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| The issue of Calvin Brock committing to fighting in the Superfighter Tournament seems thorny in light of his fight with Wladimir Klitschko on Nov. 11 for the IBF heavyweight title at New York’s Madison Square Garden. |
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Can Superfighter Save Boxing And The Day?
By Robert Ecksel
The first person who uttered the words “you gotta have a gimmick” was definitely onto something. Not sure if it was James Figg, Jack Broughton, John Sholto Douglas, or the three delectable strippers in “Gypsy” who dispensed those pearls of wisdom for the benefit of mankind, but whoever first said “you gotta have a gimmick” sure as hell got it right.
Call me old-fashioned, old hat, an old fogy, an old fart, but despite my better judgment I’ve got this love affair with boxing’s sublime geometrical symmetry of three minute rounds and one minute rest periods, each stanza a stand-in for a compete fight in itself, followed by a well deserved breather for the fighters and out of breath fans.
That’s the way it’s been and that’s the way it is after a couple of tumultuous centuries, but that’s the way it used to be too. And if some gentlemen of means have their way, and when do they not, the orthodox boxing we've come to love may go the way of the 8-track tape and unprotected sex in the backseats of convertibles.
During an international telephone conference call Monday afternoon hosted by Australian muckamuck and CEO Steven Duval, and ably seconded by former heavyweight champion nonpareil Lennox Lewis, it was announced that a “new and innovative” Superfighter Heavyweight Boxing Tournament will be held at the Telstra Dome in Melbourne, Australia on December 1.
What makes this boxing tournament different from all other boxing tournaments is that the fights will be four rounds in length, the boxers will wear 12 oz. rather than the regulation 10 oz. gloves, and the fights will happen one after the other in a single night, with the last man standing to earn $5 million.
For some this might be novelty enough, but, really, can there ever be novelty enough? The Superfighter Heavyweight Boxing Tournament has taken a good hard look at some of the sports not struggling for fans and credibility and embraced one of pro football’s new but now hallowed traditions: the instant replay where one team can call time out to review and dispute a call. What this does to boxing's intrinsic momentum is anyone’s guess, but chances are we’ll find out on December first.
Another new wrinkle the Superfighter Tourney introduces is in the scoring, which everyone knows is a complete and utter mess, even when it strives to do the right thing. Duval’s plan is to adopt a system not unlike the computerized system used by the Olympics, which is, putting it kindly, at best a nationalistic crapshoot, probably less efficient, if such a thing were possible, than some of the judging of some of the fights we’ve seen in recent years. “A panel of experts” will handle the judging, Duval told the press. Plus there will be real time scoring (tried and rejected in the past), so the fighters, cornermen and fans will know who’s winning and losing the fight as the fight progresses.
The participants in the Superfighter Heavyweight Boxing Tournament are, in alphabetical order, O’Neal Bell, Calvin Brock, Chris Byrd, Tye Fields, Juan Carlos Gomez, Oliver McCall, Jameel McCline and Samuel Peter. Maybe none of them has a Canastota or Bust tat on one of his bulging biceps, but there some genuine bruisers in that group, and some slick boxers too, there’s some meat, some muscle, even the occasional head case.
(If any of the above particpants get injured sparring or eating before the fight, the six-foot-three inch Turk known as the Bull from Bosporus, Sinan Samil Sam, has agreed to step into the breach if necessary.)
The issue of Calvin Brock committing to fighting in the Superfighter Tournament seems thorny in light of his fight with Wladimir Klitschko on Nov. 11 for the IBF heavyweight title at New York’s Madison Square Garden. But win, lose or draw against Wlad the K at MSG, Brock figures it’s worth flying to Melbourne at the chance of winning five big ones… and who can blame him?
The pay-per-view price for the Superfighter Heavyweight Boxing Tournament is $49.95. Former heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis, whose soul we bless but judgment we question ("Nothing compares to Superfighter," he said. "It is a condensed, action packed boxing spectacle and I am convinced the Melbourne event will unleash a new chapter in boxing history”) will provide expert commentary, along with, according to Duval, Colonel Bob Sheridan and possibly George Foreman.
Duval is a man with a dream and the man with the right stuff to make that dream a reality. He plans Superfighter tournaments in four different divisions in 2007, and eventually hopes it to expand to eight divisions the following year.
Stay tuned.
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David Payne:
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It is an interesting experiment and with out wishing to sound like a Luddite, I hope it fails and those name-checked approaching meaningful 10 and 12 round fights against each other with similar alacrity.
If they did, perhaps the need for a gimmick in the heavyweight division wouldn't be necessary.
Tuesday Oct 17, 2006 09:42:32 AM
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dan rhodes:
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A poor attempt to build up hype amongst mainly american fighters...is this what is resorted to when no americans hold a heavyweight title. Why not offer the rightfull publicity to the current champions ,,,american or not,,,or is that too hard to stomach.
