Showing posts with label Boxing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boxing. Show all posts

Sunday, October 22, 2023

When The Thrill Of Victory Felt Truly Thrilling

Michael MacCambridge (Wikipedia)

Michael MacCambridge’s “The Big Time” rewinds to the ’70s, when showy personalities and compelling rivalries turned sports into mass entertainment.

BY ALEXANDRA JACOBS

It’s silly, and arbitrary — and increasingly antique — to organize American history by decades. But also oddly satisfying, like sorting a junk drawer.

The 1970s, now in or approaching their paunchy and contemplative 50s, were particularly overstuffed with junk: war, stagflation, pet rocks. Writers, including David Frum and Bruce J. Schulman, have tried to tackle the whole shebang. In his new book, “The Big Time,” Michael MacCambridge sticks prudently, and often illuminatingly, to sports, which he argues became the lucrative juggernaut we know today in that polyester period.

The book is nonetheless a sprawl, covering in overlapping segments tennis, football, baseball, basketball, boxing, golf, hockey and lesser-known competitions showcased in the Olympics. “He could really come out of this hot,” the TV producer Roone Arledge predicted of the decathlete then known as Bruce Jenner at Montreal in 1976. “He’s charismatic. I think he could be another Dorothy Hamill.”

“The Big Time” crackles with such personalities, and induces longing for a time when sporting events were less scripted, scrutinized and corporatized. Men across the board were peacocks, bustling with ego: Joe Namath and his mink coat; John Fuqua and the goldfish you could see swimming inside his translucent heels; Jack Nicklaus and his weight loss; Jimmy Connors and his crotch grabs; Reggie Jackson and his candy bar. (“When you unwrap a Reggie! Bar,” the pitcher Catfish Hunter joked, “it tells you how good it is.”)

The era’s rampant racism and sexism are hardly news, but MacCambridge’s well-cut highlight reels compel nonetheless. Media outlets, including this one, were slow to accept Muhammad Ali’s renunciation of his “slave name,” Cassius Clay. The Atlanta Braves star Hank Aaron got piles of hate mail as he closed in on Babe Ruth’s record of 714 homers. Black athletes struggled to get endorsements — “I haven’t done a dog food commercial,” said the wide receiver Otis Taylor in 1971, “and that’s pretty sorry for a guy who’d be so happy to do one he’d eat the dog food.”

The difference in funding for men’s and women’s teams at the University of Texas at Austin when the staunch Title IX defender Donna Lopiano began there as director of women’s athletics was simply staggering ($2.4 million and $128,000, respectively). Roberta Gibb was told by Boston Marathon organizers that “women are physiologically incapable of running 26.2 miles.”

A lot of these anecdotes make you want to bash your head against the wall, like a character in a Charles Schulz comic strip (“Aaugh!”). How gratifying, and how ’70s, to be reminded that the cartoonist himself championed equality in sports, putting female characters on the baseball field, notably Peppermint Patty, and using Snoopy in the strip to call attention to the despicable prejudice Aaron faced.

Schulz was among the 45 million Americans who in 1973 watched Billie Jean King defeat Bobby Riggs, a onetime Wimbledon champion and “proud troglodyte on gender issues,” in the gaudy but deeply consequential Battle of the Sexes match. (The 2017 movie version failed to capture the excitement of its source material, cast in yesteryear’s snappy copy as the Libber vs. the Lobber. )

This is one of the more famous turning points MacCambridge revisits, building a case for the beginning of sports as mass entertainment and big business. The halftime slam-dunk contest won by Julius Erving in the middle of the decade, though seen by few, is another. The rise of color television, only conclusive in 1972, made costumes of uniforms. The Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders entered their white-spandex hot pants era, the team they buoyed “as identifiable a national ‘brand’ as McDonald’s or Coca-Cola.”

