Los Angeles Times

Bad signs for boxing are there

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The decision makers elected to show Masvidal’s victory.

Over the three rounds that were required for Masvidal to stop Diaz on cuts, Alvarez waited on a black couch in his locker room. Alvarez might be the so-called A-side on every one of his fights, but his sport was relegated to the B-side on Saturday night.

The bizarre scene unfolded on what is the Day of the Dead in Mexico, which was entirely appropriat­e. Alvarez’s 11th-round technical knockout of Kovalev might as well have been boxing’s memorial service. Regardless of whether DAZN understood the implicatio­ns of delaying Alvarez’s ring entrance, its decision was an acknowledg­ment of what others already have known: Mixed martial arts is the new king of combat sports.

Alvarez isn’t just any fighter. He’s boxing’s top attraction. He delivered an electrifyi­ng performanc­e against Kovalev to win a version of the light-heavyweigh­t championsh­ip, landing a thunderous right hand on the Russian’s jaw to send him crumbling into the ropes and ending a fight that appeared to be close entering the 11th round. Alvarez was nonetheles­s subjected to an indignity which the likes of Muhammad Ali, Ray Leonard, Oscar De La Hoya and Floyd Mayweather never experience­d.

The sport’s diminished stature was obvious in the buildup of this contest. The typically festive weigh-in the day before was especially striking. The crowd was small and lacking in enthusiasm. On the night of the fight, blocks of 12 seats still could be purchased at four of the six ticket-price categories, including the three least expensive. Even when Alvarez fought, there were patches of empty seats in parts of the arena.

The developmen­ts were alarming to people working in the sport who were unaffiliat­ed with the promotion.

Stephen Espinoza, the president of Showtime Sports who was in town to spread the word about a future show his network will televise, acknowledg­ed he was worried.

Espinoza called this a “year of adjustment” for boxing, as a significan­t percentage of broadcasts moved to online streaming platforms such as DAZN and ESPN+. Showtime’s longtime premium cable competitor, HBO, is no longer in the boxing business.

Though many in the sport are encouraged by the influx of new capital, it was a source of concern for Espinoza.

“There have been others in this market that have been very open that they’re getting into sports streaming and using boxing as a stepping stone,” Espinoza said. “So that doesn’t speak well to their treatment of the sport and their longterm commitment to the sport. What’s going to happen here? You’re going to leave behind a trail of expectatio­ns and everyone else cleans up the mess when these people are gone.”

Espinoza had a vested interest in making that argument, but that didn’t make his points any less legitimate. He also made an astute observatio­n about the oversatura­tion of the market.

“There’s too much boxing on TV, too much boxing available,” he said. “When you are doing the number of fights that are being done across the market, it’s hard to enforce a standard of quality. There’s a tremendous amount of noise in the marketplac­e. Unless you’re the hardest of hardcore fans, it’s hard to figure out which are the big fights, which are the medium fights, which are prospect fights.”

Espinoza added, “It’s as if we’re televising every minor league baseball game on a national basis.”

And the sport might have cried wolf — or cried big fight — one too many times.

“There’s no sport that exists that lies to its fans as much as boxing,” Espinoza said. “The announcers lie, the promoters lie and it’s not healthy. College football doesn’t sell every single game as Alabama-LSU. Not every NFL game is the Super Bowl. Sometimes, it’s just a game. I think we do a disservice when we try to sell something as one thing and it’s not.”

Boxing has problems. Of course it does. It always did and always will. What was new was the magnitude of these problems, with the dysfunctio­n now at a scale at which it affects even the sport’s most popular fighter.

What boxing received this week was more than a warning. That was a death certificat­e.

 ?? John Locher Associated Press ?? CANELO ALVAREZ reacts after knocking out Sergey Kovalev in the 11th round to win the Russian champion’s light-heavyweigh­t belt. Alvarez moved up two divisions to win a title at a fourth weight class.
John Locher Associated Press CANELO ALVAREZ reacts after knocking out Sergey Kovalev in the 11th round to win the Russian champion’s light-heavyweigh­t belt. Alvarez moved up two divisions to win a title at a fourth weight class.

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