20 without looking, give yourself an A.

They are (approximately by size): Wladimir Klitschko, Sam Peter, Ruslan Chagaev, Bernard Hopkins,Joe Calzaghe, Mikkel Kessler, Jermain Taylor, Kelly Pavlik, Oscar De La Hoya, Floyd Mayweather, Shane Mosley, Miguel Cotto, Ricky Hatton, Juan Diaz, Amir Khan, Manny Pacquiao, Edwin Valero, Juan Manuel Marquez, Chris John, and Manuel Marquez. Twelve fighters from 2005 didn't make it this time, a churn rate that seems about right. Six of the 20 are U.S. natives, a national shortfall "reflecting the decline of free television and newspaper interest," the magazine says.

In the news: Bernard Fernandez looks at the fighting Tiberi family of Delaware , and other topics, in the Philly Daily News. Dan Rafael sums up Klitschko-Brewster, Simms-Alcine and all the other weekend action at ESPN.com. Norm Frauenheim writes in the Arizona Republic that the Klitschko-Brewster dud is symbolic of the heavyweight division: "Brewster simply did what the heavyweights did years ago: Quit."


Monday, July 9, 2007

The Oldest Boxing Writers

I picked up a great old boxing book last week on the Internet through a site called TomFolio.com, where independent used-book sellers list offerings. Boxing in Art and Literature, edited by William D. Cox, was published in 1935. Even back then, pre-Liebling, there was no shortage of classic boxing writing, starting with the most classic classics, The Iliad and The Osyssey. Excerpts from both are in here.

Homer has a scene in The Iliad describing a bout between Epeios and Euryalos, written up around the 7th century B.C.:

"Two boxers being girt went into the midst of the ring, and both lifting up their stalwart hands fell to, and their hands joined battle grievously. Then there was a terrible grinding of teeth, and sweat flowed from all their limbs. And noble Epeios came on, and as the other spied for an opening, smote him on the cheek, nor could he much more stand, for his fair limbs failed him straightaway under him."

Homer also has Odysseus delivering trash talk before a fight in The Odyssey that would work at any Thursday afternoon press conference:

"Do not challenge me too far with show of fist, or you may rouse my rage; and old as I am, I still might stain your breast and lips with blood."

Then it's on to Plato, and The Aeneid ("binding on hand and arm these well-seasoned thongs of bull hide...seven folds of the hides of bulls so enormous...insewn with lead and with iron") and more modern writing. There's a terrific report by Robert H. Davis, who had inside access to the Bob Fitzsimmons camp during Corbett-Fitzsimmons fight week in March, 1897. The two fighters crossed paths while running one morning, in a meeting possibly engineered by a San Francisco newspaper editor. When Fitzsimmons put out his hand to shake, Corbett pulled his hand back and said "I'll shake after I've licked you." Of course, Fitz goes away steamed and a few days later beats Corbett in the ring with the famous "solar plexus" punch:

"Such was the speed and violence of the blow that Fitzsimmons' left arm seemed to disappear into Corbett's midst almost to the elbow."

I won't say they don't write 'em like that anymore. Sometimes we do. The book is a wonderful compilation in any case (I didn't mention the art, black and white reproductions of ancient pottery, newer sculptures, and Thomas Eakins paintings). Here's a review of the book from Time, in 1935. It's not $5 anymore but still available for a reasonable price online.

Friday, July 6, 2007

Wladimir in the Afternoon



Ah, isn't live boxing at 5 p.m. on Saturday cool? A throwback to the carefree days before the pay-per-view menace, when Wide World of Sports always had a great Bobby Chacon or Boom Boom Mancini fight on TV on those hot Summer afternoons.

This will be the second straight live-at-five for Wladimir Klitschko. Last time it was a farce against Ray Austin in Mannheim, Germany, where it was nighttime at the time. This weekend it's a much better bout, a rematch against Lamon Brewster in Koln, Germany (can Blogger do umlauts?). Last time they fought, Brewster caught Klitschko in the 5th (see above), and it was all over.

Some press on the return bout:

Dan Rafael, ESPN.com: Klitschko, Brewster look forward to a clean rematch
Keith Idec, BoxingScene.com: Klitschko-Brewster: Redemption For One

T.K. Stewart, BoxingScene.com Lamon Brewster, It’s Up To You!