There was a lingering feeling in the pit of my stomach during Saturdays Canelo Alvarez-Liam Smith bout that was hard to ignore and was probably best summed up in this tweet.Boxing fans should demand more from their favorite sport. This new norm is heartbreaking.- Brian Campbell (@BCampbellESPN) September 18, 2016Cynical fans on social media were quick to remind that this new norm wasnt that far removed from what we have experienced as a whole over the past decade. While in most cases thats true, with boxings many shortcomings having long become accepted by its worn down and underserved fan base.But if were being honest when looking at 2016 as a whole, its difficult to overlook that this is just about as bad as it gets. Already successful at running off casual fans thanks to its broken system, boxing is now threatening to do the same to its backbone of hard-core fans -- the same ones who defend (and most importantly fund) the sports slow decay.Here was Alvarez, the Mexican superstar and de facto face of the sport, headlining a pay-per-view no one asked for against a little known and overmatched opponent. The only thing at stake outside of Alvarez and promoter Oscar De La Hoya lining their own pockets was the trinket of a 154-pound title Smith had captured despite not having a signature victory of any kind.The fight also took place in a division in which Alvarez -- the sports lineal middleweight champion, no less -- has no interest in competing in. Even the undercard played down to its dismally low level of expectations.Afterward, both Alvarez and De La Hoya spun narratives of half-truths while attempting to put off for another year the superfight that should have already taken place -- Alvarezs showdown with unified middleweight titlist Gennady Golovkin -- to a time when Triple G will conveniently be closer to age 36 and fans will be worn out from the journey getting there.While Alvarez and De La Hoya arent exclusively to blame for boxings deeper dive into irrelevance in 2016, their unrepentant heel turn is discouraging when you consider their history for giving fans what they want and deserve.But during a calendar year in which nearly all parties involved have put their own immediate financial needs in front of the long-term health of the sport, its becoming increasingly difficult for fans to separate the heroes from the villains.This isnt the every other year phenomenon that has recently plagued the sport, with both 2012 (drug suspensions, promotional cold war) and 2014 (well ... everything)?proving awful, only for the sport to rebound spectacularly in 2013 (great fights, healthy competition between HBO and Showtime) and 2015 (launch of PBC, Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao buzz).This is much worse, with years of disturbing trends finally escalating to the level of an epidemic. This is an entire sport taking the path of least resistance in hopes of creating a spark for that one great fight on the horizon, only to then milk it for all its worth with bait-and-switch tactics in the buildup.Sound familiar? Its Mayweather-Pacquiao all over again, which is something De La Hoya is clearly looking to replicate with Golovkin-Alvarez. But the flippant way in which hes testing the patience of his own customers during a time when boxing no longer has the collateral to do so is short-sighted, especially after so many casual fans -- the ones needed to sell large numbers of PPVs -- vowed to never be fooled again after the $100 dud last May.Instead, 2016s biggest fights have been a series of glorified mismatches and gratuitous rematches, making boxing feel more like a touring rock concert than an actual competition, with top superstars being paid handsomely to play their hits in fights designed to make them look good. Watching Alvarez croon his adoring crowd of 50,000-plus fans at the cavernous AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, very much felt the same way, which was probably by design.Alvarez has become just another imitator of the dangerous precedent set by Mayweather, who repeatedly leveraged his sublime talent and marketability into a series of low-risk marquee fights for large rewards. Its a business model designed by Mayweathers adviser and PBC creator Al Haymon, who lets not forget came to boxing fresh off his success as a giant in which avenue? Yes, the concert promotion business.Its the same copycat model being attempted by PBC fighters like Adonis Stevenson, Danny Garcia and Adrien Broner, with each one gaining an inflated sense of financial worth after being overpaid for showcase fights, providing them with literally millions of reasons to outright avoid the dangerous ones.Its one thing for only one of boxings top stars to consistently match himself disproportionate to his talent level, as fans had endured with Mayweather in recent years. But when it quickly becomes nearly every big name in the sport, making fights that matter becomes impossible.Gone is the fantasy that if casual fans, who only came around twice per year to complain how boring and expensive a Mayweather pay-per-view fight was, would just watch the sport on the other 50 weekends each year, they would be hooked. Not in 2016.Not with HBO, long the gold standard for boxing on premium pay cable, handcuffed with budget issues, forcing one non-deserving fight after another to the PPV level. And not with PBC largely refusing to match its best against each other in cards not funded by Showtime/CBS, while constantly flooding the market on other networks with fights not worthy of being televised.Even the one fight that truly matters above all this year -- the Nov. 19 showdown for pound-for-pound supremacy between unified light heavyweight titlist Sergey Kovalev and Andre Ward -- has been saddled with an unnecessary year-long buildup in which both fighters looked