Arum, King reconciliation, hope for
current qualms?
Mark E. Ortega
UndisputedFightMag.com
March 11, 2011
One of boxing's biggest rivalries is
not one that took place between the ropes. It's not one where few, if
any blows were exchanged. But it is one that helped fuel the sport
for much of the last five decades.
Promoters Bob Arum and Don King, long
the sport's most influential promoters worldwide, are winding down
their personal careers and therefore have made amends over their tiff
that crossed more than five decades.
Last night was a piece of it, as both
Arum and King sat side-by-side and answered questions from the media,
reminiscing seemingly about the glory days of the sport where they
were unquestionably the two promotional giants that controlled a
majority of the stars produced in pugilism.
The culmination of all of the recent
publicity will be Saturday night's 154-pound world title defense of
Miguel Cotto against the overmatched Ricardo Mayorga in a Showtime
pay-per-view event expected to be fun but far from competitive. But
what has garnered most of the publicity while Mayorga plays his usual
circus clown act has been the stories of Arum and King, who both turn
eighty this year.
One wonders what jarred these two men
to their senses. 2010 was a year of heavy personal loss for both, as
Arum lost his son John in North Cascades National Park outside of
Seattle, Washington last September and King lost his wife of fifty
years or so Henrietta last December.
As both enter their twilight years, it
seems as though they are ready to let bygones be bygones despite
being involved in the most competitive conflicts the sport has ever
seen.
“When you reach a certain age, you've
got to be an idiot to continue the fights you had when you were much
younger,” explained Arum to a panel of the media Thursday in Las
Vegas.
The conversation was light hearted
though both promoters were able to vocalize quite a debate against
each other on certain instances in the past that may have bothered
them. A particular point of contention was the immediate aftermath of
the December 1999 bout that saw Felix Trinidad earn a controversial
decision over Oscar De La Hoya in a superfight that was supposed to
help rejuvenate the sport but instead sizzled.
“King, of course is in the post-fight
press conference yelling and gloating,” recalled Arum. “'The
lights are out in the Arum building.' I had one of our people pull
the plug [on King's microphone]. And even Don King, with the way he
talks, the crowd was so noisy and full of people, they couldn't hear
a thing he said. Don gets angry, slams down the microphone and went
out and held his own press conference.”
“But you've got to understand, he
violated everything he swore to uphold: Freedom of speech, no
censorship, protection of the First Amendment,” exclaimed King,
noting Arum's license as a lawyer.
“The First Amendment,” interrupted
Arum, “guarantees freedom of speech – except when some promoter
is acting obnoxious.”
There's no question that for awhile it
seemed that Don King controlled boxing, by proxy of controlling the
long booming heavyweight division. He had Muhammad Ali. He had Larry
Holmes. He had Mike Tyson. But as the heavyweight division went, so
went Don King. And when it faded from public perception in America,
so did King's clout in a sport that saw a shift to the lower weight
classes for a majority of the sport's biggest bouts.
King saw things slip away with the
retiring of Lennox Lewis. King tried as best as he could to gain a
stronghold on the belts but was turned away by the Klitschko
brothers. Less than desirable matchups featuring John Ruiz, Chris
Byrd, and Hasim Rahman forced King out of favor with the American
boxing public, and by relation those who had worked so closely with
King at HBO in promoting the bouts.
No promoter was on King's tail closer
than Arum and Top Rank Promotions. Arum had no foothold in the
heavyweight division and instead shifted his focus to the lighter
weight classes, and perhaps more importantly, markets outside the
United States that were begging to be built. Don King had Julio Cesar
Chavez, Bob Arum had almost the rest of Mexico's biggest stars. Arum
helped cultivate a modern appreciation for the little guys south of
the lightweight division and made those fighters the most money they
had ever seen in the history of the sport. His company Top Rank has
built the blueprint on how a young fighter should be developed and
built into a star.
Arum and King have worked on some of
the sport's biggest fights over the years: Ali-Frazier in Manila,
Duran-Leonard in Montreal. Their last co-promotion was the Floyd
Mayweather, Jr.-Zab Judah welterweight “title fight” [used as
loose as possible, Judah still had a belt because the man who
defeated him Carlos Baldomir had forgotten to pay a sanctioning fee
to fight for the IBF version] from 2006.
Though the future of Don King
Promotions looks bleak under the future guidance of Don King son
Carl, Top Rank looks poised to be the best it has ever been. They
have shifted the power towards them in a not-so-long standing tiff
with rival Golden Boy Promotions, headed by former Top Rank fighter
Oscar De La Hoya. Arum won the battle for the services of Manny
Pacquiao, once the focus of a lawsuit between the sport's two current
biggest powers when Golden Boy tried illegally to lure an under
contract Manny away from Arum.
The way that King and Arum reminisced
leaves one wondering, how long will it take to squash the one
argument that keeps the biggest fights in boxing from getting made?
Is it something that we will see happen before Arum retires from the
game and leaves the keys to his son-in-law Todd DuBoef? Or will this
be far down the line when a wilting DuBoef and De La Hoya sit on a
perch in Las Vegas to reminisce about their glorious war in an effort
to promote a not so meaningful fight?
One would hope that the end comes much
sooner than that.
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