Originally Published: January 3, 2008
Sleaze for compensation, the good old days and saying 'no' to strangers
Confused by the muddled heavyweight division and its hard-to-pronounce alphabet title holders? Tired of seeing belts passed around like a track-and-field baton? Thomas Hauser is quick to remind us that as upside down as things are today, they weren't much better 100 years ago.
Allan Grant/Time Life Pictures/Getty ImagesFunny as it may seem, former heavyweight boxing champion James J. Jeffries, left, probably wouldn't have looked down on today's state of boxing.And another indecent proposal
More seriously, at the same meeting, the ABC legal committee issued a ruling that could have far-reaching implications for professional boxing. "It has come to the attention of the ABC," the minutes note, "that the major sanctioning organizations have been and are soliciting and receiving 'sponsorships' from major promoters who operate in the U.S." As an example of this practice, the legal committee references a printed program entitled "The Best 20 Years -- Collector's Edition" that was distributed by the WBO at its annual convention in November 2007. The program contains a series of full-page displays in which various promoters are identified as "Platinum Sponsors." The promoters include Top Rank, Don King Productions, Golden Boy Promotions, Universum Box-Promotion, Warriors Boxing Promotions, Sports Network and Banner Promotions. "In addition," the ABC minutes declare, "some of the same promoters, as well as others, published ads in the WBO booklet. This type of activity appears to be a direct contravention of 15 USC§6308[c] [the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act], which states, 'No officer or employee of a sanctioning organization may receive any compensation, gift, or benefit, directly or indirectly, from a boxer [other than a sanctioning fee].'" The ABC could have also noted that violation of this law is a crime punishable by up to one year in prison and a fine of $20,000. The ABC has sent a letter to each of the major sanctioning organizations advising them to cease and desist from this practice. Shouldn't it send a similar letter to every major promoter?The good old days?

Bettmann/CorbisJames J. Jeffries, left, made an ill-advised comeback against Jack Johnson in 1910.
[+] Enlarge

Central Press/Getty ImagesChildren normally took well to Muhammad Ali -- as long as they knew him a little.