MacCambridge, a seasoned reporter who among other books, some encyclopedic, wrote a history of Sports Illustrated magazine, wants to drive home to readers the former importance of print journalism — how one used to have to wait till the next day’s paper for results. He warmly invokes technological ephemera like portable cassette recorders tinnily playing the national anthem, and the Sports Phone service: “a kind of life line for obsessives,” he writes, along with, of course, gamblers. At times — Bud Collins! Dick Button! Frank Gifford! — the book is like a family reunion of jolly TV uncles.

Though MacCambridge’s prose perhaps inevitably sometimes swims in stats and abbreviations — in a litigious period, the joke was the N.B.A. stood for Nothing but Attorneys — he has a knack for the graceful phrase. Some I scribbled down: “Fourth-drink recklessness.” “Oleaginous recruiters.” “Amiable, beige Midwestern voices.” (To describe anyone but Howard Cosell.) “A corona of hirsute flamboyance.” All summon this time as quickly as Ron Burgundy’s sports jacket.

“The Big Time” is probably not for the obsessive, who will already know much of what MacCambridge describes, but more for the curious generalist who wants to speed-skate down memory lane to the theme music from “Wide World of Sports.” Inevitably there are chips in the ice. Criminally, we get no back story on the “agony of defeat” ski jumper, the Slovenian Vinko Bokotaj. In that case, thank heavens for YouTube.

READ ORIGINAL STORY HERE

Wednesday, December 04, 2019

AP INTERVIEW: Joshua Out To Regain Aura, Belts In Rematch

Anthony Joshua. Image: Pinterest


BY STEVE DOUGLAS

RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA (AP)
--Anthony Joshua didn't just lose three world heavyweight titles and an undefeated record when he was beaten by Andy Ruiz Jr. in one of boxing's biggest upsets in a generation.

He lost his aura, his growing sense of invincibility.

So Joshua has had to reinvent himself, strip everything back and, in a sense, start all over.

That began by going back to his roots in Nigeria.

“Because of boxing, I’ve never had time to go there,” Joshua told The Associated Press of his first return in 17 years to the homeland of his parents and where he briefly went to boarding school at the age of 11. “In Nigeria, the people love you for you, not for what you have.”

At the lowest point of his professional career and with people starting to question him for the first time, Joshua needed time to reflect and to have a dose of reality. He visited Makoko, a slum just off mainland Lagos that is largely a floating community of wooden homes on swampland.

Joshua is adored there, and they mobbed their icon.

“It was good to see hope,” Joshua recalled. “Anyone that can bring hope to you, they appreciate it and they appreciate my journey so far. That’s what I liked. We’re on a journey.”

Joshua's journey took an unexpected detour with that loss to Ruiz Jr. in June. But it may well be the making of him.

The Briton heads into the rematch in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Saturday as something of a changed man. More humble, more accepting of vicissitudes of his sport, and eager to learn from his mistakes.

Joshua accepts there were plenty of them before the first fight in Madison Square Garden. He still won't say exactly what went wrong that night in New York, but he acknowledges he “wasn't prepared” for the challenge of Ruiz Jr. — a portly Mexican with a big heart, fast hands and unexpected power. Ruiz Jr., who stood in as a late replacement after Jarrell Miller failed multiple doping tests, knocked down Joshua four times before the fight was stopped in the seventh round, the defeated champion somewhat dazed and disheveled.

Joshua has ignored some calls to dispense with his long-time trainer, Rob McCracken — the pair go way back, to before Joshua won an Olympic gold medal at the 2012 London Games — but has changed his sparring partners, his routines, and his mentality.

“Last time when I lost, I understood why,” Joshua told the AP in a phone interview after arriving in Riyadh. "I took it like a man, I'd say. I took it like a champion should. Because I understood my mistakes. And I’ve changed them, I’ve rectified them.

“If anything wasn’t to go my way this time, I just have to say the man is better than me. He is a tricky customer but I think I’m a better fighter than him, even though I didn’t get the decision last time. I went straight back in. I didn’t say, ‘Ah, I need a warm-up fight.’ I knew where I went wrong. I know how to improve it, and I’ve done that.”

