Essential The Official Boxing Random Thoughts Thread...All boxing heads ENTER.

LauderdaleBoss

#TunnelGang #RingGangRadio
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Lauderdale
Mosley/Margarito

Shane not only beat his ass but got him the fuk up out of there on top of it lol

Exactly, a one sided beat down that ends in a stoppage will always be >>>> a 12 round ass kicking.

Lacy corner should have stopped his fight tho, but Joe throwing everything but the kitchen sink should have done the job organically.
 

FreedMind

DOPAMINE FOR MY BABY!!
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hella international
I love to see you get your hopes up though, just to see them come crashing back down once Broner refuses to let his hands go again. :lolbron:

Sorry breh, Broner doesn't lose to C level fighters.:mjlit:

#StillAdjustingToFame ️️ :mjlit:

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Bigblackted4

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I like the sound of this, if you follow Kurt Emhoff and his podcast he has good ideas about boxing. Can't copy the title but its via The Athletic

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The boxing industry is essentially splintered into three de facto leagues, each with its own TV rights deal — or in the case of PBC, two of them — and stable of fighters.

PBC boasts the largest, deepest roster with fights on FOX and Showtime; DAZN features boxers aligned with Matchroom Sport and Golden Boy; and then there’s Top Rank, the old guard that is in the midst of a seven-year deal with ESPN.

Now, sources tell The Athletic, a new entity is jumping into the fray after completing a rights deal with NBC Sports, only there won’t be any promoter at all, save for a local one in place simply to stage the fights.

Ring City, a sports media platform startup, kicks off its promoter-agnostic boxing series on Nov. 19, the first of three Thursday night events on NBC Sports Network this year, sources said. Two more follow on Dec. 3 and Dec. 17 before the company embarks on a full slate in 2021.

The mission statement is simple: Create action-packed fights where each boxer has a realistic path to victory. There will be two-to-three bouts on each two-hour telecast, per sources, which will be contested at historic gyms around the U.S. The trio of upcoming events will be staged at a famed gym in Southern California.

If Ring City is successful, the series will harken back to the days of “USA Tuesday Night Fights,” a 90s program that delivered fan-friendly bouts, many of them spotlighting top prospects.

Ostensibly, Ring City won’t be competing with the three aforementioned leagues. Instead, the series could serve as a feeder system, much the way the XFL acted as a pipeline for the NFL.

The bouts aren’t completed yet, but the group, composed of former HBO Sports executive Evan Rutkowski, lawyer Kurt Emhoff and former “Contender” consultant Sam Katkovski on the boxing side, has already extended offers to promoters. (The co-founders are marketing executive Frank Samuel and production executive Jeff Huggins.)

Ring City’s budget for shows will exceed that of “ShoBox,” Showtime’s prospect-oriented series, per sources.

But unlike that program, which over the last couple of years has often televised vaunted prospects in complete mismatches, Ring City officials have vowed to pass on any such matchups. Even if it means missing out on a rising star like Jaron Ennis, who’s boxed on “ShoBox” countless times in one-sided fights.

Perhaps equally as important, boxing once again returns to NBC Sports, a network with a long history in the fight game.

Al Haymon’s PBC debuted in 2015 with a fight between Keith Thurman and Robert Guerrero on the free-to-air network. PBC also had bouts on sister network NBC Sports Network, which is available in over 80 million homes.


Keith Thurman and Robert Guerrero fought in the debut of PBC on March 7, 2015 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Harry How/Getty Images)
Previously, Main Events enjoyed a run on the pair of networks, highlighted by the ascent of Sergey Kovalev and the stateside debut of current heavyweight champion Tyson Fury, who knocked out Steve Cunningham on NBC in 2013.

Main Events CEO Kathy Duva was close to reviving a rights deal with NBC in 2018 before the agreement fell apart when the Atlanta city site agreement that would have injected money collapsed.

Now, Duva figures to be one of the promoters supplying fighters to Ring City, along with others who don’t currently enjoy TV deals like Lou DiBella, Dmitry Salita and Tom Loeffler. These promoters have been forced to rely on the three de facto leagues for precious B-side slots for fighter development. Ring City will provide them a much-needed outlet and could also ostensibly showcase boxers from major promotions, though it could prove difficult to secure them.

In order for Ring City to succeed, competitive matchmaking will need to be first and foremost. The organization, at least, won’t be clouded by other interests like protecting its own fighters. It will also eschew multi-fight deals in favor of one-offs designed to ensure there are as many 50-50 bouts as possible.

Storytelling will also be key. Longtime television executive Eric Weinberger, formerly of NFL Network and The Ringer, will play a large role on that front, per sources. The series will aim to whip around the industry, covering the sport at large in the same vein as ESPN’s defunct “Friday Night Fights” series with news and insight.

Shoulder programming is expected on digital platforms, too.

All those ingredients will be paramount to the startup’s success as it aims to create a successful brand in a boxing industry that is being disrupted by COVID. But one aspect must rule them all for fans to truly care about boxing’s return to NBC Sports: competitive matchmaking featuring real talent.

PBC and Main Events were able to deliver that in spurts. Sustaining longevity in that department is a far greater challenger, especially in today’s boxing world that’s more splintered than ever before.
Thank you now if we can get Dibella shyt off UFC channel we will be cooking
 
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