Why Mayweather’s fight this weekend matters

FM2Floyd Mayweather jr, who may be the most polarising figure in all of sport, fights for the last time in Las Vegas this weekend.

Should we care?

Of course we should. There are those who claim Mayweather is bad for boxing, but he’s one of the main reasons people talk about boxing. Like Mike Tyson and Sugar Ray Leonard before him, he transcends his sport.

Sugar Ray was adored and Tyson has become a redemptive figure, but the Mayweather shtick is pure malevolence. He entertains himself (and some of us) by flaunting his riches and his prowess as a fighter. He wears his haughtiness like a badge of honour.

The selling point to this weekend’s fight has less to do with opponent Andre Berto than Mayweather chasing down Rocky Marciano’s mythical 49-0 career mark. It’s a staggering record given the nature of the business and it’s one Mayweather has relentlessly pursued since turning pro 19 years ago.

Mayweather has told anyone who will listen that this really is his final fight. He says his kids are getting big and training has become a drudge. He wants to live a little, away from the crazy environment he helped create.

His advisors and trainers insist this is true, but the maverick and fighter that Mayweather is suggests he will hang around for another go, beyond this weekend. Insiders claim he will go for 50-0 next year with another tango with Manny Pacquiao, presumably a fitter version than the one who succumbed in May.

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Andre Berto.

Berto doesn’t rank among the glitterati of the welterweight division, but one fight above all should define the danger he presents to Mayweather this weekend.

Two years ago he fought Jesus Soto Karass. In the second round Berto tore the tendon in his right shoulder and was visibly in pain. He fought on with just his left arm, even dropping Karass, before being stopped on his feet in the 12th. It showed staggering bravery and exemplified Berto’s warrior spirit.

There’s every chance Mayweather will outbox him, but Berto won’t die wondering. He will bring it hard and heavy, which is why I’m betting it will be a better fight than most anticipate.

You can catch it live on SuperSport 2 from 3am on Sunday.

High Stakes

A salute to SA’s cricket giants

COZOyesWIAAVT3nCricket is luckier than most sports. Its shape and rhythm lends itself to fine writing, which explains why, along with boxing, it enjoys such strong literary material.

In England, the genre is exceptionally popular. The appetite there is boundless.

Much good cricket writing has emanated from South Africa in the past two decades and here I think particularly of the likes of Peter Robinson, Luke Alfred, Rodney Hartman, Neil Manthorp, Colin Bryden and, more recently, David Williams and Dr Ali Bacher.

They all have their idiosyncrasies and specific styles, but what binds them is a clear grasp of their subject and a yearn for story-telling. Cricket, of course, has many.

At the Wanderers on Tuesday night, Williams and Bacher launched “South Africa’s Greatest Batsmen, Past and Present”, a tribute to some of the giants of the game.

Given the recent exploits of AB de Villiers and Hashim Amla, it’s a timely addition to any fan’s collection. De Villiers has single-handedly redefined what it is to be an elite batsman, conjuring shots never before seen. Bacher, who could bat a bit himself, is unashamedly in awe of the preternatural talent.

As a boy, I grew up idolising the Transvaal Mean Machine, a bunch who played with swagger and sass. It was Graeme Pollock who kept that engine ticking over, a man who was never daunted, batting quickly and fearlessly.

In this age of endless cricket, bigger bats and superstar batsmen, one of the miracles is that, even now, Pollock remains second on the list of averages for Test players, behind Sir Donald Bradman.

He was there on Tuesday. He has been unwell in recent years, having been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease three years ago, but the medicine is doing its job. He looks healthy and vibrant.

He spoke with enthusiasm, too, listing Barry Richards and Sir Garry Sobers as the finest batsmen he had witnessed. The best bowler he faced? Dennis Lillee, the eminent Australian.

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The great Graeme Pollock signs an autograph for SuperSport producer Richard Parker.

Having produced the popular “Jacques Kallis and 12 Other Great All-rounders” a number of years ago, Williams and Bacher have divined a fluid, efficient manner for their collaborations.

There are some curiosities to their latest book. For instance, Kevin Pietersen, who never played for South Africa, but was born here and has had a troubled relationship with the country of his birth, is included.

Eddie Barlow, though, isn’t.

Nor is Faf du Plessis, who averages more than 50. But there’s still time; he may crack the revision.

What the authors strongly point out is that greatness is measured beyond the cold statistics of a batsman.  Style and context are important, too, which explains Richards’ inclusion, notwithstanding him playing just four Test matches.

Williams and Bacher have also given a nod to two cricketers we might only ever wonder about. Ahmed Deedat and Frank Roro were disadvantaged cricketers who had to do without resources, proper coaching, facilities, tours and opportunity. They were victims of their time, yet they displayed excellence whenever they played. The contribution by historian Krish Reddy is therefore fitting.

What might have been indeed?

The list is an unashamedly subjective one, but you feel they probably got it just right. Williams has long been a student of the game and Bacher is Mister Cricket himself with extraordinary recall.

I’m pleased Bacher goes all out in the conclusion to name the greatest of the great.

