Dissecting the Super Six: Part 2
Mark E. Ortega
Leave-it-in-the-ring.com
July 2, 2011
In part two, Ortega examines how
Showtime and promoter Goossen-Tutor prepared themselves for the
hiccups inevitable to this novel undertaking and also how the Super
Six has affected the career trajectories of the participating
fighters.
For Ken Hershman, or any diehard fight
fan, satisfaction is guaranteed. In addition to two alphabet
trinkets (and a big shiny trophy), tournament spoils include the
illustrious vacant Ring title plus much-deserved accolades. And had
the purpose of the Super Six not written itself, culminating with the
a meeting of the division’s true leaders, Showtime had covered
their bases by securing a lucrative multi-fight deal with Lucian
Bute. So fans of the Romanian kingpin and those dubious about the
legitimacy of Andre Ward and/or Carl Froch—poised to meet in
Atlantic City on October 29—can breathe a sigh of relief come the
inevitable match between Super Six victor and the undefeated IBF
champion.
There were a few hairy moments.
Consider eleventh-hour addition and quadragenarian Glen Johnson.
More than a decade had lapsed since he had fought at 168 pounds.
Even with his win over Allan Green, to shortlist Johnson as one of
the division’s best would be a stretch. Had he bested Carl Froch
in their semi-final bout (which he nearly did before running out of
gas in the home stretch), the tournament’s integrity would have
been compromised, without a doubt.
As Showtime or Goossen-Tutor, who at
that point were on tenterhooks waiting for Andre Ward’s last
opponent to earn his place, just how much anxiety did that match
induce?
“You sit back and you realize that as
a promoter you deal with whatever happens. I don't get too ahead of
myself. Going into that fight, we were prepared to fight either one.
Coming out of that fight it worked out of perfectly,” said a
markedly cool Dan Goossen.
When broached about the prospect of
seeing Johnson in the finals, Showtime Sports’ vice-president Ken
Hershman responded in a similar vein.
“I think that we were very
comfortable if Glen was going to win that fight he would be a great
representative in that finals. He's an unbelievable warrior, he's
never shied away. I think that the bonus was that Carl was one of the
original participants and that was nice to see and he is well
deserving of his spot; he fought arguably the hardest route to get
there out of anybody. It just turned out that way, we didn't know
going in.”
For the sake of Ward’s legacy, any
S.O.G. fan must be thrilled about a final fight versus Froch rather
than Johnson. With over ten losses to his credit (controversial
several may have been), a win over Johnson could hardly qualify as
notable.
On the other hand, Froch, whose record
includes merely one loss, has never been truly dominated. Many felt
that the Englishman’s victory over Andre Dirrell in Nottingham was
home cooking. Many also felt that he similarly drew the short end of
the stick in the following round, fighting opponent Mikkel Kessler on
his home turf of Denmark. If Ward outclasses Froch, as the Bay Area
native has every opponent he has faced on the road, it would mark
quite the career highlight. Those who subscribe to “Froch lost to
Kessler; Kessler lost to Ward; therefore, Froch will lose to Ward”
are clearly oblivious to the boxing idiom: “Styles make fights”.
On his part, Froch has the opportunity
to challenge an undefeated opponent for all—or most—of the
marbles.
The inherent flaws of executing a
six-man tournament were obvious from the start; consider the
potential pitfalls of coordinating one bout between two fighters.
Now endeavor to accomplish the same result with three times as many
men, over three separate stages—setbacks are practically mandatory.
Jermain Taylor was the first casualty.
After suffering a concussive knockout loss to Arthur Abraham, again
in the final round of a bout, Taylor was forced to pull out. His last
moments in the Super Six made an indelible impression on fans, and
not in a positive way. To avoid further risking Taylor’s health,
Showtime did the honorable thing and essentially paid for him to
renounce his participation.
As Showtime, or perhaps even Ward
himself, certainly you’d endorse a fight against Taylor that would
have further developed Ward's “brand”, as Hershman earlier
referred to it.
Instead, Ward got Allan Green, who had
been perceived mainly as little more than a hype job. Green, who
boasted no signature wins, was not exactly the biggest name waiting
in the bullpen the first time Showtime had to dig into their relief.
“You don't anticipate a fighter
falling out but you certainly are cognizant of the possibilities of a
fighter falling out,” noted Dan Goossen when discussing the
Taylor-Green switch.
