
Originally Posted by
greynotsoold
I don't think most of them know what is happening. Take Jeff Ryan...a 'boxing' writer for years. He started out writing about big-time wrestling and got into boxing. Thirty years on, he doesn't know shit about boxing. this is true of Farhood, nigel collins, just about all of them. These know-nothing dingbats are the reason that boxing has degenerated into a tough man contest. I remember, years ago, the editors of KO and Ring editorializing that the only thing that would save boxing was more toe-to-toe brawls and the end of hit and don't get hit 'slicksters.'
What is sad is that a guy LIKE a Teddy Atlas who has all the credentials and all the experience and all the credibility to reach the novice fan, the MMA fan who wants to learn more about The Sweet Science, the channel surfer, and he does very well explaining his strategies for the fights but during the fights he's very quick to dismiss it as boring. He can throw in a quick line or two about adjustments that could be made but typically the boxing pundits talk about the action rather than the strategy and the opposite is true for MMA where I've
NEVER heard Joe Rogan shit all over a fight (probably because Dana White would fire him, but still).
But what do you expect? You want a clear voiced, sharp thinking, commentator who grasps the concepts of boxing....those guys simply don't exist. Manny Steward has passed away, George Foreman no longer calls fights, Freddy Roach is struggling with Pugilistic Parkinson's, Teddy Atlas doesn't have the patience and focuses too much on the skill level (not all fighters are GREAT), Kellerman was always too caught up in the past, Larry Merchant is a bloviating windbag.
I dislike Joe Rogan, but the guy has taken the time to LEARN martial arts, and you can tell he loves it, he craves knowledge but also wants to share it. So as a commentator HE is somebody I think does a great job. He'll offer up his opinion, he's respectful to the actual fighters and trainers, and he understands the strategy at play which he then takes time to explain to his audience.
A lot of boxing guys get too attached to "their style" Teddy Atlas can KIND OF give different viewpoints other than his Pressure Fighting background, but in boxing your style too often becomes your gospel....guys get emotionally attached about that shit but the thing is fighters have different styles and if you don't understand them or think they should fight in a different manner you're not going to give your audience a clear picture of what can/will happen
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