Time will tell, but there's a sense Joshua is more comfortable in Saudi Arabia than he was in the bright lights of New York five months ago, when he was making his U.S. debut and, maybe, took his eye off the ball.

While retaining that chiseled physique that could not contrast more with Ruiz Jr.'s, Joshua looked slimmer and lighter during his public workouts in Riyadh this week.

And because he is having to prove himself all over again, Joshua said he compares this fight with the first of the 23 in his pro career.

“I have erased the old fight from my memory and I’m approaching it like I’m fighting for the heavyweight championship of the world, which I am. I’m not looking at it as a rematch,” Joshua said.

“Even though I’ve had a belt around my waist, I’ve always had that challenger mindset because even in my 15th fight, I challenged for the British title. The 16th (was for the) world title, defend, defend, challenge again, so it’s part and parcel of the game now. I’m used to the tough challenges.”

Another loss to Ruiz Jr. — in a fight with a reported $70 million purse and being televised by the DAZN streaming service — and there would be serious questions about Joshua, one of Britain's most celebrated sportsmen and someone whose career trajectory was only heading one way until last summer. Fights with the likes of Deontay Wilder and Tyson Fury would be further away then ever.

But he's not thinking that way. He's embracing taking boxing to a new audience, shrugging off the fact that the fight will take place in a kingdom where there are human-rights concerns, and is desperate to regain his IBF, WBA and WBO belts.

“Of course people doubt me,” Joshua said. “But the main thing is I’m still here. I’m not discouraged. That’s all I can say.”

More AP sports: https://apnews.com/apf-sports and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Steve Douglas is at www.twitter.com/sdouglas80

Monday, June 03, 2019

Olympians Efe Ajagba And Ali Eren Demirezen Meet July 20 On FOX

Heavy sensation Efe Ajagba. Image: Premier Boxing Champions




LAS VEGAS (PREMIER BOXING CHAMPIONS) — Rising unbeaten heavyweight sensation and 2016 Nigerian Olympian Efe Ajagba will square off against undefeated 2016 Turkish Olympian Ali Eren Demirezen in FOX PBC Fight Night action and on FOX Deportes Saturday, July 20 from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

The 10-round heavyweight attraction will feature two 2016 Olympians putting their unbeaten records on the line as they look to make a statement in the red-hot division. FOX PBC Fight Night begins at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT and is headlined by undefeated IBF Super Middleweight World Champion Caleb "Sweethands" Plant making the first defense of his title against unbeaten contender Mike Lee.

FOX PBC Fight Night will precede the FOX Sports PBC Pay-Per-View event beginning at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT that also takes place at MGM Grand featuring eight-division champion Manny Pacquiao facing WBA Welterweight World Champion Keith Thurman in the main event.

Tickets for the event, which is presented by TGB Promotions and Sweethands Promotions, are on sale now and can be purchased online through AXS.com, charge by phone at 866-740-7711 or in person at any MGM Resorts International box office. The Ajagba vs. Demirezen match is being promoted in association with Ringstar Sports.

"Saturday, July 20th is the biggest night of boxing I can remember," said Richard Schaefer, Chairman and CEO of Ringstar Sports. "The entire card top to bottom is toe-to-toe action with evenly matched fights featuring the most entertaining fighters in the world displaying their talent. I am sure several of the fights that night will be immediate Fight of the Year candidates. It is only fitting that the most talked about young heavyweight, Efe Ajagba, will be part of this Boxing-Extravaganza. Efe is simply put the definition of must-see TV. His opponent, Ali Demirezen, is undefeated in 11 fights with 10 of them by knockout. It will be two undefeated big punchers putting it all on the line, that is PBC boxing at its best!"