underwhelming in tune-up bouts, robbing from the potential crossover buzz.The sport has done well to fight off the constant boxing is dead hysteria in recent years by providing its hardened regulars with just enough reminders as to why they fell in love in the first place, despite constant obstacles like big-name promoters proving unwilling to work with each other.The reason is because boxings almost arrogant resiliency takes root within a singular reality that remains true: When its operating at its best, no other sport can provide an equal high or summon as deep an emotional reaction as boxing. In fact, its not even close.In that regard, boxing is an addiction for most true fans that is very hard to quit. Promoters know this; in fact, they feast on this. But its an abusive relationship at best, especially in 2016. And when theres little payoff to be found for the fans whose hard-earned pay keep the sport moving, soon enough theres little reason to tune in.Its heartbreaking to know that your favorite sport must complete its decades-long fall before it can ever truly be fixed.Its very likely that 2016 wont be that year, despite the many problems that boxing remains embroiled in. But it would be nice if those in power woke up to the reality of the sports sinking-ship existence and spent less time preparing their own lifeboat.It would be just as nice for fans to finally use their voice in the only true manner that affects change -- with their wallet -- and stop accepting the status quo.Alvarez-Smith wasnt the only thing thats wrong with boxing in 2016, but its surely a microcosm of the path of least resistance trend that is further distancing this once great sport from the potential that still exists, buried deep within the ruins of its own remains. Wholesale Jerseys . "Theyve both been real good," said Babcock. "Havent changed our minds." A decision has seemingly been made - Sundays Group B-deciding tilt against Finland ahead - but it could not have been an easy one. Price opened the tournament with a sturdy 19-save performance against the Norwegians, yielding just one goal. 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BOSTON -- It wasnt as timely as the one the night before, but dont ask Hanley Ramirez which home run was better.Both of them, the Red Sox first baseman said with a laugh after he homered for the second straight game -- and for the second straight game helped Boston beat the rival New York Yankees.One night after hitting a three-run shot as the Red Sox rallied in the series opener, Ramirez added a solo drive to help Boston win 7-4 on Friday night and protect its two-game lead in the AL East.David Ortiz had a pair of hits, including a double that was the 1,187th extra-base hit of his career. That moved him out of a tie with Frank Robinson and into 11th on baseballs all-time list; Lou Gehrig is next with 1,190.Ramirezs homer was his ninth in 16 games.The middle of the order has been powerful, and it has been consistent, manager John Farrell said of Nos. 3-4-5 hitters Ortiz, Mookie Betts and Ramirez, who had two hits apiece. (Ramirez) has been on a good run for nearly a month now.Jackie Bradley Jr. also homered for Boston, which maintained a two-game lead over Baltimore and Toronto.The Yankees, who on Thursday night were one out from climbing within three games of the division lead, fell six games back. They are four behind co-leaders Baltimore and Toronto in the wild-card race.Obviously, we would have liked to win a couple games here, but theres still some time, third baseman Chase Headley said. Its reachable. Weve just got to go get on another streak and start winning some games.Clay Buchholz (7-10) allowed two runs on seven hits and two walks, striking out two in six innings.Luis Cessa (4-2) gave up three runs and six hits, striking out one in five innings. In his second game since signing with the Yankees, Billy Butler hit a two-run homer in the ninth to make it 7-4, but Craig Kimbrel got two outs for his 26th save.Ortiz singled in the first and was thrown out trying to stretch it into a double.dddddddddddd He did double off the center-field wall in the sixth, giving him a major league-leading 47 for the season and moving him two doubles behind Ted Williams for second place in franchise history.CRAZY FIRSTCessa allowed the first five batters to reach, but two of them were thrown out trying to stretch singles into doubles. Betts was also called for the potential inning-ending out stealing second, but the replay review showed he was safe.Boston still came away with two runs in the first against Cessa.He kind of got through the first inning with good defense, Yankees manager Joe Girardi said.BUCH STOPS HEREBuchholz bounced back from his shortest start of the season with six solid innings and his second consecutive win. The Red Sox righty, who has bounced back and forth from the bullpen, pitched out of jams in the second and third but gave up a pair of runs in the fifth.He created a couple of jams for himself, Farrell said. Hed bend a little bit but still stay away from the big inning.Buchholz entered the night with a 5-9 career record and a 6.19 ERA against the Yankees.TRAINERS ROOMYankees: 1B Mark Teixeira (neck) was back in the lineup after missing the previous two games.Red Sox: Farrell said knuckleballer Steven Wright has made progress with his right shoulder that he injured diving back to a base pinch running in early August. Hes not feeling anything right now, Farrell said. The next step is for Wright to throw in Fort Myers, Florida, when the team heads out on a road trip.UP NEXTYankees: RHP Bryan Mitchell (1-1, 6.14 ERA) makes his sixth career start Saturday afternoon.Red Sox: LHP David Price (16-8, 3.81) looks to extend his career-best winning streak to eight games. Hes allowed two or fewer runs in his last six starts. ' ' '