See for yourself. Buy the book.

(South Africa’s Greatest Batsmen, Past and Present is on sale at all major retailers and costs R246).

The enduring madness of South African rugby

mental-illness-art-660x350-1440394337Groucho Marx was a funny man. He was also a wise man, once remarking that “politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong remedies”.

As the damning of politics goes, that’s a pretty thorough, fitting assessment. Indeed, he could have been talking about South Africa.

This, remember, was a week in which a number of marginal and wannabe politicians tore into the Springbok selection policy. Some said the squad was too black, others too white.

This was also the week in which the EFF refused to support a motion in parliament congratulating Wayde van Niekerk and Anaso Jobodwana, our champion sprinters. And then there was that trade union nonsense.

Idiocy everywhere.

As ever, South African rugby was caught in the endemic madness that swirls around its very existence. The miracle is that our players so often produce excellence in such a polluted atmosphere. They even win World Cups.

Some context. Historically rugby emerged along racial lines, only unifying in the early 1990s. But the baggage of the apartheid years still hangs like a millstone. Recalcitrant coaches and long-existing structures, chiefly schools, continue as if it were the 1980s. Black rugby has made enormous gains, but it struggles to secure a foothold in the places that really matter, Super Rugby and Springbok rugby.

Everyone knows this, and it must be fixed.

Rugby bosses have long grappled with transformation and the swing to an all-inclusive game has been slow and difficult. The 1995 Rugby World Cup win was only a temporary salve. Rugby failed to harness the goodwill that spread across the land and has been apologising ever since.

Every subsequent World Cup has been preceded by a wailing and gnashing of teeth over selections. The more things change, the more they stay the same.

Even Peter de Villiers, the Boks’ first black coach, failed to provide the impetus for black players at Springbok level. Yet he’s first in the queue lashing Heyneke Meyer and condemning the racial composition of the Boks.

It’s so tiresomely South African.

The problem is that it’s easy for spiteful opportunists to take pot-shots at the Boks because they inspire strong emotions. The country can be burning, the economy may be in freefall, but just you dare select the wrong players. Politicians vent, radio talkshows buzz, rugby headlines hog the street poles.

You wish they would save their energy and anger for the real issues that trouble everyday man: putting food on the table, finding a job, being safe.

Being what it is, rugby has to toe the line, so Meyer and rugby’s grandees suck it up like a battered wife who says nothing. It’s a perverse situation that hobbles rugby to an extraordinary degree.

Few know that SA Rugby does tremendous work in townships and impoverished areas. But these stories are seldom told. They aren’t sexy enough. They create little opportunity for posturing, so the politicians stay away.

I would argue that Meyer has the most hellish job in world rugby. All Steve Hansen or Stuart Lancaster must do is worry about selecting their best 22.

Meyer must take into account the dynamics of culture, colour and language and somehow blend it into a team capable of going to war with England or the All Blacks. All this, mind, in an atmosphere of being ridiculed and second-guessed at every turn.

It is the lot of every Springbok coach, the poor sod.

As a writer friend pointedly remarked this week, transformation doesn’t start with being chosen to wear the Green and Gold, it ends with it.

Transformation isn’t about quotas either. Transformation is a mindset, not a to-do list.

It is the preceding 15 years of struggle and sacrifice and opportunity that defines and develops a Springbok. Why pile opprobrium on Meyer, an honourable, decent man traversing the persistent madness of a game he so adores?

Because it’s convenient? Because he’s an easy target? Just because?

He would be the first to admit that he gets some selections and tactics wrong. Which coach doesn’t?

But the last thing Meyer should do is take his cue from people who have no right to be moral crusaders.

If he did, the madness would have beaten him. – © Sunday Tribune

 

 

 

Bravo to boxing’s big mouths

HotWhat do Charlie Weir, Dingaan Thobela and Baby Jake Matlala have in common?

Apart from being champion fighters, they were among the most charismatic in SA boxing history.

Reporters and fans were constantly drawn to them.

Those days are long gone, though, and few local boxers occupy a place in the public consciousness. Some of our best are known only to hard-core followers.

As accomplished as they are, they have little to no idea about self-marketing. They sit back waiting for their profiles to rocket, with little to no idea how to put themselves out there.

Which is why I’m so encouraged by the efforts of Colin Nathan, the trainer (and my best boxing mate), and Hayden Jones, a local journalist, in putting together a weekly boxing vodcast on YouTube – Hot Boxing Talk.

Now into its 12th week, the broadcasts are done on a shoestring, but they’re high-energy offerings that tap into the sport’s zeitgeist. Boxers pop in to chat, local experts offer their views and there’s sometimes a bit of stirring to keep the boxing pot on the boil. It’s good, solid stuff.

I cracked the nod this week and was happy to give my two cents’ worth. Take a look here:

With his warm, confident style, Nathan is a natural host, which probably isn’t surprising given that he has television experience.

Nathan is one of the few local fight figures to really put himself out there. He is engaging and actively seeks out journalists and influencers (he has an open media day next Wednesday, for instance).

