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Boxing and Television
By Tom Donelson
August 8, 2006 - Ringsports.com Jack Hirsch challenged a little bit of
conventional wisdom, namely that golden age of boxing was in the distant past.
How often do we hear, "the golden era of boxing on television was in the 50's,
60's or even the 70's and early 80's." Mr. Hirsch believes that we are living in
the golden age of boxing and television.
In the printed version of Ringsports.com, Hirsch wrote, "Today, I can view any
big fight I want. In the good old days I could view hardly any. To get a
detailed account of the action, I had to wait about a month until Ring Magazine
and Boxing Illustrated came out. By that time, the news was old news." While
many remembered, "boxing being on free network television", the reality was the
network television restricted the number of bouts actually shown. Even many of
Ali's fight were not shown live or not available to the general public.
Ali-Frazier I was a PPV event but there was no HBO to broadcast it either live
or on a repeat basis. There was no television and if you did not see the event
through PPV at a specific location outside of the home, you did not see it. The
only way you could get any information on the fight, you had to find a radio
station that would bring a delayed description from the local AP reporter at
ringside.
Hirsch added, "If you wanted to catch a major heavyweight title fight, then you
had to listen to it on the radio. That is what I had to do the Ali's unification
match with Ernie Terrell. Fights like that were rarely held on weekends.
Weekdays went the rule. It was a take or leave it proposition."
About television today, Hirsch observed, "Today fans are in control. They can
pick and choose from a large menu. Get a load of this: there are the 48 dates
that ESPN secured for 2006. Then there are the constant stream of fights
exhibited by cable giants HBO and Showtime." But that is not all. Outdoor Living
Network has added a live boxing package and Fox Sports network along with
Comstat have added delayed tape broadcasts, which allows boxing fans to follow
many fighters. More fights are being broadcast today.
There is much gnashing of teeth about the lack of free television but as I have
mentioned in the past, television has changed. There is no real free television
since even network televisions are part of cable and satellite packages. Network
television is part of a larger market and the final results are that sports fans
have more choices.
The emergence of the Mixed Martial arts or the X-games is possible only because
of the abundance of cable channels. If we lived in the good old days, sports
such as the mixed martial arts would have no chance to develop an audience
except in the underground away from the view of the television lens.
Even Pay for View is part of the new television democracy as big events can be
easily broadcast into the privacy of one's home. This was not the case in the
early days of PPV, when you had to find a local outlet that was broadcasting.
And the PPV cost only represents what the market is willing to tolerate. Fans
control the remote control.
Most boxing pundits are simply living in a glorious past that never existed.
Jack Hirsch is right, there was no golden age of televised boxing. Not only that
but the technical quality is superior today when compared to the old days. While
many have complained about present boxing commenter, they are equally superior
to those of the past.
Recently, I listened to the original broadcast of Muhammad Ali and Oscar
Bonavena. The broadcast team consisted of Howard Cosell and Yancy Durham, Joe
Frazier trainer. Let put it this way, Durham was not Emmanuel Stewart and Cosell
proved himself inferior to Jim Lampley or Steve Albert today when it came to
describing the blow-by-blow action. I will take Lampley, Albert, Larry Merchant
or Al Bernstein over Howard Cosell anytime and the only blow-by-blow by who
would compared to the present generation was Don Dumphrey.
Hell, many fights featured celebrities who knew nothing of the sport as part of
the team. Frazier-Ali I had Burt Lancaster and the Rumble in the Jungle featured
football star Jim Brown, who added nothing to the broadcast. Professionalism was
not part of many broadcast and many of the second men in the booth were not
present because of what boxing knowledge they had.
Boxing broadcast are actually better than what was done in the past both in
technical skills and in the broadcast. As Jack Hirsch writes, we are living in
boxing golden age of boxing television.