Tuesday Oct 17, 2006 01:41:04 PM
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Rudy Gomez:
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It sounds like a good idea, but for boxing to reach the general public and not have to come up with corny ideas like these is to stop having good fights on PPV. Every time you hear about a name fighter going up against some good competition or at least decent opponent, you have to cough up $50 to watch. And those are $50 which you dont know what you are getting, you can get a nice entertaining fight or some snoozer with two name opponents whose fight wouldnt be worth $50.
Promoters like Top Rank, Golden Boy, Main Events, DK Promotions, Main Events - should start reaching out to normal TV networks - FOX, CBS, NBC to put their fight cards on. HBO and Showtime should stop being so picky on who they put on the air, Showtime has been doing a good job lately of putting in quality boxers against each other, HBO still puts a top tier opponent against some wash up.
The heavyweight division sucks right now, because no one can box! They all think knock out! The only big names out there that can box are James Toney who is nearing the end of his career and yes he can compete against these guys cuz he is such a great boxer and counter puncher, but he doesnt have the pop to put his oppenets out. The other guy Wlad K can box and punch, but that chin has left us memories of knockout losses against Sanders, Brewster, Purrity, and almost another one against Sam Peter. These big guys need to learn the sweet science!
Tuesday Oct 17, 2006 01:43:17 PM
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wayne:
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The Superfighter tournament sounds too good to be true. Just have to see if it plays out.
Tuesday Oct 17, 2006 01:53:47 PM
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William A Major:
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why dont they try 15 rd championship fights , 8 champions in 8 divisions,and the real champion of that division fight the top 3 contenders . dosent that sound like a sport that would increase its fanbase and generate excitment ?
Tuesday Oct 17, 2006 02:18:21 PM
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Loren Evans:
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Top contenders shouldn't be fighting in these superfighter tournaments. Fighters don't even win a championship belt for this wack tournament. The middleweight tournament in 2001 that had B Hop, Trinidad and a few other middleweight fighters was a good tournament and a legitimate tournament. What boxing needs is more tournaments like that involving the various champions of a division fighting against each other like if Heavyweight Divison has Valuev and Klitschko and the other heavyweight champions all competing against each other. T
Not this tournament that's a joke and that boxers are going to compete in just for the money. This is a marketing gimmick that is just another way for people to make money.
Tuesday Oct 17, 2006 02:56:10 PM
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chrisL:
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This is an interesting idea. I have mixed feelings about it personally, but it's a cool tournament I think. I would hate to see a bunch of these tournaments popping up in the future, but I think it gives some of these guys a great opportunity to make some great money for going out and being the best on this night since most boxers don't have their finances or their split from promotional companies handled very well.
I will say that anyone who really disagrees with this one time tournament should wake up though however, because though most fighters love the thrill of victory and being a champion, they are also there to line their pockets, so OF COURSE these guys are gonna show up to win. To some people a belt doesn't mean much, and I can think of about 5 million reasons why I'd agree with that for this particular tournament
Tuesday Oct 17, 2006 05:51:28 PM
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gio:
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I dont care what any of you say. im really excited about this and i cant wait to see it. I havent been this excited to watch a heavyweight boxing event since klitshko vs lewis.
Tuesday Oct 17, 2006 08:52:26 PM
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rudy:
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still whats going to happen to the winner of this tourney? nothing, there is still going to be 4 belt holders and no TRUE champion - i like the idea Loren Evans put out there, have a tournament like the middleweight one where B-Hop and Tito ended up fighting in the championship bout, that was a great fight! just like Showtime is doing right now with their ShoBox serious and their super middleweight tournament w/up and coming contenders.
Wednesday Oct 18, 2006 08:54:25 AM
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Lawdog:
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It sounds like an interesting concept, but there is the risk that it could change the face of boxing forever. It will not be about strategy. Most of them can last four rounds, so it will be more of a slugfest like the tough man competitions. When a boxer has to go 10 or 12 rounds, he has to have a strategy.
Wednesday Oct 18, 2006 09:01:00 AM
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Phil:
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More tournaments would be great for boxing.
They should increase the number of rounds per fight in each progressive round of the tournament. Extend the tournament to two nights if you have to. Go from four rounds to eight rounds. Then the next day go to 15 rounds (there's a nice gimmick for you!) Since there're no sanctioning organizations it shouldn't be any trouble.
Instant replays are a good idea but don't do it in the middle of a round. That's the dumbest thing I ever heard of. If a fighter's in trouble he can just foul a guy and call a time-out when he's penalized?
Real time scoring will work well with four round fights.
Thursday Oct 19, 2006 06:16:56 PM
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Is It Only Money That Matters?
"Who refuses to take a drug test worth $40 million?" For the American psyche, money is everything. It transcends what is right or what is wrong. For a certain amount of money, I'll do anything. Manny is Filipino, and he cannot fathom that kind of thinking. Is that what capitalism should be? I can't understand why $40 million should dictate your personality. Simply put, Pacquiao has his own dignity and refuses to be manipulated into taking $40M and giving his (butt) to anyone who wants it." ---TSS reader "Tony" informs readers of a possible cultural difference which causes certain peoples to interpret Pacquiao's refusal to cater to Mayweather's testing demands (photo by Chris Cozzone)
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