Originally posted by Mike Brewer
You're definition of a boxing champion is a subjective one. One which I feel is unrealistic and part of the reason that there are so many mislead youth today.
What is good for any competition are those who excel at its goal. What is good for swimming is the best swimmers. What's good for MMA is the best fighters. What's good for boxing is the best boxers.
You, like so many, wish to use athletes, celebrities and whoever else as role models for the children, which IMO is absurd. Its that same goal of outsourcing that has parents blaming genres of music and television programs for their children's behavior instead of shouldering the blame themselves.
When people attempt to use entertainment as a source of values for their children, they are to blame for whatever negative elements manifest. Since when have entertainers become responsible for setting examples for youth? Since when have strangers become responsible for the examples your children follow?
You sound like the people who protest music videos because of the images they show on television. I protest those people because their children shouldn't be able to watch those programs if they were being properly monitored. Those kinds of people are blame mongers. They expect the programs on television to raise their children.
What you suggest about boxing is no different. Claiming that boxers should be ambassadors to all people sounds silly. You're trying to elevate a sport icon to a political figure of sorts when that isn't his place or platform! What you're doing is trying to romanticize the roles of professional athletes because they were able to fight better, shoot more baskets, run faster or hit more home runs. Why should they be responsible for how your kids turn out, when your kid has parents who are both capable of teaching him wrong from right? Why are athletes held to these standards when actors and musicians are not? Is throwing a punch or dribbling a ball more noble than playing a guitar or singing a song?
Its basically bullshit. Stop worrying about what these athletes are doing. Stop worrying about their lives. As you said earlier, none of them give two shits about you or me or anyone else that isn't dear to them. And vice versa. I only care to watch a competition, not getting caught up in what political party an athlete endorses or what his stance on global warming is.
They're just athletes, but its the kind of worship that certain people heap upon them that cast them into positions that they never belonged in from the beginning.
According to your rationale, men with airtime and elite sport skills have to all wear suits and be eloquent speakers with outspoken opinions on society and ethics. What kind of nonsense is that? If they chose to be that way then its fine, but having to be cast in that mold simply because you excel at sports is stupidity.
Why is Mayweather good for boxing? Its because he is the best boxer. Even if he loses this match against DLH he is still the best boxer. He came from featherweight to jr middleweight to face a man who has been fighting at or around 154 for years. That's why this match is taking place at 154 and not 147 ... to give DLH an advantage. Any astute boxing fan or student knows that.
What's good for boxing is the best boxer. When the best boxers fight each other, that's best for boxing. When talented amateurs turn pro under solid guidance that's good for boxing. When incompetent judges are blacklisted from scoring fights, that's good for boxing. When fighters are willing to go up to fight better competition because their own division is weak, that's good for boxing. When an icon of boxing can draw more attention to the sport, that's good for boxing.
All those other things are extracurricular and have no weight on boxing. Whether you like a man or not doesn't mean he's good or bad for boxing. Those are your opinions. He might be more marketable because of a clean image, but that has no bearing on whether he's good or bad for boxing. Worrying about a clean, cut image has more to do with whether you yourself can identify with a boxer, not whether he is good or bad for boxing.
Some might argue that Mike Tyson was terrible for boxing, but Mike Tyson was thee largest grossing attraction in boxing history. No boxer, clean cut or otherwise, has commanded more attention or bigger numbers than Mike Tyson. What does that tell you? It tells you that people want a spectacle. They want something exciting and entertaining. They want violence and blood. They want the raw, unadulterated rage that Tyson was known for.
Before Tyson, boxing was a dying sport. Interest in the sport was at a low. People weren't buying tickets or tuning in. When Tyson left, their was a huge decline in boxing ratings. To be honest, I know people who say that they've never paid for a PPV unless it was a Tyson bout. People who weren't even boxing fans began throwing boxing parties just to watch Tyson knock someone out. It didn't matter who, just that Tyson was in the fight.
Now by your standards, Tyson was horrible for boxing, yet he did more for the sport and the interest that boxing needs to survive than any other boxer in the last 21 years.
My question to you is that what do you think that boxers being clean cut would accomplish? Do you think that it would sell more tickets? Do you think that it would sell more PPV's? Do you think that it would raise the skill level of the boxers? Do you think that it would make boxing as a sport more popular?
On all counts you'd be wrong. As I pointed out, just a few years before Tyson turned pro, boxing was dying. And it wasn't because of a lack of talent. Larry Holmes was an excellent boxer who was underrated and under-appreciated. But he had as much flare as a wet match. As Don King put it, people would rather pay to watch Ali watching boxing on TV then pay to actually see Larry Holmes fight.
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