Ughelli, Nigeria's Ajagba (10-0, 9 KOs) gained notoriety last August 24 when his opponent, Curtis Harper, walked out of the ring after touching gloves to start the first round. The 24-year-old won the fight without throwing a punch as Harper was disqualified live on FS1. Ajagba, who lives in Stafford, Texas and trains with Ronnie Shields, has steadily increased his competition in his two fights this year, stopping Amir Mansour on FOX in March in two rounds, before disposing of Michael Wallisch in April in two rounds as well.

"My goal is clear: I want to be heavyweight champion of the world," said Ajagba. "To get there I must continue to take on anyone and for the third time in my career it is another undefeated heavyweight. As they say 'somebody's o must go,' and it won't be mine. There's no better platform for this performance than on the biggest boxing night of the year. The stage is set...don't blink!"

Unbeaten since turning pro after the 2016 Olympics, Demirezen (11-0, 10 KOs) has fought out of Hamburg, Germany in the professional ranks and will make his U.S. debut on July 20. The 29-year-old most recently defended his European heavyweight title against Adnan Redzovic in April, winning by disqualification and matching Ajagba with a perfect knockout rate minus one DQ.

"I'm very happy to make my U.S. debut versus a really good fighter like Efe Ajagba,'' said Demirezen. "I'm very focused on that fight and being in the best shape ever to make a statement. I plan to have a great performance in Las Vegas because I know the U.S. boxing fans like real fighters. I'm sure they will love me after the fight.''

For a complete look at Ajagba vs Demirezen, check out our Fight Night page.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Nigeria's Kayode For WBA Title


The Golden Boy Promotions and Mayweather Promotions announced Wednesday, August 20, 2014, that the vacant WBA Heavyweight World Title will be held in the Main Event Golden Boy Live on Fox Sports 1 and Fox Deportes. Nigeria's Lateef Kayode fighting out of Hollywood, California, will put his name in the history books when he meets Cuba's Luis Ortiz Thursday, September 11, 2014 for the WBA title at The Joint, Hard Rock Cafe $ Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada. Both fighters are unbeaten and Kayode will be Nigeria's second fighter to win the title in that division. The Kayode-Ortiz 12 round bout sponsored by Corona and O'reilly Auto Parts. Kayode is trained by 4-time trainer of the year Freddie Roach.

Tuesday, April 09, 2013

Amateur MMA Fighter [Felix Elochukwu] Dies Following Unregulated Event In Michigan

By Sreven Marrocco
MMA News, April, 9, 2013


Another tragedy has occurred following an amateur MMA event, this time in Michigan.  

Felix Pablo Elochukwu collapsed shortly after competing at an unregulated event on Friday in Port Huron and died Saturday at an area hospital. He was 35.

An autopsy was conducted on Sunday, and results will be available later this month, a rep for the St. Claire County (Mich.) Medical Examiner told MMAjunkie.com (www.mmajunkie.com).

Elochukwu, who was born in Nigeria but lived in Ontario, Canada, was competing in his first bout. He fought at heavyweight and was a decorated grappler on the local circuit, according to a report on Sportsnet.ca.

After fighting an opponent mostly on the mat for two rounds, Elochukwu reportedly was mounted in the third and took several strikes before the referee stopped the bout. He appeared fine immediately afterward, but deteriorated after leaving the cage and fell from a chair. A paramedic on site assisted him, and an ambulance was called.

Neither Elochukwu nor his opponent were required to undergo medical checks prior to the bout, according to Sportsnet.

Amateur MMA is unregulated in Michigan, which means safety measures are left to promotions such as Amateur Fighting Club, which held the event at an American Legion building. But this past year, the Association of Boxing Commissions advised its member commissions not to license fighters from the state and not recognize event results from events held there. It cited overall concerns about the regulation of both professional and amateur sports due to existing laws that left the state powerless to address fundamental healthy and safety issues.

