Dissecting the Super Six: Part 1
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
July 1, 2011
With the Super Six World Boxing
Classic headed down the final straightaway, Leave it in the Ring lead
writer Mark Ortega makes a comprehensive appraisal of the
groundbreaking tournament’s unfolding and considers what the future
holds following its culmination. Included are insightful takes
courtesy of Ken Hershman, vice president of Showtime Sports (the
network responsible for producing the round robin), and
Goossen-Tutor’s own Dan Goossen, who promotes Super Six finalist
Andre Ward.
In part one, Ortega explores the
provenance of the Super Six and all the elements necessary for the
execution of such a historic event.
Just shy of two years ago, an
announcement was made that would rock the foundations of not only the
168-pound weight class, but of the boxing world. Showtime, the long
time runner-up in terms of premium televised boxing coverage in the
United States, had announced a six man, abbreviated round robin
tournament that would make great strides in determining a true
champion for a weight division that had been lacking in prestige.
Of the super middleweight division’s
twenty-seven years in existence, only one Ring Magazine world
champion had ever been crowned. In March 2006, Joe Calzaghe lifted
the title with his one-sided drubbing of then undefeated Jeff Lacy,
then left the belt up for grabs following his retirement in 2008.
If one of Showtime's major goals was to
crown an undisputed king at 168, the roster of original tournament
entrants revealed the pains taken to ensure this. Featured were
former undisputed middleweight champion Jermain Taylor, eager to
relive his glory days; WBC titlist Carl Froch, an emerging talent
from across the pond with a crowd pleasing style; WBA beltholder
Mikkel Kessler, a hands-on favorite who had posed a formidable
challenge for Calzaghe in the former’s lone loss; weight jumping,
hard hitting, middleweight titlist Arthur Abraham, who boasted an
unblemished record; and last but not least, the fighters Andre (Ward
and Dirrell)— two young, former American Olympic teammates who had
yet to be tested by the best.
Jermain Taylor—though he bowed out
early— can be credited with lending the tournament relevance to
casual fans that had been force fed heavy, televised doses of the
fighter from early on in his career to the peak of his success. The
2000 Olympian carried a chip on his shoulder having endured a string
of more recent losses to names that couldn’t quite be classified as
walkovers. Twice, Taylor lost to Kelly Pavlik (once brutally),
riveting bouts in which victory just barely eluded him and perhaps
shouldn’t have. He was mere seconds away from picking up a belt
when he tangled with Froch in the Englishman’s American debut;
despite Taylor’s point lead, Froch showed him the lights late in
round twelve. In the eyes of HBO, Taylor was washed up. But to
Showtime, Taylor was a name fighter to build around (or rather, use
to prop up other fighters) when this Super Six idea began getting
legs.
That HBO had little to no interest in
the fighters sought by Showtime was important. And Taylor had
quickly fallen out of favor with the network after being built up by
them for so many years.
Mikkel Kessler saw his stock dip with
the cable giant following the loss to Calzaghe, despite the fight
earning a good rating. Prior to this meeting, Kessler’s bout
against Librado Andrade was meant to be a showcase, a springboard
priming him as a viable opponent for the reigning titleholder, whom
HBO was heavily championing.
Arthur Abraham was a long-reigning
middleweight kingpin who apparently lacked the color or star power to
be used by HBO in any capacity other than as a feeder for marquee
names such as Kelly Pavlik, but negotiations for the pair’s meeting
were never made. Furthermore, the perceived deficiency in mass
appeal proved false as Abraham’s star rose a couple notches
following his appearance in Showtime's Fight Camp 360, a documentary
series following the tourney. More on that later.
Froch, Ward, and Dirrell, on the other
hand, had enjoyed more fruitful dealings with Showtime in recent
years. Early on in their respective careers, both Ward and Dirrell
fought showcase bouts aired on HBO, but neither was memorable— at
least by the network’s standards. In Dirrell’s case, his fight
against Curtis Stevens culminated in victory, albeit a lackluster
one, and in the eyes of network bigwigs, pulling out the win doesn’t
so much matter as long as you look good doing it. And if you can’t
win, at least look lively. This may explain why ample opportunities
are afforded guys like Edison Miranda and Ricardo Mayorga while
Dirrell and Ward don’t get their fair due. Ward, for his part,
appeared on a forgetful card headed by the atrocious Acelino
Freitas-Zahir Raheem against an opponent from Minnesota with a padded
record.
