On The Ropes: Decades of corruption have put Olympic in jeopardy

By Norm Frauenheim-

Michael Conlan’s obscene gesture at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games threatens to become a symbolic goodbye to Olympic boxing in a political fight that is just another outrageous example of deeply-rooted corruption.

In a meeting this weekend of amateur officials in Moscow — of all places, there apparently will be a last ditch-effort to save boxing from getting eliminated from the Tokyo Games in 2020. The allegations are dark. Media reports read like a spy novel, or the Mueller investigation: https://sports.yahoo.com/underdog-candidate-fights-boxings-oly mpic-future-192048341–box.html

But none of it is exactly a shock, either. It’s disappointing, profoundly sad, for anybody who remembers in Rome, in Tokyo, in Mexico City and Sugar Ray Leonard in . But it could have been corrected and ultimately avoided had there been a vigilant International Olympic Committee more concerned about integrity than rights fees.

Truth is, the IOC should have suspended the amateur ring in 1988 after Roy Jones Jr. got robbed of gold in Seoul. It was then and there that boxing should have been put on notice and told to get its act together. Serve a suspension in 1992 and then come back in 1996 with new procedures, honest judges and without the bagmen.

But the Lords of the Olympic Rings turned a blind eye to the mess. They moved on, collecting huge money from politicians willing to spend taxpayers’ money for the right to stage the circus.

The Lords got richer. Olympic boxing just got more corrupt. I’ll leave it up to somebody else to decide if there’s much of a difference.

For now, it’s just easy to get rid of the obvious blight. Boxing and blight have always been neighbors, of course. But the IOC allowed the sport to become irreparable. It simply ignored it, literally pushing it to the fringe.

In Seoul, boxing was staged within walking distance of the pool and main stadium. The summer games have always been divided into two parts — swimming over the first eight days; track-and-field over the second eight. Over the last few Olympics, that meant the first week and Usain Bolt in the second.

Between races, there was boxing and gymnastics. After the 1988 scandal, however, boxing got shoved off the midway and into places increasingly hard to find. By 2004 in Athens, the Olympic ring, was hidden in a rough neighborhood, far from the Big Top and NBC’s studios. For the Lords, it was out of sight, out of mind. Too bad. ’s gold medal on the last day of those Games was as compelling as any performance in Athens.

Even then, however, the whiff of corruption had begun to cloud the future of Olympic boxing. In 2008, there were allegations of an Eastern European offering bribes to the chief of judges. According to the allegations, he was offering payola for certain judges to get assigned to specific bouts. It was an alleged scheme to fix fights in the medal rounds.

At about midnight in Beijing, a news conference was scheduled. A handful of reporters, including this one, showed up. Nothing much was decided. Nothing much was reported.

The Lords looked the other way. The corruption deepened.

A couple of months after Conlan’s middle finger said it all after the Belfast fighter – now a professional – lost a controversial decision in the quarter-finals, every judge and referee at the Rio Games were suspended.

Only the boxers and fans were – still are — there. But it’s beginning to look as if they were just forgotten, lost like a business expense incurred by an IOC more interested in big fees than fair fights.