Bills aimed at regulating amateur MMA awaits a vote in Michigan's house of representatives. A previous bill stalled out in this past year's legislative session, according to a report from MLive.com.

"Legislators did not opt to regulate amateur events, so they have no reporting duty or responsibility to this agency, nor does the agency have any oversight or authority over those events," said Barrington Carr, director for the enforcement division of Michigan's Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs, which oversees the state's athletic commission. "There are some current initiatives to try to bring [amateur MMA] into the regulations.

"If legisation [is] passed, we'd certainly be happy to enforce those laws."

The AFC issued a statement the night following the event.

"Last night's event, April 6th, we lost a member of our MMA family and we would like to take this time to honor him," it read. "This is a tragic turn of events. We will keep his family and friends in our prayers and we ask you to do the same. May God be with them in this devastating time of loss. To us, this tragedy will not end today. He will remain in our hearts and on our minds. Further information will be posted at a later time."

In the past 15 months, three MMA fighters have died following amateur bouts, two of which were at unregulated events.

Wednesday, September 05, 2012

Hard-luck Ajose earns headlining role

By Dan Rafael, ESPN


KO artist Lucas Matthysse stands in way of Olusegun Ajose's path to redemption

Olusegun Ajose of Nigeria has been sitting in position for a mandatory title shot for a year, but the WBC has ignored his rights time and time again. It has simply screwed him and left him with little leverage other than a costly lawsuit that nobody wants.

It is boxing politics at its absolute most heinous.

Ajose dropped Ali Chebah twice and won a unanimous decision in an official final eliminator last September, in a fight that made him the mandatory challenger for the WBC's 140-pound title. In other words, he had next.

Ajose-Chebah took place shortly after the WBC wrongfully stripped Timothy Bradley Jr. of the belt but, because it's an organization that always gives Mexican fighters the benefit of the doubt, it approved Erik Morales to face late substitute Pablo Cesar Cano for the vacant title. That was preposterous because the WBC's two top contenders, Ajose and Chebah, were scheduled for a final eliminator shortly thereafter and that is the fight that should have filled a vacancy that was absurd to begin with.

After Morales won the vacant belt, Ajose (30-0, 14 KOs) was again ignored. Instead of following its rules that say a fighter who wins a vacant title is supposed to next make a mandatory defense, the WBC pathetically allowed Morales to defend against Danny Garcia (and Morales wound up losing the title because he did not make weight and then lost a clear decision to Garcia).

Then it was Garcia who was supposed to fight Ajose next. Instead, he was put off again as Garcia's handlers got the WBC to approve a summer unification fight with Amir Khan after Lamont Peterson tested positive for a banned substance and the fight with Khan was canceled.

Garcia knocked out Khan, but instead of Ajose finally getting his opportunity, he was left on ice yet again as the WBC let the mandatory slide and approved a rematch between Garcia and the undeserving Morales (who lost his last fight AND didn't make weight). They meet again on Oct. 20.

So what of the 32-year-old Ajose? His consolation prize is an "opportunity" to fight knockout artist Lucas Matthysse (31-2, 29 KOs) of Argentina for the organization's vacant interim belt at 140 pounds. Ajose accepted it because, well, what other choice does he have? He can still make more money in this fight than any other but the full title fight. In addition, Damian Ramirez, Ajose's manager, told me that the WBC has promised to pay Ajose $75,000 to make up to him for the royal screwing, although he hasn't yet seen the money. And, of course, the WBC also promised him a mandatory title shot a year ago.

After almost a year off while this all played out (and not to Ajose's benefit) he will return to action to face Matthysse for the interim belt on Saturday night (Showtime, 9 ET/PT) at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. The fight was originally the co-feature on the card, but it was elevated when welterweight titlist Randall Bailey, citing a back injury in training, postponed his first defense against Devon Alexander.

"It's common knowledge I've been deprived of this fight for so long," Ajose said. "I've been ready to fight for a championship for four years. Now that I have this opportunity I'm not going to let it go. I better win this fight. I'm going to give everything I have to win this fight."

