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Leagues and Governing Bodies

HOLYFIELD-TYSON PART II: REAX ON THE STATE OF BOXING

          In what William Gildea of the WASHINGTON POST called
     "possibly the ugliest and most distasteful bout in
     heavyweight championship history," Saturday's WBA title
     fight between Evander Holyfield and Mike Tyson ended with a
     Tyson DQ for biting Holyfield twice in the third round. 
     Marc Ratner, Exec Dir of the NV Athletic Commission,
     announced after the fight that Tyson is "temporarily
     suspended" and his $30M purse "is being withheld pending a
     hearing" to be held Tuesday (WASHINGTON POST, 6/29).   
           NATIONAL REAX: In DC, Michael Wilbon: "[I]t's safe to
     say boxing has reached a sick and incomprehensible low"
     (WASHINGTON POST, 6/30).  In Philadelphia, Bill Lyon: "In a
     sport that has always been its own worst enemy, this was a
     night of special shame" (PHILA. INQUIRER, 6/29).  Mike Lurie
     of CBS SportsLine wrote under the header "Tyson Takes Bite
     Out Of Boxing's Credibility" (CBS SportsLine, 6/29).  In San
     Antonio, Dan Cook: "It's very difficult to disgrace boxing
     but Mike Tyson made a great effort Saturday night" (S.A.
     EXPRESS-NEWS, 6/29).  In Toronto, Dave Perkins: "It's long
     past the point of saying [the DQ] is another black eye for
     the sport" (TORONTO STAR, 6/29).  Also in Toronto, Steve
     Buffery: "Will boxing survive this latest black eye? 
     Probably.  Incidents of this sort are almost commonplace and
     the sport somehow keeps bouncing back" (TORONTO SUN, 6/30). 
     In Miami, Dan Le Batard: "Saturday's insanity might help
     boxing, believe it or not, because a bloodthirsty fan spits
     money like an ATM machine" (MIAMI HERALD, 6/30).  In K.C.,
     Jason Whitlock: "[Tyson] embarrassed himself, and he
     embarrassed a sport that we long ago thought was beyond
     embarrassment. ... [Holyfield-Tyson II] quite possibly
     doomed the sport forever.  It will be difficult for anyone,
     even boxing's most ardent fans, to take this sport seriously
     again" (K.C. STAR, 6/29).  USA Network's Sean O'Grady: "How
     many black eyes can one sport have?  It seems like
     everything is a black eye for boxing.  Boxing is resilient
     to these kinds of things" (USA).  In Milwaukee, D. Orlando
     Ledbetter: "You know that the world of professional boxing
     is on its proverbial death bed when the loquacious Don King
     is left speechless" (MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL, 6/29). 
     Holyfield's attorney, Jim Thomas: "I think Don King -- and
     you will laugh at this -- is a victim here.  He worked very
     hard to make this fight possible" (DALLAS MORNING NEWS,
     6/30).  In N.Y., Jimmy Breslin: "[W]hen Tyson is shoved out
     the door, the whole business of boxing should be fired out
     right after him" (NEWSDAY, 6/30).  Also in N.Y., Shaun
     Powell: "The sport should collectively organize a boycott of
     Tyson.  Commissions should bar him from fighting in their
     states. ... And the public, which shells out good money for
     outrageous ticket prices and pay-per-view rates, we should
     say enough" (NEWSDAY, 6/30).  The WALL STREET JOURNAL's
     Fredrick Klein: "Boxing is the sport that needs the most
     regulation, but gets the least.  One shouldn't be optimistic
     that Saturday's fiasco will change that" (WSJ, 6/30). ESPN's
     Keith Olbermann: "It's official now.  Boxing is no longer a
     sport.  Now it's a parody of the life of Vincent Van Gogh"
     (ESPN, 6/29).  ESPN's Dick Schaap: "If you had scripted it
     though, you could not have found a more fitting way to sound
     the death knell of boxing" ("The Sports Reporters," 6/29). 
     Showtime's Jim Gray, on Tyson's future: "I think it's going
     to be very, very difficult for Mike to continue his career. 
     But this is boxing, after all. ... America has a short
     attention span, that of a gnat. ... he'll probably always be
     remembered for this.  But I think he'll be able to continue,
     and I'm sure he'll want to continue." ("Today," NBC, 6/30).

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