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Jul 24, 2005
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Danny Garcia says he’ll be moving up to 147, Lamont Peterson wants rematch
date April 12th, 2015 | Post Comment - 47 Comments

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By Dan Ambrose: Lamont Peterson (33-3-1, 17 KOs) lost his IBF light welterweight title last Saturday night in his narrow 12 round majority decision defeat in front of 12,300 fans to WBA/WBC 140lb champion Danny Garcia (30-0, 17 KOs) in their catch-weight fight at 143 pounds at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

The International Boxing Federation said that Peterson’s IBF title would be on the line, not to be won, against Garcia, but to be lost if he was beaten. Peterson now wants a rematch against Garcia, but for that to happen he’s going to need to move up to 147 because that’s where Garcia is heading.

The fight was televised by Premier Boxing Champions on NBC.

“Garcia said after fight he will probably go up to 147 for his next fight. Peterson said he’d strongly consider it. Garcia-Peterson #boxing.” Dan Rafael said on his twitter.

If a second fight between Garcia and Peterson is going to take place, it’s going to require that Peterson follow Garcia up to 147, because that could be used an excuse not to take the fight against him. But it’s also going to be up to their adviser Al Haymon to determine if he wants to put them back in with each other. It’s a gamble either way. If Peterson loses a second time to Garcia, his value might drop as a fighter because that would be yet another loss for him. But if Peterson beats Garcia, then we could see Garcia’s stock drop off badly. He already didn’t look good against Peterson in taking a battering from him last Saturday night. Garcia looked more like the loser than the winner, and it did not look good with the way that Garcia was retreating all around the ring in the last two rounds. That’s not the way that a future Floyd Mayweather Jr opponent is supposed to look.

If Mayweather to fight Garcia right now after this fight, Mayweather would take a ton of heat from boxing fans because of how poor Garcia looked. Say what you want about Mayweather’s last opponent Marcos Maidana, at least he looked good in beating Adrien Broner to get his first fight against Mayweather. Maidana earned the second fight against Mayweather by fighting his heart out. Maidana wasn’t running around the ring from Mayweather to escape punishment like Garcia did against Peterson.

Peterson said on his twitter “I did what I came to do. I’m ready for Part Two!”
Garcia won the fight by the scores of 114-114, 115-113 and 115-113.
“I’ll gladly fight him again if he wants,” Peterson said via ESPN.com. “But it was hard enough getting him in the ring the first time.”

I think it’s safe to say that there won’t be another Garcia vs. Peterson fight. It’s a fight that Garcia needs to take to show the boxing fans that his poor performance was just a fluke, but I don’t think it’s going to happen. I think he or his adviser Haymon see too much risk in a second fight against Peterson, and they’d rather move on and take a couple of fights before facing Mayweather with still and unbeaten record. Garcia can then cash out in that fight in the process of taking a likely one-sided loss. Peterson would likely have to drag Garcia back into the ring to get him to fight him a second time because I don’t see him taking the fight a second time.
Garcia landed 173 of 589 punches, according to CompuBox. Peterson connected on 170 of 494 punches. Peterson would have landed a lot more if he hadn’t spent so much time moving.

“I thought it was close, I’m not gonna lie. But felt like I did enough to win,” Garcia said.

I think a lot of boxing fans would disagree with Garcia. Of course, they had the advantage of watching the fight at a distance instead of being in the ring. But even though Garcia did when the fight, he lost the event. His stock went down while Peterson’s went up. Now it’s up to Garcia to make the right move to bring his popular back up. One way of doing that is to fight Peterson again. Another way of doing it is for Garcia to take on a dangerous welterweight like Marcos Maidana, Adrien Broner or Keith Thurman. Broner and Maidana have already called Garcia out.

If Garcia isn’t interested in facing Peterson again or taking on any quality welterweights, then he’s going to have to likely see his popularity plummet in the same way that a fighter does after he takes a loss. Regardless of the fact that Garcia won the fight, it was seen as a loss by a lot of boxing fans. The body language that Garcia exhibited as he retreated all around the ring in the last four rounds against Peterson was ugly to watch. Garcia’s puffed up right eye made him look even worse. But more important than that was the worry that Garcia showed on his face as he wilted under the pressure from Peterson. That was just sad. Garcia looked scared, confused and defeated. The fact that he was given a controversial decision by the judges doesn’t change anything. He was still seen as a fighter that looked horrible, and he’s now longer seen as a future star by a lot of boxing fans.

“I was putting a lot of effort into the eye to get it to swell up as much as I could,” Peterson said.

Peterson really worked over Garcia’s right eye with his thudding shots. He wasn’t punching with the same kind of power that Garcia was, but he had enough power in his shots to do a lot of damage. Peterson’s power is underrated for sure, and he makes up for what he lacks in one-punch power by him landing a lot of hard shots. The body shots especially seemed to take a lot of energy out of Garcia. He was trying to hold Peterson on the inside to keep him from throwing to the body, but it didn’t work too well. Peterson was still able to break out of his clinches and keep throwing to the body and the head.
 