Ajose, who spent some time living in England and in New York, is an active solider in Nigeria's army and plans to return to duty after the fight.

"I'm coming to America to win a world title," he said. "After the fight, I'm going back to join the army and live and train in the barracks. That's the way it is. I'm a soldier. You don't become a soldier if you're not tough."

And you also don't beat Matthysse if you're not tough. He is one of boxing's best pure punchers, but Ajose said his power is not a concern to him.

"Just because he can punch other boxers doesn't mean he can fight me," Ajose said. "He has never fought me. When he punched Zab [Judah], did he knock him out? No. Did he knock out [Devon] Alexander? No. I'm at their level. Knock me out? That's not going to happen. It's going to be me knocking him out, not the other way around.

"Ali Cheba had an 80 percent knockout ratio and when he hit me it didn't hurt me. I proved my chin. I knocked him down twice but he didn't hurt me. I felt some of his power but nothing I couldn't handle."

Matthysse, 29, lost controversial split decisions to Judah and Alexander in their hometowns and he is coming off a sensational fifth-round knockout of former two-division titleholder Humberto Soto in June.

"I know he's one of the toughest in the division." Ajose said. "He's quite tough. He lost twice, but I think he was robbed both times. I know he comes to fight, but I only saw two of his fights -- against Devon Alexander and Zab Judah. I didn't see his fight against Humberto Soto. There are more fights of me on YouTube than there are of him, so he probably knows more about me. But when we fight, we'll learn a lot about each other.

"My advantage is my skills, my experience in the ring -- not that he's had more fights [in the U.S.] than I have. That doesn't matter. He may have fought more times here, but he's never faced anyone like me."

And should Ajose win, he wants the shot at Garcia he has been denied.

"Danny Garcia, that's who I want to fight, 100 percent," Ajose said. "After I beat [Matthysse], I want Danny. He's been saying he's better than me. OK, come out and fight if you think you're a superstar. Show me you're good, because right now I have a bigger fish to fry, and that's Lucas. Lucas is way better than Danny. Right now I'm thinking about Lucas. After I beat him we'll think about Danny."

Thursday, August 02, 2012

Memorable Images: Muhammad Ali


Boxing promoter Harry Leverne (background left), match maker Mickey Duff (background middle) and trainer Angelo Dundee (background right) listen as world heavyweight champion Mohammad Ali (formerly Cassius Clay) is interviewed by television reporters upon his arrival at London Airport. Ali is in London for a fight against Henry Cooper. England, 1966. Location: London Airport, London, England. Date: May 09, 1966. Image: Hulton Deutsch

Mohammad Ali remains the greatest ever in boxing; when boxing was dying a natural death and he popped up, everybody got paid till today which also signaled the sport's commercial success.

Friday, April 06, 2012

Memorable Images: Boxing: Jack Johnson Vs. James Jeffries


The first colored heavyweight champion in American history was Jack Johnson, who held sway from 1908 to 1915. In 1910, James Jeffries, hog-fat and long past his prime, attempted unsuccessfully to come out of retirement and beat Johnson. In contrast to Joe Louis' universal popularity today, Johnson's reign was resented by white fight fans who yearned for a "white hope" to depose him. Date: July 94, 1910. Location: Reno, Nevada.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

PHOTO OP: DICK TIGER



This boxing legend was born in Amaigbo, a village fomerly in the Orlu Province during the pre and post-independence era. An aggressive counterpuncher, Tiger earned his first WBA Middleweight title fight against Gene Fulmer in October 1962. Tiger would win the fight and the title.

Notes:

WIKIPEDIA ENTRY ON TIGER

ADEYINKA MAKINDE'S ESSAY ON TIGER

AFRICAN AMERICAN REGISTRY ON TIGER

DAMOLA IFATUROTI'S BOOK REVIEW ON TIGER

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