Buck Smith : Boxer They can't all be a modern day Buck Smith driving around in his hatchback and camping outside of the arena...and maybe thats a good thing.
It may really come down to quality over quantity. I like a guy who maintains and stays active but not just for the sake of just collecting checks. Then again, who the hell am I. For the lesser guys its a living and they can be expected to ply their trade and pay the rent. You hate to see guys who are career door mats with high activity but you do. I have a bigger problem with elites and guys who have 'arrived' and rest on the bench, all the while still living on past accomplishments. Yes...Mayweather comes first to mind. He is a prime example of a guy who hit a career peak performance with Hatton and then simply took his ball and went home...retiring for two years. I think he blew some key time and missed oppurtunity in a division and sport that almost seemed to pass him by a bit. On the other end a top guy who just fights so so types and ends up with more padding than a Highschool prom. Canelo may be in that design thus far, with a couple of names tossed in to peak interest. Activity is a must but fans need to see a guy tested and face a monster once in a while to keep stay interested. If all you want to do is drive nails, go be a carpenter.
Barring a legitimate ring earned or training injury i think 3 times a year for a champion should be mandatory.
Meh to me it's all just romanticizing the "good old days", which is something that we do in almost every subject. How many times have you heard "dude I only listen to 60s/70s rock because that's when music was PURE, man". Most of these guys like Greb we've never even seen fight. We really don't know a whole lot about him or his opponents.
I still say if you take Roy Jones, same record and accomplishments, but put him back in the 1920s or so and all we had were newspaper clippings and hearsay about him, he would be the absolute undisputed #1 p4p of all time.
You can also see this with SRR. People have this great view of the guy, as opposed to PBF who everyone agrees is an asshole. But SRR was as big an asshole as PBF. He flaunted his money, hired an entourage to keep him company, hired a midget to make him laugh, beat his wife and was a horrible absentee father to his sons. But we all have this rosey view of him like he was a real man's man, a gentleman.
The past is the past to me. With all the new stuff we learned about concussions and the effect of subconcussive blows, I think fighting all the time like they did is just stupid. Even if you're fighting bums, you're still taking punches that are chipping away at your health. We all have a different biological clock, getting smashed in the ring and in training takes a toll and you can only go to the well so many times until the well is dry.
So I think today is way better, because guys are still young and fresh when they hit the main stage.
Does fighting more often make you more seasoned? Definitely, but you're also accruing punishment to your body and mind. So it's a double edged sword IMO.
I say we leave the past in the past, remember back when Greb fought doctors would recommend smoking cigarettes lol.
It does seem that a lot of the top fighters do not fight often. Donaire is the exception but fighters like Floyd could fight more regularly.
Overall in their career they have lower number of fights because TV companies want undefeated fighters to sell them and less fights mean less risk of getting beat at the higher levels.
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
The reason the old time guys fought a lot is because they were getting paid and paid well. Unlike today when even world ranked fighters have day jobs, there were a lot of fighters making good money. That was because there was no tv, no football to speak of, no NBA, etc...so people went to the fights and thus there were a lot of fight cards. That means a lot of work available for fighters.
I can guarantee you that you will never find a young pro starting out that would tell you he'd like to fight less. To a man (and I guess woman, these days) they are all discouraged at not being able to find fights and at getting paid peanuts when they do find work. The number of fights cards is not nearly what it was in the 1950s (with the advent of televised fights), much less the 1930s, and while there are a handful of fighters making huge money, most make nothing.
And a lot of the guys that do fight a lot and do get paid, use their fights to fight victims and pad their records, so they get to big fights 30-0 with 27kos, having fought 40 rounds. They may be "fresh" but they still fight like amateurs, which makes sense for a guy with only 4 fights worth of rounds under his belt.
Jesus dude I've read enough autobiographies of the old timers to know that wasn't the case. Especially during the depression era. Maybe the top guys were getting paid well, but the lower card guys were still struggling worse then they are today.
Times change but basic principles always stay the same, and one of those is no promoter is going to pay a guy out of the kindness of their heart. They pay guys who put butts in the seats.
So if a championship boxers gets into a car accident and can't fight that year, he should be subjected to some sort of penalty?
This "mandatory" stuff is crazy. It's supposed to be a free country. Boxers are independant contractors. If a carpenter doesn't want to take a job, he doesn't have to. He can take 100 jobs or 0 jobs in a year. Free country.
They may have been making $500 a night, but that was pretty good money then. Jimmy McClarnin made over $100,000 in one year as a teenager. At that time there were over 5000 fighters in New York City alone, making a living as pro fighters because they had something like 35 cards per week.
At least the bottom rung guys had the opportunity to fight on a bunch of different cards; that opportunity does not exist today, and if you can get $100 per round today you are lucky.
Thats cool. Be a bit of a drag if we agreed all the time. Fighters today are a bunch of coddled nannies compared to almost any era of the past, To many belts, to much politics, Arum hates Oscar, Floyd and Oscar hate Arum. Reduced to in house fighting and even then they only fight once or twice a year.
Sure $500 was a lot of money back in the day, but who was getting that on a consistent basis? Sure, there were guys raking it in, but hell look at James Braddock, he had to work on the docks to supplement his income because boxing wasn't doing it before he got his big break against Baer.
And even the guys who were getting paid well, back then it was all mob controlled so you had a bunch of people taking a piece out of your earnings. I don't think money was the issue. I don't believe for a second they fought so many times because they wanted to.
Well people with different opinions makes it interesting, it would be pretty boring if everyone agreed.
But I don't buy the sentiment that these guys are sissies. We still have a ton of guys who are willing to go in there and die in the ring if they have to. Sure we have our coddles babies, but go back in any era and you could find your whiners and quitters I say.
I say if you go back in a time machine, grab SRR from the 40s and show him boxing today, he'd say "You mean I don't have to fight 5 times a month?? I can make in one fight what I made fighting 10 times?? This is great!"
I don't think they fight enough and I would probably do the same thing. They don't because they don't need to.
Would you give up time with your family, relatives, friends, charitable organizations and I don't know what all just to make a bunch of vampire like dudes, huddled around TVs, drinking and smoking happy?
I agree, M. But TV may be miscalculating what "undefeated fighters" do for general interest. There's a fine line between holding back an undefeated fighter to reduce the risk of his getting beat, and having enough fights to keep public interest going. Whether or not the decrease in today's typical fighter's activity is warranted or not, the bottom line is it doesn't help general interest in the sport. Even an undefeated fighter that fights once a year or even less, is not going to hang on to a lot of fans, just because of the inactivity. There's too much sport competition out there to grab the fans' interest. Even MMA, which personally I haven't the slightest interest in, will continue to erode fan interest in boxing. I mean, what good is an undefeated record if you're only going to put it on the line every 18 months or so?
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