The
restoration of Ron Lipton’s referee’s licence just over a year ago by the New
York State Athletic Commission, was from the perspective of many committed
boxing fans, I think, acknowledged more with an overwhelming feeling of relief
and less with a sense of triumph.
Here,
after all, is a man who had officiated at the highest levels of the sport in
the 1990s but whose licence, revoked initially on the basis of an incident in
which he was acting in self-defence, had became embroiled in a protracted
effort to secure registration in a toxin-permeated atmosphere of what appeared
to be an interminable series of obfuscations and needless and heavy-handed bias.
Still,
with well over a decade of his refereeing career frozen and never to be
returned, it was in something of a celebratory mood that in May earlier this
year, a party of upwards of 70 persons consisting of his family, friends,
acquaintances and students from New York City’s Marist College in Poughkeepsie
came out to see Lipton referee a preliminary bout on a bill headlined by
Patrick Hyland, an up and coming super featherweight.
Some
may have considered it to be something of a humiliation, or if that is too
strong a word, something of a ‘comedown’, to be refereeing on a prelim bout before
a hometown audience. But not Lipton.
How
would one know this? Anyone looking on as a member of the audience or tuned
into the live Internet stream would have noticed Lipton’s figure, situated just
outside the spotlights which were strategically shone onto the squared ring, in
the partially-darkened vicinity of the ring; his silhouette conveying an erect
and focussed posture.
They
would have then observed him proceed to embark on a gentle but precisely
executed set of stretching exercises, and would have noted him purposefully walking
around the ring prior to the entrances of the combatants of the bout to which
he had been designated to officiate.
This
is Lipton before any bout he officiates. It matters not whether he is about to
officiate a twelve-round world championship bout before a capacity crowd of
frenzied Irishmen in the Green Glens Arena in County Cork or in a six-round preliminary
bout in a modest promotion in New York State; Lipton is the same model professional
exhibiting the same high level of commitment and diligence before, during and
after the fight that he is overseeing.
This
will not come as a surprise to those who have known him in his capacity as a
trainer, a college instructor, an award-winning choreographer and as an officer
in law enforcement.
To
know Lipton is to recognise in both his background and persona a dyed-in-the-wool
native of New York City. What with underpinnings as a police official, a three-time
boxing champion in the amateur ranks (albeit achieved in neighbouring New
Jersey) alongside his Jewish-Italian heritage, he is a definition of the
essence of what could be defined as ‘traditional’ New York.
And
with his ambiance as a tough and versatile, life-long dweller and operator
within the hyper-competitive jungle of America’s foremost conurbation,
there resides in his cool, articulate demeanour something of the unquenchable
spirit referred to by the character portrayed by Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca who matter-of-a-factly cautions
the Nazi figure played by Conrad Veidt about the practicability of invading
certain neighbourhoods in New York.
For
most of his life, Lipton has lived and breathed boxing. Yet, one year on after
the re-issuance of his licence, the May fight is the only one he has participated
in despite a number of high profile promotions having taken place. The biting sense
of discrepancy is not displaced even if one allows for an ostensibly not
unreasonable strategy of easing him back into his duties after his rather
lengthy ‘lay off.’ The fact is that Lipton does not appear to have been used as
often as he could and should be utilised particularly given his vast experience.
What
is behind this seeming policy of exclusion if no longer outright ostracism?
During his enforced absence, Lipton was outspoken in his criticism of certain
figures in the boxing industry and specifically was unrelenting in his
denunciations of what he perceived to be the woeful standards of refereeing.
The
latter was not particularly controversial given the widespread criticisms of
certain referees voiced by fans on the pages of boxing magazines and Internet
sites. Most notorious was the condemnation and revulsion felt by many at the
handling of a fight involving Beethoven Scotland who later died from brain
injuries. This formed the centre point of an article by the late Jack Newfield in
the November edition of The Nation in
2001.
While
Lipton lessened the tone of the criticisms he had voiced about certain figures,
he remained uncompromising in his appraisals of refereeing competence. His outspokenness
was due not only to the injustice meted to him but also because many
aficionados of the sport sought his opinions in the aftermath of every major
match on the cyberboxingzone website where he has served as a popular
and respected resident expert for over a decade.
Since
his formal re-instatement among the fraternity of New York referees, he has
kept silent on performance as he is bound by a code of conduct. But the
developments over the past year appear not to have solved the issues at the
heart of his original blackballing.
If
the often self-touted cultural trait of British ‘fair play’ is not a phrase
commonly used across the Atlantic, the Americans nonetheless frequently assert
the pre-eminence of justice as an essential cog in the conduct of the affairs
of their society. Openness and transparency
are the highly valued corresponding values in an avowedly competitive culture
shorn of the stereotypically tradition bound methods practised in the so-called
‘Old World.’
But
in the culture of New York, the LaGuardian values of meritocracy have for long
vied with those of Tammany Hall-like patronage and deeply embedded traditions of
intrigue and the closed-door dealings of cabals.
From
this writer’s outsider’s vantage point, it is almost inconceivable to think of
the son-of-the-soil Lipton being the victim of an ethnic-based prejudice, although
he is surely one of a few Jewish referees who have operated at top level boxing
in recent times. The same applies even taking into consideration the changes in
demography and the increased and influential role of African-Americans and
Latinos in boxing administration since the 1970s. Those familiar with the
Lipton story would be aware of his championing the cause of African-Americans
and other minorities which was undertaken at great personal cost while he was
in law enforcement.
The
suspicion is that there are issues at play which may be rooted in party political
allegiances or are predicated on persons bearing a particularly severe form of
personal animus.
Meanwhile,
as the sands of time ebb away ever slowly but surely, the Jeffersonian quote
about justice not sleeping forever must continually plague the mind of Ron
Lipton and, indeed, any reasonable and objective person who loves and cares for
the sport of boxing.
(c) Adeyinka Makinde (2012)
Ron Lipton is featured in IMPACT: Jewish Boxers in America a new documentary airing on Cablevision and The Jewish Channel.
(c) Adeyinka Makinde (2012)
Ron Lipton is featured in IMPACT: Jewish Boxers in America a new documentary airing on Cablevision and The Jewish Channel.
Adeyinka
Makinde is the author of DICK TIGER: The Life and Times of a Boxing
Immortal and JERSEY BOY: The Life and
Mob Slaying of Frankie DePaula.
Website: http://adeyinkamakinde.homestead.com/index.html
Website: http://adeyinkamakinde.homestead.com/index.html
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