The result is that his boxers, among them world champion Hekkie Budler, get more of the spotlight than most. Another top man, light-heavyweight contender Ryno Liebenberg, is a master of shtick and is never short of a quote or six. First class.

I just wish it was an attitude that ran throughout SA boxing.

‘Southpaw’ knocks ’em dead

IMG_9055There is a moment in Southpaw when a broken Jake Gyllenhaal, struggling to win back his self-worth, tells his little girl Laila, “I’m gonna fight again.”

Her eyes light up. Dad comes home with his face buckled and bloodied, but she understands. This is what he does.

Southpaw breaks no new ground in the boxing movie genre, but it is gritty and compelling. Gyllenhaal’s physical transformation from everyday man to a hulking light-heavyweight had the Internet on fire a few months ago. He pulls off the role of a fighter expertly, but he also demonstrates his acting chops in a movie that is decidedly dark and heavy.

Like many boxing films, it’s a story of redemption. There are the stereotypes, too: the fighter’s desperate background, his gorgeous, conflicted wife, the ascetic old trainer and the angst of fighting one more time.

Where the film earns legitimacy is through the real-life boxing figures who waft in and out. They include former champion Victor Ortiz, referee Tony Weeks, promoter Lou Di Bella, announcer Jimmy Lennon Jr and the commentary team of Jim Lampley and Roy Jones Jr, one of the greatest boxers of the last 50 years.

Rapper 50 Cent has a leading role and his portrayal as a devious promoter is bang on and doubtless drawn from a world he knows well. His boxing promotions  company just went bust.

If there’s a downer, it is the over wrought, exaggerated fight scenes. Boxing is dramatic enough without the need to ham it up, but Southpaw can’t help itself. It goes down this road emphatically.

Gyllenhaal fights, and lives, through a haze of blood and gore and torment. It’s hard not to warm to him as he picks himself up again and again.

Boxing is fortunate in that it has inspired many celebrated films, such as Raging Bull, Rocky, The Fighter, Million Dollar Baby and When We Were Kings.

Thanks primarily to Gyllenhaal’s supreme method acting, Southpaw is definitely a top contender.

Don’t be surprised if he is in the running for an Oscar.

(The film opens at Ster-Kinekor cinemas this weekend).

 

Rugby World Cup the SuperSport way

ZnipIt was Francois Pienaar who once said there is no vision in sport without television.

Smart man.

We get our fixes from all sorts of mediums, but when the big events come round, short of attending the matches, we assemble around the television. It’s a tribal custom among sport tragics everywhere. We do it because, well, it’s what we do.

The World Cup starts in 17 days’ time and will herald a call to arms to rugby fans everywhere. The colour, pageantry and competition will draw us all in yet again to watch the unfolding of rugby’s great shindig. Much beer will be drunk, many tears will flow.

I’ll be getting my kicks from SuperSport (disclaimer: it’s where I work) which has put together an outstanding offering. Today, a 24-hour rugby channel cranks up and will run until October 31, the day of the World Cup final.

It will have something for everyone. Apart from the action guaranteed from 48 matches, SuperSport will have eight different magazine shows, ranging from hard core analysis (Master Plan) to soft features and colour (Show Me Your Passport). There will be something for everyone.

SuperSport itself could probably assemble a World XV of fantastic quality using its pundits, who will pop up in a variety of places and guises.

A couple who come to mind include Sean Fitzpatrick, Lewis Moody, Nick Mallett, Bobby Skinstad, Justin Marshall, George Gregan, Ashwin Willemse, Taine Randell, Colin Charvis, Gavin Hastings, Joel Stransky, Johan Erasmus and Breyton Paulse.

There are a couple of caps and World Cup winners’ medals among that lot.

SuperSport will also have regular access to the Springboks, ensuring fans get to see what goes on behind the scenes.

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Aware of the clamour for commentary options, SuperSport will offer four language options for Springbok games: international English; SA English; Afrikaans; isiXhosa.

All others will have three options: International English; Afrikaans; isiXhosa.

Happily, most of the matches take place during “down time”, but there are agreeable options for those who can’t catch the action live.

DStv premium PVR subscribers with a DStv Explora will be treated to 26- and nine-minute highlights available on CatchUp for every match. All knockout and Springbok games will be available in their entirety.

Also, every RWC match will be streamed live to subscribers (who have a DStv connect ID linked to their DStv Premium PVR subscription) via supersport.com or through the DStv Now app and SuperSport App.

It’s the fifth such tournament SuperSport will be broadcasting. Even if the Boks don’t bring Bill home, I reckon SuperSport will smash it.

The William Webb Ellis Cup at Pool A game between Ireland and Argentina at the Adelaide Oval. The victory assures Ireland of thier place in the Quarter Finals. NO MOBILE PHONE USE. INTERNET SITES MAY ONLY USE ONE IMAGE EVERY FIVE MINUTES DURING THE MATCH.  22/11/03: England and Australia were battling out in the rugby world cup final, and the chance to lift the William Webb Ellis Cup. According to legend, schoolboy William Webb Ellis picked up a football and ran with it during a game at Rugby school in 1823, thereby inventing the game.