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Best Era to Be a Boxing FAN?
Posted on 11/14/24 at 8:28 pm
Posted on 11/14/24 at 8:28 pm
Not talking about which era had the best fighters. I'm talking about the best time to be a fan of boxing as a sport.
For me, it's late 90s until the 2000s. That was the height of televised boxing. Every week you had HBO Boxing After Dark, ESPN Friday Night Fights and SHOBox showcasing up and coming fighters. By the time a PPV rolled around (about once a month), you knew all the fighters up and down the card.
Now, UFC fills that role. They are the ones with all the TV contracts.
I still love boxing, but there's just no place to really watch it without shelling out PPV money. I hope the Paul v Tyson fight is a commercial success for Netflix and they move into a weekly or monthly event schedule with real contenders.
For me, it's late 90s until the 2000s. That was the height of televised boxing. Every week you had HBO Boxing After Dark, ESPN Friday Night Fights and SHOBox showcasing up and coming fighters. By the time a PPV rolled around (about once a month), you knew all the fighters up and down the card.
Now, UFC fills that role. They are the ones with all the TV contracts.
I still love boxing, but there's just no place to really watch it without shelling out PPV money. I hope the Paul v Tyson fight is a commercial success for Netflix and they move into a weekly or monthly event schedule with real contenders.
Posted on 11/14/24 at 8:36 pm to PurpleandGold Motown
Late 90’s and early 2000’s. I was a big Lennox Lewis fan.
This post was edited on 11/14/24 at 8:38 pm
Posted on 11/14/24 at 8:40 pm to PurpleandGold Motown
Early '80s obviously. You had Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler, Larry Holmes, Thomas Hearns, Aaron Pryor, Roberto Duran, Salvador Sanchez, Wilfredo Gomez, Alexis Arguello, and Wilfredo Benitez all at or near the height of their powers. Just a super stacked era with tremendous fighters in nearly every weight class.
Posted on 11/14/24 at 8:48 pm to PurpleandGold Motown
I liked the 70's and 80's. On Saturday afternoons there were often great championship fights. Gil Clancy and Tim Ryan worked a bunch of these fights. Howard Cosell called fights back then also.
The fighters were magnificent back then. We are talking about Duran, Leonard, Hagler, Buchanan, DeJesus, Benitez, Ali, Holmes, Norton, Shavers, Saad Muhammad, Quarry, Foster, Bonavena, Frazier and on and on.
Picture a Saturday afternoon and Ali vs Norton is live on network TV. Or Duran vs Barkley.....Hagler vs Minter or Antuofermo
The fighters were magnificent back then. We are talking about Duran, Leonard, Hagler, Buchanan, DeJesus, Benitez, Ali, Holmes, Norton, Shavers, Saad Muhammad, Quarry, Foster, Bonavena, Frazier and on and on.
Picture a Saturday afternoon and Ali vs Norton is live on network TV. Or Duran vs Barkley.....Hagler vs Minter or Antuofermo
Posted on 11/14/24 at 8:50 pm to Bench McElroy
1976 Olympics through the late 1980s.
The Ali era.
The Ali era.
Posted on 11/14/24 at 8:53 pm to Bench McElroy
quote:
Early '80s obviously. You had Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler, Larry Holmes, Thomas Hearns, Aaron Pryor, Roberto Duran, Salvador Sanchez, Wilfredo Gomez, Alexis Arguello, and Wilfredo Benitez all at or near the height of their powers. Just a super stacked era with tremendous fighters in nearly every weight class.
This. And don't forget Tyson won his first belt in 86. He debuted in 85 at the age of 18.
From wiki:
Tyson made his professional debut as an 18-year-old on March 6, 1985, in Albany, New York. He defeated Hector Mercedes via first-round TKO.[26] He had 15 bouts in his first year as a professional. Fighting frequently, Tyson won 26 of his first 28 fights by KO or TKO; 16 of those came in the first round.[37] The quality of his opponents gradually increased to journeyman fighters and borderline contenders,[37] like James Tillis, David Jaco, Jesse Ferguson, Mitch Green, and Marvis Frazier. His win streak attracted media attention and Tyson was billed as the next great heavyweight champion. D'Amato died in November 1985, relatively early into Tyson's professional career, and some speculate that his death was the catalyst to many of the troubles Tyson was to experience as his life and career progressed.[38]
Posted on 11/14/24 at 8:57 pm to PurpleandGold Motown
70s for heavyweights, 80s for lighter classes.
Duran, Leonard, hearns, hagler, et al
Ali, Foreman, Frazier, Norton, and others
Duran, Leonard, hearns, hagler, et al
Ali, Foreman, Frazier, Norton, and others
Posted on 11/14/24 at 8:58 pm to Bench McElroy
quote:
Early '80s obviously. You had Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler, Larry Holmes, Thomas Hearns, Aaron Pryor, Roberto Duran, Salvador Sanchez, Wilfredo Gomez, Alexis Arguello, and Wilfredo Benitez all at or near the height of their powers. Just a super stacked era with tremendous fighters in nearly every weight class.