May 13, 2002
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Cuenca, Yang ordered by IBF to fight

NEW YORK -- Even though Saturday night's fight between unified junior welterweight world champion Danny Garcia and titleholder Lamont Peterson was a nontitle bout contracted at a catch weight of 143 pounds, the outcome still cost Peterson his belt.

Peterson lost a majority decision at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, and thus was stripped of his 140-pound world title by the IBF. Peterson would have not been stripped had he won his second nontitle bout in his last four fights.

With the belt now vacant -- and Peterson saying after the fight that he might be headed for the welterweight division anyway -- the IBF said Sunday that it will order 34-year-old Argentine southpaw Cesar Rene Cuenca (47-0, 2 KOs) to face South Korea's Ik Yang (19-0, 14 KOs), 30, to fight for it. Cuenca and Yang are the top fighters in the organization's rankings.

Cuenca is coming off a unanimous decision over Albert Mensah in a title eliminator last May in Argentina. Yang, a regular on Top Rank's cards in Macau, China, knocked out Patomsuk Pathompothong in the sixth round of a title eliminator on March 7 in Macau.

The fight between Cuenca and Yang, should a deal be made, could take place on Top Rank's next card in Macau, which is scheduled for July 18.
Cuenca and Yang? Bizarre. Hope Yang wins. Neither will hold that belt long that's for sure.
 
May 13, 2002
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Really odd match making here. Races would be moving up and skipping 135 pounds altogether, straight to 140...

Michael Woods @Woodsy1069
Looking like we get @AdrienBroner vs Rances BARTHELEMY June 20. Cincy



This would be a sick main event though:

FIGHTHYPE.COM
KEITH THURMAN VS. SHAWN PORTER BEING DISCUSSED FOR JUNE 20 PBC CARD? KEITH THURMAN VS. SHAWN PORTER BEING DISCUSSED FOR JUNE 20 PBC CARD?|| FIGHTHYPE.COM #fighthype
3:53 AM - 13 Apr 2015
 
Props: Joey and Joey
May 13, 2002
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Cotto-Geale Clash Will Head To Barclays on June 6th



By Miguel Rivera

BoxingScene.com reported two weeks ago that former champion Daniel Geale (31-3, 16KOs) became the frontrunner to face WBC middleweight champion Miguel Cotto (39-4, 32KOs) on June 6th in New York City. A deal has apparently been completed, according to a report by El Vocero. Cornelius 'K9' Bundrage and Jorge Sebastian Heiland were the other two candidates in the running.

The paper reports that Cotto's next fight, televised by HBO, will head to the Barclays Center in Brooklyn. Cotto's New York career has been built at the rival venue, Madison Square Garden in Manhattan, but the fighter is making some changes. Earlier this year he signed a multi-fight promotional agreement with Roc Nation Sport.

The paper says a press conference will take place next Wednesday at Barclays to announce the fight. Geale was knocked out by middleweight king Gennady Golovkin but later bounced back with a decision win over Jarrod Fletcher to close out 2014.
 
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May 13, 2002
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Catchweight For Cotto-Geale Is 157

Reports are now coming out that a fight between WBC middleweight titlist Miguel Cotto (39-4, 32KOs), and Australia's Daniel Geale (31-3, 16KOs), has been finalized for June 6th at the Barclay Center in Brooklyn, New York. It will be the Puerto Rican's first defense of that title he won last year by thrashing Sergio Martinez in ten rounds at the Madison Square Garden.

According to a source with knowledge of the situation, a catch-weight of 157-pounds has been instituted for this match-up. Cotto, has spent much of his career around the welterweight and junior middleweight classes. Last July, Geale was blown out by Gennady Golovkin in three rounds. He came back a few months later to win a decision over countryman Jarrod Fletcher.
 
Aug 31, 2003
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36 years ago today Chan Hee Park made the last defense of the lineal flyweight title against Alberto Morales. Park didn't end his career with a sparkling record like most old school fighters (17-4-2) but he did beat the great Miguel Canto 10 fights into his career to win the lineal title. Park would be the 2nd fighter in a link of 29 fighters for the longest running lineal title in boxing that spans from 1975 (Miguel Canto) to right now (Roman Gonzalez).

Morales really had no business fighting for the belt and it was actually his second shot at the same WBC title, first with it being the lineal title.

 
Jul 24, 2005
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I think it still good numbers for 4 boxers that don't have a big fan base

Danny Garcia vs. Lamont Peterson had 3.4 million viewers on PBC on NBC
date April 13th, 2015 | Post Comment - 8 Comments

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garcia25By Dan Ambrose: Last Saturday’s fight between WBA/WBC light welterweight champion Danny Garcia (30-0, 17 KOs) and IBF 140lb champion Lamont Peterson (33-3-1, 17 KOs) was a huge success on Premier Boxing Champions on NBC. The fight brought a peak of 3.4 million viewers on NBC, according to Fight news.

The fight averaged 2.9 million. That figure makes the Garcia vs. Peterson fight the second highest watched fight in the last 17 years. That’s pretty impressive to say the least.

The Garcia-Peterson fight took place at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. Garcia won the fight by a somewhat controversial 12 round majority decision by the scores 114-114, 115-113 and 115-113. Even if you agreed with the decision, and there were many boxing fans who didn’t, you have to agree that Garcia did not shine in the fight.