“When Jermain fell out, I was wishing
they would go the route of plugging in a Stieglitz [WBO champion] or
a Bute instead of an Allan Green. Ken did a good job of filling the
leaks in the boat. The ultimate final say as it normally is with
network, is it was with the network. Obviously, I voiced what my
thought process was to want to fill in with one of the other
champions.”
At this juncture, Bute had no
connection with Showtime; to add either Bute or Robert Stieglitz, as
Goossen had hoped, would have been clutch. As Stieglitz claimed one
of the paper titles held in some regard, he would have proven an
acceptable match. But at the end of the day, nobody was looking
outside of the original pool of Super Six contestants and saying,
“The road to super middleweight supremacy runs through Robert
Stieglitz.” Stoppage losses to Librado Andrade and Alejandro
Berrio support this.
Furthermore, Stieglitz was unheralded
by the American fight fan—never mind the selling point he wore
around his waist (to their credit, boxing fans are finally starting
to wise up to that ploy). As well, when this writer spoke to him
months ago, Stieglitz showed little interest in visiting America. He
seemed to think his reputation alone precluded the overseas travel
required to defend said title against the other super middleweights
in contention. After all, he has not left the confines of his
Magdeburg, Germany since the loss to Andrade in March of 2008.
The ostensible downgrade from Taylor to
Green has slowed both the round robin’s momentum and Ward’s
rising star, if only a tad. Green was a dubious fighter with no
following. Few knew who Green was, and those that remembered seemed
to care little. The minority of Green supporters seemed to be
synonymous with critics of Ward who still weren't sold on his
allegedly shaky chin—despite his taking shots from reputable
punchers Kessler and Edison Miranda.
As Jermain Taylor or any boxing buff, a
Ward matchup should warrant alarm; a sustained, twelve round beating
courtesy of a fighter who lands plenty isn’t the most appealing
prospect for a guy who has seen his fair share of wars. In this
writer’s opinion, even Taylor’s most valiant effort would have
wilted in the face of flush shots, head butts, elbows, and the rest
of Ward’s arsenal. Still, he could have proved himself better
equipped than Green, who folded up quickly under pressure and let his
survival instincts prevail over his ring intelligence.
The next hiccups occurred just prior to
the third stage of the Super Six. After picking up the WBC strap in a
war with Carl Froch in what was easily the tournament's most exciting
bout, Mikkel Kessler announced his withdrawal following an eye
problem that had him seeing double—despite the subsequent Fight
Camp 360 footage that shows Kessler behind the wheel of an expensive
car talking to the cameras just minutes after.
The following glitch, too, seemed
suspect. Andre Dirrell, citing a neurological injury resulting from
punches landed by Arthur Abraham, was the next to resign. In their
second stage bout, Dirrell had slipped to a knee when Abraham struck
with a vicious uppercut to the head—and was then disqualified. Not
long after, Dirrell's team began negotiations with Andre Ward’s
camp.
The clash between former teammates was
hotly anticipated. Stylistically, Dirrell posed a challenge for
Ward, who had arguably won every round against his first two
opponents. The fight was pushed back. A Fight Camp 360 episode
featured Dirrell trainer Leon Lawson stating that the money needed to
be right before they would get in the ring.
The money wasn't right and neither was
Dirrell's health, so he bowed out. His character, which had been
under fire from the gate, invited further doubt. Dirrell’s public
presence faded to black and only now is he beginning to reappear.
Fans will likely see him back in the ring before the end of the year.
Kessler and Dirrell’s collective
withdrawal left an empty ring to be filled. Enter Glen Johnson
against Allan Green. A decade had lapsed since Johnson had fought at
168 pounds; in fact, the fighter was coming off a recent loss to
Tavoris Cloud at a whopping 175. Despite uncertainty regarding
Johnson’s ability to make weight, he achieved the task and was
rewarded with a fight against Green, an old sparring partner—one
who had admitted having trouble with the older fighter.
Oakland then saw native son Andre Ward
in what was deemed a “non-tournament” bout. Ward’s third match
placed him in the ring with the extremely dirty Sakio Bika, who
lacked following, personality, and a complimentary style. Ward
emerged from the tough fight victorious; sadly, his stock rose
little. Weighing that fight against one with Dirrell had to be a
letdown for Team Ward. Dan Goossen was candid in his discussion of
the subject.
“As you're well aware, there's no
bigger commitment a fighter makes than what the original six fighters
committed to, which is fighting the best in back-to-back-to-back
cases. We all felt [Ward] was prepared to fight Taylor and he was
prepared to fight Andre Dirrell. The circumstances in our case didn't
work out with either and I know in the case of Kessler it didn't work
out for Green. You deal with it and you move forward.”
