WBC Boxing History
WBC, the acronym for World Boxing Council, is
the perhaps the most reputable brand name in the “big three”
sanctioning organizations, all credit goes to its powerful promoter
Don King. Though it is the WBC President Jose Sulaiman who presides
over the matters pertaining to the WBC, many sports pundits would
say that it really was the WBC promoter Don King that dictates the
flow of the production. And the WBC boxing history
has telltale signs for confirmation.
But to give credit to an awe-inspiring
character, Don King was the face of boxing in the 1970s and 1980s.
No other promotions was as successful as he, that even the
sanctioning body on which Don King worked for was, some would say,
ready to bend rules. And again, the WBC boxing
history shows several credence to such charge.
Like when Leon Spinks won the WBC Heavyweight
Championship Belt from Muhammad Ali on 1978 in one of the greatest
upset in WBC boxing history. He was, after the victory, slated to
fight another WBC contender Ken Norton. But Leon Spinks opted to go
for a rematch against Ali for the WBA title defense, of which he
had stripped Ali prior the defense. Of course it was only natural
for WBC to strip Spinks of the title, but when one considers that
Norton was a Don King promotion, and the fight between Larry Holmes
versus Ken Norton was another Don King promotion, it wasn’t hard to
guess where the strings lead.
Don King had an unmatched eye for talent. And
not only that, he can foresee the future hype. Maybe that’s how he
managed to convince WBC to give his fighters freedom from the
mandatory defense title, because he knows that his fighters would
be winners for years to come, not in terms of boxing matches but of
promotions and advertisements.
It seems that those boxers that flourish under
Don King are lucky than most, because King would be there to take
care of them. And it happened so many times in the course of the
WBC boxing history: from Ali to Tyson, his influence on the
sanctioning body was felt. Just like Mike Tyson’s battle and
controversial loss to James “Buster” Douglas, whom many have
considered one of the biggest upsets of WBC boxing history. Due to
the ‘long count’ incident, the WBC refused to hand Buster Douglas
the title. Later, amidst intense media scrutiny, WBC would give
Buster Douglas the title.
The most atrocious foul committed in the
WBC boxing history was without Don King however,
it was of corruption. Roy Jones, Jr. was a boxing hero around the
90s, and he punctuated it with wins. It was in early 1998 when Roy
Jones, Jr. would decide to give up his WBC Light Heavyweight Title.
Soon to follow were splurges of lucrative championship matches to
fill the vacancy, until at last it was Graciano Rocchigiani who won
the WBC belt.
It was surprisingly short lived, when in a
climatic turn of events, WBC rescind the title when Jones rethink
and requested to be reinstated as champion. And to the astonishment
of all, WBC granted the return, due to a more lucrative defense
matches that were to follow.
And came WBC’s near dissolution when Rocchigiani
filed a strong lawsuit that would cost them $31 million in damages,
though Rocchigiani had to settle for an undisclosed sum.
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