<p><b>Praise for <i>The Arc of
Boxing</i></b></p>
<p>“Lively . . . Silver explored the magic, studied the history.”<b>―<i></i><i>Philadelphia Daily News</i></b></p>
<p>“If you care about boxing . . . its future, its past, or both . . . then
you have to read this book . . . thoroughly researched . . . articulately
argued.”<b>―<i></i><i>Newsday</i></b></p><p>“True aficionados, whether they
ultimately agree with Silver or not, are sure to enjoy his book for its
unmistakable knowledge and passion.”<b>―<i></i><i>The Ring</i></b></p>
<p><b> </b></p>
<p><b>Praise for <i>The Night
the Referee Hit Back</i></b></p>
<p>“Mike Silver is the Sugar Ray Robinson of boxing writers—smooth, smart, powerful,
and tough to beat. The good news is that you can step in the ring with him and
not get hurt.”<b>―</b><b>Jonathan Eig, author of <i>Ali: A Life</i></b></p>
<p>“There was a time boxing was the biggest sport was the biggest sport in
this country, bigger than baseball. The great historian Mike Silver reminds us
why in his latest book, <i>The Night the Referee Hit Back</i>.
His stories bob, punch, weave, and bang the body—but this time in a way that
can touch your heart without cracking a rib.”<b>―</b><b>Teddy Atlas<i></i></b></p>
<p>“Anyone who comes to me with a boxing question, I reflexively redirect
them to Mike Silver, who to my mind is, pound for pound, the greatest authority
on the subject. This book is only further evidence of his expertise.”<b>―David
Margolick, Contributing Editor at <i>Vanity Fair</i>, and author of <i></i><i>Beyond Glory: Joe Louis vs. Max Schmeling, and a World on the
Brink</i></b></p>
In When in Doubt, Stop the Bout, renowned boxing historian Mike Silver presents a shocking exposé of the sordid underbelly of professional boxing, and uncovers the sport’s criminally flawed infrastructure and those responsible for it.
From compromised referees to poorly trained ringside physicians to an insidious cartel of “sanctioning organizations” approving dangerous mismatches, Silver lays bare the corruption, the negligence, and the incompetence that has made a dangerous sport even more dangerous.
But aside from unmasking the chaotic mess that afflicts boxing, this book for the first time proposes groundbreaking practical solutions that will mitigate the danger and save lives. Penetrating and persuasive, When in Doubt, Stop the Bout will change forever how you see the sport of boxing.
Chapter 1: A Brief History
Chapter 2: The Case for Shorter Fights: Part 1
Chapter 3: The Case for Shorter Fights Part II: Learning From the Past
Chapter 4: The Referee’s Dilemma
Chapter 5: Educating the Referee
Chapter 6: Modifying the Rules
Chapter 7– A Referee Speaks Out –Anonymously
Chapter 8: Hands Up, Chin Down: Reviving a Lost Art
Chapter 9: Paging the Ringside Physician: Where are you?
Chapter 10: A New Scoring Protocol
Chapter 11: Amateur Boxing vs. Professional Boxing and the Headguard Debate
Chapter 12: The Boxing Brain vs. The Football Brain: Name Your Poison
Chapter 13: Boxing vs. Mixed Martial Arts: Which Sport is More Dangerous?
Chapter 14: To Glove or Not to Glove?—That is the Question
Chapter 15: Boxing’s Parasites: How the WBC, WBA, IBF and WBO Continue to Undermine Boxing Safety
Chapter 16: For Whom the Bell Tolls: Analyses of 14 Boxing Related Fatalities 1990-2022
Chapter 17: The Future of Professional Boxing
Chapter 18: Summary of Recommended Laws and Regulations
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Mike Silver is the author of three books. The Arc of Boxing: The Rise and Decline of the Sweet Science (McFarland, 2008) is considered a classic and was recently listed as McFarland’s # 1 best-seller for June 2023. His second book, Stars in the Ring: Jewish Champions in the Golden Age of Boxing (Lyons Press, 2016), was called by Publisher’s Weekly “An achievement unlikely to be equaled.” The Night the Referee Hit Back: Memorable Moments from the World of Boxing (Rowman & Littlefield, 2020) was described as “A welcome addition to the libraries of boxing fans and sports pundits” by Publisher’s Weekly.
Silver’s work has appeared in the New York Times, The Ring
magazine, Boxing Monthly, The International
Boxing Research Journal, and
various boxing web sites. He is a former inspector with the New York State
Athletic Commission and a consultant and on-air commentator for nineteen boxing
documentaries produced by PBS, HBO, ESPN, the History Channel and Madison Square
Garden Network. He was the curator of the “Sting Like a Maccabee: The Golden
Age of the American Jewish Boxer” exhibit at the National Museum of American
Jewish History in Philadelphia (2004-05), and a co-curator of the San Francisco
Jewish Film Festival’s centerpiece program, “Jews, Boxing, and Hollywood”
(2007). He is a member of the New York State Boxing Hall of Fame.