Necessary, too, that the Super Six
featured no fighter that was represented by one of the two major
promoters in the United States. That Golden Boy Promotions or Top
Rank would delve into such uncharted waters was highly improbable.
Sitting one tier below the power pair were the American promoters
that eventually got in bed with Showtime. Goossen-Tutor Promotions
[Ward], Lou DiBella [Taylor], and Gary Shaw [Dirrell] all had
achieved success at the elite level but weren’t quite in a place
where they could dictate to the networks which fights should be
aired—and not the other way around. Except in the case of Shaw and
ShoBox (ShawBox), of course.
The international promoters all
expressed heavy interest in permeating the American market,
especially with Mikkel Kessler and Carl Froch having achieved a fair
measure of success and/or notoriety on the other side of the pond.
Notably, Universum of Germany, who counts both Kessler and Abraham
among their stable of fighters, enjoyed the benefit of having two
horses running this race—two horses that were widely considered the
favorites.
To Showtime Sports vice president, Ken
Hershman, a perfect storm was brewing.
“The beauty as it is originally
conceived, we had Jermain Taylor, Mikkel Kessler, Arthur Abraham,
young Olympic medalists in Andre Dirrell and Ward and you had Carl
Froch who was a big star in Britain but not over here,” explained
Hershman in a phone interview earlier in the month. “It was the
right collection of characters and people, promoters and the right
time to do that.”
As the tournament concludes later this
year, Super Six pundits and critics alike will at once assess its
impact on the integrity of the sport.
Was [the Super Six] good for the
network? Was it good for the promoters? The fighters? And most
importantly, was it good for the fans?
According to Hershman, the answer to
all of those questions is a resounding yes.
“All [participating fighters] got
three guaranteed paydays, had a chance to advance to get four and
five paydays and become one of the top pound-for-pound fighters in
the world,” offered Hershman when asked how this benefited the
fighters.
“If you look at the way this has
played out for the participants it has been a lot of reward and a
fair amount of risk but a pretty good way to keep a steady attention,
steady revenues, steady predictable fights in their career in a two
year period. I think it's very attractive to them, very attractive to
the promoters. It's a steady diet of their fighters getting paydays
and getting on television and building their brands. And the exposure
the promoters have gotten on the Fight Camp shows is good for their
business, good to recruit other fighters to their platform.”
Dan Goossen of Goossen-Tutor
Promotions, Ward's promoter of record, is in agreement.
“First and foremost, the concept is a
terrific one for the sport. So despite some of the other comments I
may have as it relates to tightening up the commitment and all the
other facets that come along with it, I believe it's a great vehicle
for the future.”
The tournament has definitely seen its
fair share of peaks and troughs. As Woody Allen once said, “If
you're not failing every now and then, it's a sign you're not doing
anything very innovative.”
And innovation is exactly what Showtime
needed to battle with the big dogs over at HBO. For years, they have
been putting on the much more competitive fights, yet have suffered
the stigma of the competitor’s ugly stepsister; in other words,
second best. Is it any coincidence that after this tournament gained
steam, Showtime managed to secure the rights to a Manny Pacquiao
fight [against Shane Mosley, May 2011]? Had the ground floor not
been laid by the Super Six, who’s to say that this would have been
feasible?
“Sometimes when you are naïve about
things you are better off,” Hershman mused when asked if he thought
the tournament would play out according to plan.
“And I think we were real naïve
about how really difficult it would be to manage a tournament where
there'd be bumps along the way. We knew that we would never get to
the finish line with all six guys being the same six that started but
we built in mechanisms to deal with that and I think we did well. But
it was a challenge and it was interesting to me, and I can't say it
was fun, but it was really an experience worth having in this
business, and ultimately, we did get to the finish line and we're
going to have an amazing finals.”
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