Home Page
Search WBAN
WBAN Patch Program
Latest News-Women
Latest News - Men
Upcoming Events
Fight Results
Fight Photo Gallery
Latest Rankings
Past/Present Ratings
Knockouts!
Boxer's Profiles
Amateur Scene
Boxing Trivia
Boxers Websites
Fanmail
Women Cops who Box
History -Women's Boxing
Exclusive Interviews
Tiger Tales by Fox
Bust a Fighter!  
Mixed Matches
Mismatches
About WBAN
Advertise on WBAN
Other Links
Alexa is Worthless
WBAN FORMS
WBAN Women Registry
New Boxer Form
Upcoming Events Form
Add a Record
Edit a Record
     

Title Boxing carries
a complete line of

boxing equipment

 


 


Boxing Gloves
by Everlast from $29.95

TOP GALLERIES!

Video streaming, over
11, 500 photos, and more! 
   

Matchmaker's Hot List - Exclusive Matchup!
   

Hot Hot HOT Photo Galleries!Flash Photo Slideshows!
   

Boxing Records for women boxers..archived records!
To Join Go Here
 

Worldwide
Contact Listing!
Sign up to be listed on WBAN, HBN, and WBR!
More info!

  Promoter's Form
  Matchmaker Form
  Manager Form
  Trainer's Form
  Boxers Form

Having Problems
 with the website?
Send an Email

Directly to WBAN!





 

 

 

 

 

           
                                                                                                     
                                      
   

 
 


TV or not TV
By Bernie McCoy
April 21, 2003
     
     
     
   
   
   

 

   
   
   
   
   

 

   
   
   
   
   

 

   
   
   
Have you ever heard of the United States Basketball League?  Its a sub-NBA league existing primarily in medium sized markets around the country and populated with  players not ready for the prime time of the National Basketball Association. Have you ever heard of the Champions Tour, formerly the Senior Golf Tour? Its a sub-PGA tour existing on medium sized golf courses around the country populated with players past their golfing prime and no longer competitive on the Professional Golf Association tour. Don't look in your "local listings" for the next USBL basketball game, they aren't on TV. However, the Champions Tour is regularly telecast and has been for the last fifteen years, providing viewers with "compelling" telecasts of fifty and sixty year olds, climbing in and out of golf carts and their "senior moments" on the golf course. Guess which enterprise has a brighter future? Here's today's Marketing "blinding flash of the obvious": in order for a sport to succeed, it must have meaningful, frequent and timely TV exposure.

This past weekend in California, Women's boxing had a couple of significant events on tap. On Friday, in Lemoore, four bouts were scheduled, featuring among other quality fighters, Sumya Anani, Fredia Gibbs, Laura Serrano, and Isra Girgrah. The following night in Fresno, Jenifer Alcorn was stepping into the ring with Mia St John. The ESPN network, as part of their "Friday Night Fights" on ESPN 2, planned to cover the Friday bouts, and HBO was covering the boxing card in Fresno,  featuring a title defense by Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Late in the week, ESPN2 announced that it was moving the "Friday Night Fights" start time from 10PM EST to 12 Midnight, thus taking the bouts out of prime time in at least 70% of the country. This change, according to the network, was necessary in order to broadcast a Stanley Cup playoff game on ESPN2, beginning at 9PM. What the network failed to divulge is that it had the option of switching this game "in progress" to ESPN at around 9:30 PM, following the completion of another hockey game, thus accommodating the original 10PM start time for boxing. This type of "in progress" switch from one ESPN outlet to another is quite common for baseball, basketball, and hockey, but the network chose not to avail themselves of the option and the boxing start time stayed at 12 midnight, competing against a number of "get rich quick with Florida land deals" infomercials which are a programming staple in that time period. When it finally reached the air, the boxing program began with the Serrano/Girgrah bout which went the full eight rounds. This was followed by the Anani/Gibbs bout which was halted, after the first round,  due to a Gibbs' hand injury followed by the Michael Grant/Gilbert Martinez "main event" that ended in a seventh round Grant TKO. Then, with plenty of airtime remaining in the usual two hour boxing segment, the network, inexplicably, opted to discontinue "live" boxing, leaving viewers without the opportunity to view at least one of the two remaining Women's bouts, Nina Ahlin/Vaia Zaganas or Lisa Lewis/Layla McCarter. Thus, ESPN2 compounded an avoidable programming delay of two hours by foregoing the broadcast of additional "live" boxing; not much of a programming reward for viewers who had stuck with the network through the two hour delay.

