There was a time when boxing was a heck of a lot more popular in America than it is now, and therefore The Ring -- which immodestly refers to itself as "The Bible of Boxing" -- was a heck of a lot more popular as well. But that was when the sport itself was viewed much differently. Changing demographics? Changing sensibilities? Changing ethnicity among the leading contenders? All these things and more undoubtedly have hurt American boxing, a sport now overseen by a confusing range of alphabet-soup sanctioning bodies and greedy cable TV promoters. This trend may be reflected in how hard it can be to locate the latest issue of The Ring amidst all the professional wrestling, martial arts, and ultimate fighting magazines in the full-contact sports rack these days. The Ring has a long and varied history dating back to 1922. For a while the magazine was published by Bert Sugar, a colorful cigar-chomper generally regarded as the dean of boxing writers and a man who could have been created by Damon Runyon. But today's version of the mag has no such pedigree; a company owned by the slick entrepreneur Oscar De La Hoya now publishes The Ring. Boxing fans remember the night in 2004 when Bernard Hopkins landed a devastating left hook to the liver that resulted in the first knockdown of De La Hoya's career. But even then, the engaging fighter already was expanding into quite a few enterprises outside the ring. Which raises the question: Can someone who oversees a stable of dozens of contending athletes publish a successful and unbiased magazine devoted to that sport? The answer remains a work in progress, as sports journalists grapple with such issues in an age when baseball teams own the TV stations that broadcast their games. But the stakes are higher at The Ring, since the magazine awards titles and belts, and some of De La Hoya's fighters are in contention for them. Yet when the deal was finalized in 2007, he promised "total independence." Once you dive into The Ring, what may surprise you is just how much content is provided. There are 130 dense pages in the November issue, and the mag is filled with profiles, news, columns, rankings, forecasts. For those who are serious about the sweet science, that "bible" tag is fairly accurate. Yes, there's quite a bit of sloppy editing (weird hyphens pop up, quotation marks are opened but not closed, etc.). But there's also some good stuff: