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ESPN’s Awful Boxing Production A Black Eye

March 23, 2009

ESPN’s lackluster coverage of Saturday’s heavyweight title fight featuring Vitali Kilitschko was a black eye – both for the sport and the network.

It was a sad commentary on the once-mighty sport that a heavyweight championship bout was relegated to ESPN Classic first of all.

But it was also a shoddy presentation that was comically below the standards of any outfit claiming to be “The Worldwide Leader In Sports.”

Boxing’s heavyweight division – once its calling card – is now a punchless group of pugilists at best.  So fight fans (like myself) are lucky that ESPN bothered to carry it at all, even when they dumped it onto ESPN Classic, reportedly because they were contractually obligated to show college wrestling.

But the show itself was terrible.  Admittedly, ESPN had a very high bar to hit in a sport for which the standard is set by HBO Sports, which does boxing as well or better than any network does any sport in this country.

HBO productions are always rich with top-quality taped pieces and a run of show setting up the anticipation of the night’s main event, with the production values always top-class from start to finish.  And for bigger fights, HBO starts long before fight night with its critically-acclaimed 24/7 series, which is basically a multi-episode infomercial for the fight, but it’s done so well and compellingly that you don’t really care.

So when ESPN opened the show cold in the arena in Germany with Klitschko already walking out of his dressing room, the viewer had to jump right into it.  Forget the backstory, it was fight time.

And it was tougher to get acclimated once you realized the announcers were not across the pond, but were calling it from a studio back in The States.

Now often that doesn’t matter, as it is long a staple of other international affairs such as soccer (including on ESPN), and when done well (as ESPN usually does), a viewer doesn’t notice.  And the choice to keep the announcers home for a low-interest event was very much understandable in these economic times.

But the audio mix was so bad on this production that to a TV viewer the arena had all the atmosphere of a Kansas City Royals game in August.

And once the fight started, in typical ESPN fashion, the screen was way too cluttered.  There was the usual ESPN scroll across the bottom, two different ESPN-branded logos, and the entire fight they left up the names of the fighters and the color of their trunks.  And trust me, it ain’t hard to tell Vitali Klitschko and Juan Carlos Gomez apart.

After Klitschko’s win, ESPN tried to stick with the post-fight interviews, but production-wise that was a total train wreck, too.

Again, as a boxing fan I hate to bite the hand that feeds me, because if ESPN didn’t step up, there is a good chance this fight would not have been on TV, and I would have had to spend the hour watching my March Madness picks go further down the toilet.

So thanks for that, ESPN.  And I get not sending announcers Brian Kenny and Teddy Atlas to Germany, because this fight was probably of interest to me and about 13 other Americans.  And the often-boring fight itself was why God invented the fast-forward button on the TiVo, and Exhibit A of why heavyweight boxing is in the tank.

But when you are used to the top-rank quality of HBO Sports, or even the solid work of a Showtime or Versus when it comes to boxing, ESPN’s shoddy presentation was a punch below the belt to boxing fans, and definitely to the network’s reputation as well.  Luckily for them, I doubt many people were watching.

Posted by Ben Grossman on March 23, 2009 | Comments (7)

3/29/2009 4:11:20 PM EDT
In response to: ESPN’s Awful Boxing Production A Black Eye
Heath commented:

I don't need glamour and glitz. All I need is the ring to be well-lit, the action from a couple angles, and some insightful commentary from Teddy Atlas. The attraction is the action in the ring, not the side-show. That was covered, and that's all I need. All the show aspects are useless.


3/29/2009 7:21:05 AM EDT
In response to: ESPN’s Awful Boxing Production A Black Eye
Bud commented:

It was the most boring fight that I have ever seen.
There is not a deceny heavyweight anywhere.
Klitsko"s say they won't fight each other, what happened to the mandetory(?) opponent rule?


3/23/2009 3:37:30 PM EDT
In response to: ESPN’s Awful Boxing Production A Black Eye
juicer commented:

You may know the difference between between the two fighters but I assume tv was trying to target more than you and the 13 others who cared and draw more people in to watch and stick with the fight. What % of americans do you think would be flipping channels see 2 guys boxing and right away know one was Klitschko? I know that's the reason I stopped flipping and watched.
Different countries have different production styles, it seemed like a standard world feed broadcast to me (the 1/2 I saw anyway)...you're piggybacking off someone else's show and making it your own....of course it won't be as good as a real US production, but at least it was on the air.
I think your article tries to swing from both sides of the fence, luckily I doubt many people are reading it.


3/23/2009 3:37:29 PM EDT
In response to: ESPN’s Awful Boxing Production A Black Eye
juicer commented:

You may know the difference between between the two fighters but I assume tv was trying to target more than you and the 13 others who cared and draw more people in to watch and stick with the fight. What % of americans do you think would be flipping channels see 2 guys boxing and right away know one was Klitschko? I know that's the reason I stopped flipping and watched.
Different countries have different production styles, it seemed like a standard world feed broadcast to me (the 1/2 I saw anyway)...you're piggybacking off someone else's show and making it your own....of course it won't be as good as a real US production, but at least it was on the air.
I think your article tries to swing from both sides of the fence, luckily I doubt many people are reading it.


3/23/2009 12:01:16 PM EDT
In response to: ESPN’s Awful Boxing Production A Black Eye
Cockillla commented:

Well, Im a former boxing fan. I have to admit reading your blog was the first I heard about this Heavy Weight bout. Outta site outta mind I guess is always the king. I watch alot of ESOn and can't remember even a scroll about it.
R.I.P. Boxing


3/23/2009 10:30:43 AM EDT
In response to: ESPN’s Awful Boxing Production A Black Eye
Unsilent Majority commented:

I completely forgot the fight was on and I didn't even turn on ESPN until the sixth round was underway. Another horribly publicized boxing event by the powers that be at ESPN. Granted, I wouldn't recommend going overboard on the Klitschko/Gomez pre-fight hype, but at least give it some mentions on SportsCenter in the days leading up to the fight. Oh well, just more of the same from a network that continues to ignore their own product in Friday Night Fights.


3/23/2009 12:59:03 AM EDT
In response to: ESPN’s Awful Boxing Production A Black Eye
John McAdam commented:

dude..you go back in history and people like louis and all those cronies fight exactly like vitali does. dont slag the sport with that conventional wisdom. you KNOW that was an exciting fight.

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