Published in The Lebanon Democrat, Thursday, May 17, 2012.
SAN DIEGO – Earlier this week, I read about the proposed boxing match between Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather.
Unlike in years past, I read it with disinterest. Boxing is no longer intriguing to me like it used to be. Growing up in Lebanon, Gillette’s “Friday Night Fights” were a ritual. My father and I would settle into our seats in the den with the television glaring at us in black and white. We rooted for boxers who had become familiar to us over the years. Nearly always, my father rooted against my favorite. I now have the suspicion he did that just to tease me.
An exception was Floyd Patterson. As I recall, we both admired his skills and jointly rooted for him to win.
I don’t recall many of the fights but Gillette’s parrot still sticks in my brain. Complete in his colorful plumage reduced to black and white, he would march around the ring holding aloft a placard denoting the number of the next round.
I continued as a boxing fan, a requirement for an aspiring sports writer at The Nashville Banner, and later, necessary to do my job as sports editor of The Watertown Daily Times in upstate New York. At the latter, boxing was up close and personal. Amateur and professional boxing was a major attraction in the state of New York in the Golden Era of Sports. Jack Case, the sports editor I succeeded at The Times, had been a major reporter of the sport since the 1930s.
Jack was best known for creating the nickname for a famous boxer. And the name lives on. In 1939, this light heavyweight was the talk of the boxing world. He celebrated his 18th birthday by soundly defeating Larry Zavelich of Ottawa at a Watertown venue. Spotting the young pugilist when entering the dressing room after the fight, Jack declared, “Ray, you are as sweet as sugar.” From then on, the fighter was known as Sugar Ray Robinson.
My disillusionment reached its final stage right after Jack retired. As sports editor, I was required to comment on the championship fights. Joe Frazier was the reigning heavyweight and had quickly defeated Terry Daniels in January. In May, Frazier destroyed Ron Stander in a brutal, gory mess. My commentary in The Times declared the Gillette parrot was squawking against such an abomination. I judged the best punch was in a Mennen after-shave commercial when Frazier knocked himself out in front of the bathroom mirror.
My return to the Navy separated me from regular access to boxing and my interest waned. But the roots of that disillusionment came while I was at The Nashville Banner.
In 1964, Sonny Liston and then named Cassius Clay (later Muhammed Ali) began their famous heavyweight duels. After Liston quit because of a shoulder injury in the sixth round of their first fight, the WBA ordered a second championship match be held. That fight was in Lewiston, Maine and broadcast on closed-circuit television. In Nashville, the broadcast was at the Ryman Auditorium.
Mike Fleming, The Banner’s boxing reporter asked me to accompany him and help obtain post-fight comments. Mike and I took our seats in the middle of the auditorium. Porter Waggoner and his buddies filed into the row in front of us just before the broadcast began.
The show started with Robert Goulet forgetting the words in the middle of the national anthem. The fight itself ended with the now famous “phantom punch” when Liston fell like a tree less than a minute into the fight. Fred Russell, The Banner’s famous sports editor didn’t even get to the fight after getting caught in traffic. Even the knockout count was done incorrectly. Because of the remote location, less than 2500 attended. It was one of the worst debacles in the ring.
To top it off, I interviewed one of Porter Waggoner’s buddies exiting the Ryman.
“What did you think of the fight,” I asked.
“I paid $25, and I didn’t even see it,” he responded.
“What,” I intelligently blurted.
“We smuggled in a six pack of beer,” he explained, “and I was in charge. I bent over to get the cans out of the plastic, and before I could get them open, the fight was over.”
I should have stopped following boxing right then.