I hope more boxers stand up and say they don't want to pay the fees to fight for these BS belts. We need just one belt per division in boxing. As a start they should get rid of the multiple belts in the same division from the same organization.
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I hope more boxers stand up and say they don't want to pay the fees to fight for these BS belts. We need just one belt per division in boxing. As a start they should get rid of the multiple belts in the same division from the same organization.
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Hidden Content Bring me the best and I will knock them out-Alexis Arguello
I'm not God, but I am something similar-Robert Duran
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I stopped looking at the alphabet ratings 10 or so years ago
The Ring ratings are the only ones I go by now
Don't bully fat kids - they've got enough on their plate
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To be fair to the IBO, they have a pretty solid way of ranking fighters.
The problem with all these straps is that they really have no way of defining themselves past the colour of their belts. I mean as we all know things weren't always so bad, it takes fighters and promoters alike to give fuel to this descending maddening of the boxing world. I mean really, it takes nothing to attempt to establish a new sanctioning body yet it takes fighters and promoters to give it credence.
Here's an idea? I'm not fully versed in the business of boxing but from my perspective, it's almost tragic irony that (for example) the IBF is only regarded as a mere promotional tool because if you look at say UFC (essentially a promotion AND a sanctioning body), which only forms and tiny, tiny part of the wider MMA market yet has managed to stand out through GREAT marketing and direction, you can see how the IBF (for example) could stand out past the colour of it's flashy-flash Red belt.
I'm not entirely comfortable with going by what a magazine says, I mean I have full respect for the magazine but it is just as corruptible as any sanctioning body. Their P4P rankings already have my disapproval, a mere popularity contest IMO.
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The IBO? Really? They don't rank any of the "champions" in their rankings at all. Their 160 champ is some guy named Khurtzide from the Ukraine who has beaten, well, absolutely nobody I've ever heard of. I get the attraction of a computerized rankings (what boxrec does as well) but unless I can see the formula? I have no way of judging whether it makes any sense. I haven't seen the IBO formula (if you know where to find it I'd love to see it) and the boxrec one has some really arbitrary elements to it.
I fundamentally disgaree with the bold for several reasons
1) Ring Magazine only recognizes six champions at the moment. Wlad, BHOP, Sergio, JMM, Wonjonkam and Segura. Exclusivity is a plus in my view!
2) Ring has ZERO financial interests in who is a champion or that there are champions at at all. They don't make money by sanctioning fights. So they have no built in incentive to create BS champs.
3) While it is owned by Oscar, thus far there is ZERO reason to believe Golden Boy's financial interests have imposed a view on Ring's editorial content. It is something to keep an eye on. But they also have an awfully good advisory group.
4) How exactly are Ring's p4p rankings "a popularity contest?" Those decisions are made by the Ring editors same as other rankings. And p4p doesn't carry any real weight in any case nor do they infringe on Ring's divisional rankings.
Last edited by marbleheadmaui; 07-06-2011 at 10:37 AM.
Hidden Content Bring me the best and I will knock them out-Alexis Arguello
I'm not God, but I am something similar-Robert Duran
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I never knew that! Actually, that is a great idea which makes a LOT of sense.
Again, I'm merely saying that I am uncomfortable with the idea of using a magazine which is just as corruptible (not corrupt) as any other body. I have no problem with the Magazine at this present moment but If the ring magazine comes to represent the overall ruling opinion of boxing then that is a huge worry for me simply because the Ring Magazine is still at a safe distance from boxing and so there really is no way of knowing if their could or would be any financial/ promotional interests.
Simply because they are far to subjective with no definitive criteria to be even remotely credible. The fact that a semi-shot fighter like Marquez is still ranked no.4 yet Robert Guerrero isn't even in the top 10 kinda speaks for it's self.
I think that P4P 'carries weight' were promoting a fighter is concerned. Fighters seem to REALLY give a shit where they are ranked. And as far as I can see, it just seems to be a fancy collection of champions. Nothing to do with celebrating skill that transcends weightclass.
If the Ring becomes boxing's overall ruling opinion, then this becomes a concern for me.
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Original & Best: The Sugar Man
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Hidden Content Bring me the best and I will knock them out-Alexis Arguello
I'm not God, but I am something similar-Robert Duran
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Although not bombproof - some of the Ring's current ratings are out of kilter because they IGNORED their own boxing history - just compare those alphabet middleweight rankings with The Rings' current top 10?
Sergio Martinez
Felix Sturm
Daniel Geale
Paul Williams
Matthew Macklin
Sebastian Sylvester
Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.
Sebastian Zbik
Dmitry Pirog
Hassan N'Dam N'Jikam
Marco Antonio Rubio
This list is far more realistic than any above.
3-Time SADDO PREDICTION COMP CHAMPION.
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I'm not sure anyone apart from us boxing nerds take the Ring title seriously. Certainly not British broadcasters "educating" millions of casuals.
Get this - when Nathan Cleverly defended the WBO light-heavyweight title, which he didn't even win in the ring, against Aleksy Kuziemski (yes.. who?), Ian Darke proudly hailed him as Wales FIRST ever light-heavyweight world champion.
Yet Joe Calzaghe, who beat Hopkins for The Ring lightheavy title, was sitting in the studio. And had already mentioned that night how proud he was to become a TWO weight world champion.
So for Darke/Sky the Ring title certainly didn't mean a thing. Even though Calzaghe had beaten a man that was universally recognised as no.1 at the time. Madness.
3-Time SADDO PREDICTION COMP CHAMPION.
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