Stumbling blocks aside, Goossen then
expounds on the beauty of the round robin format.
“You think about Arthur Abraham, who
was 1-2 in the three stage fights but he made it to the semi-finals
based upon a knockout and if he could have scored the upset against
Andre Ward, he reverses all the losses he incurred in one fight. In
our sport it's very hard to have someone that's won one fight out of
his last three and to be in a position to turn it all around with one
fight. Those are benefits for the fighters that join the tournament
and make the commitment to fight one tough fight after another and
realize even in losing they can still end up becoming a winner.
Similar to what you see in our other sports like baseball and
basketball where you can lose and still come back and win a series of
other games and end up coming out on top. It's a lot more forgiving
in the Super Six format for losing. From the winner's standpoint you
are taking on a much higher risk, bigger reward position going
through the winners bracket. You're always facing a hungry fighter.”
That glory (and a guaranteed payday)
stands just one bout away from any fighter, regardless of loss,
certainly poses a tantalizing carrot.
“I think there are no losers in this
tournament,” supports Hershman.
“People still want to see Glen
Johnson fight, still want to see Mikkel Kessler fight, and I think
people still want to see Jermain Taylor fight, believe it or not. I
think that there are no losers from that perspective and when you're
fighting the amazing caliber of fighters we had in this tournament,
someone's gonna lose. Carl Froch lost to Mikkel Kessler. Certainly no
shame in that; didn't set his career back for a second. He came right
back put on an amazing performances against Arthur Abraham, beat
Johnson and is now off in the finals.”
Since one of the main objectives of the
Super Six (outside of establishing the winner as a pound-for-pound
entrant and legitimate boxing star) was to ensure post-tournament
marketability for the participants, one would be hard pressed to
claim that Showtime and the promoters involved failed to achieve
this—critics and all.
Prior to the round robin’s onset,
then-middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik candidly expressed his scorn.
“Let them beat each other up, let
them ruin their careers for peanuts,” jeered Pavlik. “Why would I
be in that tournament when I am a middleweight? They never asked me
and I never wanted to join. They're going to burn their whole
careers, and for what? Nobody watches Showtime. Trust me, when the
winner of the tournament fights his next fight, it will be on HBO.”
Note that Showtime drew 1.3 million
viewers on May 7th of this year—for a card that included
Pavlik himself. Ironic that Pavlik now finds himself on the outside
looking in while many of the Super Six participants see their careers
flourishing.
In fact, none of the fighters save for
Allan Green and perhaps Andre Dirrell, has seen their career freefall
into mediocrity following their involvement with the tournament. And
Green enjoyed two bonafide paydays that some might argue that he
didn’t deserve in the first place.
Mikkel Kessler's last fight was
featured on tape delay under the Froch-Johnson semi-final; clearly,
Showtime has plans for Kessler. Plan A (matching Kessler with Bute
in Montreal), however, was thwarted despite a high money offer being
lobbied at the Dane.
Glen Johnson’s career enjoyed
revitalization by opening up a whole new weight class of contenders.
If his performance against Froch is any indication, Johnson cannot
and should not be disparaged as an opponent for fighters on their way
up.
Despite three consecutive losses,
Arthur Abraham can now return to middleweight and reinstate dominance
where he is technically undefeated. That Abraham was given two title
shots following his first loss is unheard of, furthermore affirming
Goossen’s claim that the potential rewards [of the tournament] far
outweigh the risks.
Andre Ward, who had been considered the
fifth or sixth best horse running, is now the odds-on favorite and
consensus #1 in the division. And this is without wins over a marquee
name like Jermain Taylor.
Jermain Taylor’s return will be
televised on Showtime airwaves after bowing out of the tournament
almost two years ago; enough said.
Carl Froch, who rebounded from his
first loss with a terrific win over Abraham, now enjoys the
division’s #2 ranking—even though his last two wins were over
guys coming off losses.
From a fighter’s perspective, the
Super Six has been a pretty successful experience.
Offers Ken Hershman, “The career
paths of the Super Six have skyrocketed and the prospects for those
guys have skyrocketed and their name recognition has skyrocketed.
Those are all the things we wanted to achieve and accomplish and we
feel that we delivered on it. I think their careers have been
enhanced dramatically, their pocketbooks have been enhanced
dramatically, and if you ask them about their experience they'll all
tell you how positive was.”
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