The following night in Fresno, Home Box Office covered the Floyd Mayweather Jr/Victoriano Sosa title fight, which featured a preliminary bout between Jenifer Alcorn and Mia St John. HBO cable, which has yet to broadcast a Women's boxing  bout, had previously announced that Alcorn/St John would not make "air", prompting one to ponder the programming wisdom of presenting a replay of the previous week's Marco Barrera/Kevin Kelley mismatch in lieu of Alcorn/St John, a bout which had generated substantial interest in the Fresno area. HBO simply chose to continue its programming boycott of Women's boxing, opting for the replay of a four round mismatch.

While it is easy to bemoan the continued lack of TV exposure the sport of Women's boxing receives, others may point out that ESPN2 did, at least, telecast the Laura Serrano/Isra Girgrah bout. Ignoring for the moment the midnight start time, the obvious reply is that such programming beneficence might be properly filed under "No good deed goes unpunished". The Serrano/Girgrah bout was, indeed, a marvelous fight; two of the skilled athletes in the sport, over eight rounds of give and take action. Girgrah is a wonderful fighter, as attested to by her 23-3-2 record coming into the bout. On Friday night, however, she was the second best fighter in the ring. Serrano threw more punches, landed more punches and showed significantly more aggressiveness throughout a terrific eight rounds of boxing. At the end, two of the judges, who were allegedly sitting at ringside and even more allegedly paying attention to the action in the ring, awarded the fight to Girgrah. Not to overdo golf analogies, but Mark Twain once remarked that the game amounted to "a good walk spoiled"; two boxing judges in Lemoore California on Friday night, turned the efforts of two great athletes into "a wonderful bout spoiled".

Thus, what should have been a banner weekend for Women's boxing ended up, from a TV standpoint, somewhat less. HBO continued to thumb its programming nose at the sport (to provide an insight into the thinking of these boxing Luddites, HBO is on record as stating that the first Women's bout on HBO will likely be Christy Martin/Lucia Rijker) while ESPN, who seems to cover the sport on an almost grudging basis, didn't do a great Women's boxing card any favors by almost inexcusable scheduling and a reluctance to "go the extra step" and telecast additional bouts when they clearly had the airtime.  The inescapable truth is that if the sport of Women's boxing doesn't begin to get more respect and better coverage  on TV, it will soon be on the verge of becoming the United States Basketball League.
 
     
     

 

     
     
     
 
     
     

 

     
     
     
 
     
     
   
 
     
     
 
Back to WBAN
     
         
         
         
         


To Sign Up

PHOTO GALLERIES, ONLINE MPEGS, VIDEO STREAMING, UNLIMITED RECORDS, REPORTS, AND MUCH MORE! 
Are you a WBAN Records Exclusive Member?  Members have UNLIMITED ACCESS to the boxing records, over 13,180 photos in 520 galleries (many of the galleries include VIDEO STREAMING and MPEGS), 115 Slideshow Galleries, A-Z Photo Gallery of the Women Boxers, ONLINE MPEGS, IMPROVED system "MASTER SEARCH" to search the records member's site and  WBAN's multimedia information on one page for any boxer.   MATCHMAKERS HOT LIST (100+recommended matchups), EXCLUSIVE MATCHUP, fight reports, and much more!   Go Here to join or sign in! 

[HOME [ADD YOUR SITE] [EMAIL TL FOX]  
[
DO YOU HAVE A TIP?  [WBAN'S MISSION]  [PRIVACY POLICY] 
AUX   
 
   GOOGLE NEWS  [WBAN DISCLAIMER]  
[PROBLEMS WITH WEBSITE OR FORMS? EMAIL TL FOX]   
©WBAN (WOMEN BOXING ARCHIVE NETWORK) MAY 1998