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A Great "Lead In"
By Bernie McCoy
June 9, 2008 |
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(JUNE 9) In television programming
it's known as a "lead-in:" a strong show generating a big audience
and "leading" that audience to the following show or, in the case of
TV's most famous lead-in, "The Cosby Show," leading the audience to
an entire Thursday night of viewing. "It's a technique that has also
been used, successfully, in boxing," Judy Kulis, IFBA President,
noted, on the phone, from her headquarters office in Nevada last
week. "Often when there is a big PPV fight in Las Vegas on a
Saturday, ESPN will originate their "Friday Night Fights" from that
city. We're doing a variation, leading with an all-female boxing
show from Connecticut into the
biggest PPV event in the
history of Women's boxing, the following night in
Albuquerque, NM. There will be an interview with
Holly Holm
on the Thursday telecast along with numerous references to the PPV
telecast. It's a way of marketing the PPV show while, at the same
time, presenting a very good night of female boxing. Over the two
nights, there will be a total of six IFBA titles on the line in
those two rings.
On Thursday, June 12, from Mohegan Sun Casino, in Uncasville, CT and
telecast on Fox Sports network,
Lisa
Brown
(14-3-3) will defend her IFBA super bantamweight crown against
Alicia Ashley
(14-7-1) over ten rounds, while Jill Emery (8-2) and
Angelica
Martinez
(6-4) will battle for the vacant IFBA welterweight title. Emery had
originally been scheduled to fight
Cristy Nickel
in a non-title six round bout. When Nickel dropped off the card,
Judy Kulis went looking and Martinez took the bout, prompting an
editorial aside from Kulis, during our phone call, "I love Angelica,
she's one of the fighters in the sport, who will, on short notice,
take a fight and not just any fight, but, as in this case, a tough
fight against a tough opponent. Making Emery/Martinez a ten round
title fight was an easy call." Emery is coming off a close loss to
Terri Blair,
last December, while Martinez, over her five year career, has been
in with Holly Holm four times (starting early in both fighters'
careers),
Layla McCarter
and has a win over
Christy Martin
(October 2006).....easy call, indeed. The Brown/Ashley fight is a
main event bout on almost any card in any venue. It matches two
veteran fighters with ring skills tested over a combined 17 years
and 42 bouts against some of the top competition in the sport.
Also on the card is a six round
featherweight bout between
Jeri Sitzes
(14-7-1) and
Ela Nunez
(6-3) and Kulis notes, "This could be
the sleeper bout of the night, two action fighters who come to fight
every time out." Nunez's last bout, in March, was a five round TKO
of tough
Brooke Dierdorff,
while Sitzes is coming off a title bout loss, in February, to
main-event fighter, Lisa Brown.
Also featured is the return to the
ring, after a year and a half hiatus, of unbeaten
Melinda Cooper
(18-0) in a six round bout with veteran
Donna
Biggers
(19-7-1). At press time, a fifth bout, featuring
Elena Reid
(19-4-5) going six rounds with
Ava Knight
(3-0-1) has been added.
Given the ongoing paucity of television coverage of the sport of
Women's boxing, the Fox Sports network telecast, from Connecticut,
would be, in normal circumstances, a major event for the sport. Two
very good title fights, a bout that promises bell/bell action from
two dynamic fighters and the return to the ring of one of the most
skilled female boxers in the sport, is, usually, as good as female
boxing and television coverage of the sport gets. Add the fact that
the Thursday telecast is scheduled for a prime time airing on the
Fox Sports affiliates, not suffering from the time constraints of an
11PM start time that has plagued some of the past Fox female boxing
telecasts, and the Thursday show from Connecticut shapes up as a
"perfect storm" of quality exposure for the sport. Kulis noted that
the Fox Sports TV coverage will include "the two title bouts and the
Sitzes/Nunez fight, with the Melinda Cooper and Elena Reid bouts
held, as "swing bouts," to be shown if any of the other three fights
end early, a distinct possibility."
And this is just the "lead-in." Combine the Connecticut card with
the New Mexico PPV show
the following night and the boxing fan will be treated to television
exposure of the largest group of female fighters ever assembled: six
championship bouts and under-card fights that might be at the top of
many boxing programs around the country. How good are the six title
fights, two in Connecticut, four in New Mexico? Start with the fact
that these six fights spotlight some of the most talented fighters
in the sport, fighting each other. The six fights are, basically,
what fight fans always hope for: "two good fighter" bouts. How good?
Think about the six bouts: Holly Holm/Mary Jo Sanders, Chevelle
Hallback/Jeannine Garside, Carina Moreno/Eileen Olszewski, Hollie
Dunaway/Wendy Rodriguez, Lisa Brown/Alicia Ashley and Jill
Emery/Angelica Martinez and then realize that, if you're honest, you
don't really know who is going to win any of those bouts. And when
was the last time you could say that, particularly about some of the
"title" fights that the sport has foisted on the public recently and
a couple that are scheduled in the near future.
Said another way, the two female fight cards in Connecticut and New
Mexico are an example, a good example, of what can, what should, be
accomplished on an ongoing basis, in the sport of Women's boxing.
It's what results when forward thinking promoters such as Fresquez
Promotions and the boxing officials at Mohegan Sun combine with a TV
network, like Fox Sports and a PPV distributor such as Integrated
Sport (could the be a better name) that recognize that good boxing
isn't limited by gender and both are joined by an aggressive Women's
boxing sanctioning body, such as the IFBA, who aims for the
achievement of results rather than talking about how to go about
getting results. It is that type of support, that has,
unfortunately, been absent for far too long in the sport of Women's
boxing. When that type of support exists, two fight cards, like the
ones in Connecticut and New Mexico, result and some of the best
fighters in the sport are showcased on national television while at
the same time providing the sport of Women's boxing with the
opportunity to show just how good it can be.
It begins Thursday night with a great "lead in."
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