This in spades. The OP obviously wasn't alive or too young to appreciate the number of talented fighters that spanned the many weight classes in boxing. The 70's through the 80's saw so many great fights being made and not only that, but they were also available on network TV for the most part
For several years now it's been PPV crap they have for just about any fight of worth------and lots not worth it like some of the Floyd Mayweather fights of the past 3 or so years where he's fighting nobodies.
I've been watching boxing since I was a little kid and Gillette sponsored "Friday Night Fights Live from Madison Square Garden". All brought to the viewer in black and white and watched by me, my day and an uncle who was a Navy Fleet Champion during WWII.
Edited to add this: In the local scene---- N.O.---- we had Tony Licata, a middleweight who was a very good amateur out of St. Mary's Gym in the French Quarter who turned pro at age 17.
He went on to have a very good pro career, fighting from 69 to 80 and amassing an excellent record of 60-7-4 during that time. He fought the Middleweight Champion Carlos Monzon, one of the greatest to lace up the gloves in Madison Square Garden in 1975 but lost by TKO in the 10 round of their scheduled 15 rounder.
I knew Tony and sparred with him before he turned pro at St. Mary's a few times and he was a hell of a nice guy. I just wish he could have pulled it off and won the middleweight title.
He went 51 straight fights without a loss in his career. Damn respectable in my eye.
This post was edited on 11/14/24 at 9:15 pm
Posted on 11/14/24 at 9:05 pm to gumbo2176
I'm 43. I'm hardly young, but yes, I remember boxing in the 80s and the talent pool. That is why I said in the OP that I wasn't talking about the quality of the fighters but the accessibility for the average fan. Maybe there were more fights on TV in the 70s, but I have trouble believing it was the amount we got in the 90s and 00s.
Posted on 11/14/24 at 9:06 pm to PurpleandGold Motown
Shiiiii, back in 70s you could see Ali fight on network tv.
See night of champions on ABC. Was a Monday of four title fights. Holmes, Mustafa Muhammad, sugar Ray, and Mike Weaver John tate
See night of champions on ABC. Was a Monday of four title fights. Holmes, Mustafa Muhammad, sugar Ray, and Mike Weaver John tate
Posted on 11/14/24 at 9:21 pm to Bench McElroy
quote:
Salvador Sanchez
Salvador Sanchez
Arrived and vanished
Only twenty-three with so much speed
Owning the highway
Mexico City bred so many
But none quite like him
Sweet warrior
Pure magic matador
Posted on 11/14/24 at 9:22 pm to prplhze2000
quote:
See night of champions on ABC. Was a Monday of four title fights. Holmes, Mustafa Muhammad, sugar Ray, and Mike Weaver John tate
I remember watching the Tate/Weaver fight and that last round with less than 1 minute to go, Weaver uncorked a textbook left hook that sent Tate to LaLa Land for the count. He dropped like a cut down tree and was out before he hit the canvas.
Hell, he could have been counted out with a sundial he was so knocked out.
Posted on 11/14/24 at 9:54 pm to Bench McElroy
And you could see Hagler, Holmes, Leonard, etc, on network TV.
Posted on 11/14/24 at 10:05 pm to PurpleandGold Motown
Depends on your age, I'm 65, the early 70's through late 80's were some good times. Ali vs Frazier, Ali vs Foreman, Allexis Arguello vs Aaron Pryor, Sugar Ray Leonard, Tommy Hitman Hearnes, Larry Holmes, Danny Little Red Lopez, Ray Boom Boom Mancini, Marvin Haggler, many more I could name but the early 70's through late 80's, maybe through early 90's was probably the best era of boxing in the past 60-70 years.
Posted on 11/14/24 at 10:06 pm to FightinTigersDammit
Boom Boom Mancini
RIP Duk-Koo Kim
RIP Duk-Koo Kim
Posted on 11/14/24 at 10:07 pm to VABuckeye
The fight doctor, Ferdie Pacheco!
Posted on 11/14/24 at 10:08 pm to FightinTigersDammit
quote:
And you could see Hagler, Holmes, Leonard, etc, on network TV.
Correct. The vast majority of big money title fights were on broadcast television back in the 70's and 80's.
Posted on 11/14/24 at 10:20 pm to gumbo2176
quote:
Edited to add this: In the local scene---- N.O.---- we had Tony Licata, a middleweight who was a very good amateur out of St. Mary's Gym in the French Quarter who turned pro at age 17.
The battling barber Jerry Pellegrini… there’s a gym still in Old Arabi
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