Tim Bradley on Turki: Create a boxing commissioner to oversee the sport

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Tim Bradley got on his soapbox this week to lecture Turki Al-Sheikh, telling him he hasn’t done anything to improve boxing other than putting on some “good fights”. Tim believes that once Turki leaves the sport, things will be as bad as before he arrived.

Commissioner Callout

Bradley says he wants Turki to create a commissioner-like person to “oversee” the sport in the same way the NFL and NBA do. These leagues have appointed commissioners who oversee the management and route of the teams.

It is unclear whether Turki would want to take on that kind of responsibility, as it would be a lot of hard work. He seems more interested in making good fights between fighters he selects. It would be a full-time job for Turki to become the boxing commissioner if he could make it happen.

“Why don’t you help us build a union so the fighters can stay strong and get their promoter or whatever,” Tim Bradley said on social media, lecturing Turki Al-Sheikh. “Why don’t you give us a World Boxing Council, someone who deals with everything (sport)? I know we have the WBC, but you know what I mean.

“Someone to oversee like the NFL (meaning the commissioner of sports management, appointed by the league’s teams) and the NBA (commissioner, similar to the NFL, appointed by the teams).

“You can be based in America, and you can be based there (Saudi Arabia), and they can all work together to bring boxing back together the right way. You do things like that, then you get my attention. You do things like that, then i stand behind you

“I’m going to get behind you Turki, I really do, because that’s what boxing really needs. When you’re gone, Turki, when you decide to go, we’re going to be back on top. You’ve had some great fights (for example, Fury vs. Usyk and Beterbiev vs. Bivol), but boxing hasn’t changed a damn thing.

Fixing the future of boxing

“So my view of boxing is different than all of you. You get the fights you want, which is great. It’s great, but that’s not going to solve all the problems that boxing has. We need a governing body that have a view of the whole sport,” Bradley said.

In the past, promoters around the world put on a lot of high-priced, low-quality cards, and much of the interest in boxing disappeared. Too many events were put behind a PPV paywall, preventing fans from seeing fights unless they were willing to pay $70 to see mostly mismatches.

Promoters made matters worse by always matching their fighters with opponents they couldn’t beat. This still continues today, and we’ve even seen it in some of Turki’s cards with promoters stacking the lower cards in decks with no competitive value.



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