This was definitely not his finest hour of his pro career, as Peterson came on strong in the 2nd half of the fight and landed the more telling blows. The way Peterson dominated Garcia in the second half of the fight was a lot more impressive and one-sided than the way that Garcia got the better of Peterson in the 1st half of the fight.

Garcia really wasn’t landing a lot of shots in the first half of the fight mainly because of Peterson’s movement and excellent defense. Garcia’s shots were hitting mostly air with an occasional punch connecting with Peterson’s head or body. Garcia had a lot more luck landing body shots than he did with head shots. However, Peterson paid Garcia back when he threw to the body, and this cancelled out a lot what Garcia was doing.

With the high ratings, which obviously dwarf the numbers that HBO and Showtime fights typically get, there might be some interest from NBC in a rematch between Peterson and Garcia. Peterson wants a rematch because he feels like he’s got Garcia’s number now after dominating the second half of the fight. However, Garcia is leaving it up to his manager Al Haymon and the network whether they want to see a rematch between him and Peterson. At the end of the day, Haymon will likely make the decision whether there should be a rematch or not.

Haymon seems to be building Garcia up to get a big fight against Floyd Mayweather Jr in the future. For that reason I don’t think that Haymon will green light a second fight between Garcia and Peterson. Garcia will probably move up in weight to 147 and take a couple of stay busy fights against fringe contenders to pad his resume with. They will then likely take the fight against Mayweather. It’s also quite possible that Garcia would wind up getting a shot against Mayweather if he defeats Manny Pacquiao in their fight on May 2nd. If there’s not a rematch between Mayweather and Pacquiao, then I can see Haymon setting up the Mayweather vs. Garcia fight so that the fight is made while Garcia is still undefeated.

Garcia doesn’t look solid enough to beat the best fighters at 147, or even some of the best fighters at 140. Light welterweight Adrien Broner wants to fight Garcia after watching his fight against Peterson. Marcos Maidana wants to fight Garcia as well.
 
Aug 31, 2003
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KO of the day!!!
Teofilo Stevenson vs Mamoudo Drame (shot out to naner12 @naner12 )

0:15
14 years ago today Bernard Hopkins fought WBC champion Keith Holmes in his first unification fight towards complete middleweight unification. In his next fight he'd be exposed to the world against Trinidad.


 
Jul 24, 2005
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EyeOn
Sports
Al Bernstein remembers being ringside for Hagler-Hearns
By Al Bernstein | Showtime Boxing Analyst
April 14, 2015 9:35 pm ET

Some moments in time are frozen in our memories. Such a moment came for me on April 15th, 1985, as I sat ringside announcing the now epic clash between "Marvelous" Marvin Hagler and "Hitman" Tommy Hearns. Both men had made their dramatic entrances into the ring and been introduced to the crowd, and they stood there moments away from beginning the fight. I took a moment to live that moment. I surveyed the large crowd at the outdoor stadium at Caesars Palace and listened to the din that was already starting in anticipation of this match. I consciously thought about how lucky I was to be sitting in that seat at that moment. I thought how lucky we all were to be present for something so special. Little did I know just how special it would be.

That was an era in boxing in which extraordinary and even history-making matches were the norm, not the exception. The 1980's was a a decade filled with great boxers and great boxing matches. At the top of the food chain were the "Four Kings": Hagler, Hearns, Roberto Duran and Sugar Ray Leonard. Much like the Rat Pack did in entertainment years earlier, these four men used Las Vegas as their main venue to make magic happen. At a time when boxing still enjoyed a place at the table of major sports in America, those four men were each superstars individually. When put in the orbit of each other they became supernovas. Any pairing of those four created a mega-event. It was in that setting that Hagler and Hearns met in the ring on that spring night 30 years ago today.

Will Mayweather-Pacquiao be anything close to the Hagler-Hearns battle? (Getty Images) Will Mayweather-Pacquiao be anything close to the Hagler-Hearns battle? (Getty Images)

When this fight took place I was 34 years old and only about five years into my broadcasting career. I had announced the Hagler-Duran fight in 1983 and here I was two years later announcing another mega-fight. I was extremely fortunate to get these kinds of opportunities so early in my broadcasting journey. This assignment was one reason 1985 was a watershed year for me. It was also the year I met the great Don Dunphy, the best boxing announcer of all time. I had watched him as a youngster and after I interviewed him for the fifth anniversary of the Top Rank Boxing show on ESPN, he became my mentor and friend -- a rare and treasured gift in life. The Hagler-Hearns telecast continued my association with great sportscasters. The legendary Curt Gowdy worked as the host on that show and Al Michaels, already well on his way to a hall of fame career, joined me at ringside to do play by play. It felt like we were each representing a slightly different genre and generation of broadcasters, coming together for what we all knew was a remarkable event.

If there was camaraderie among the television crew doing this fight, not so with the combatants. Marvin and Tommy were originally supposed to fight three years earlier but a earns hand injury postponed the fight, and then it was somehow canceled. Both men moved on to other fights, but Hagler seethed over what he perceived as Hearns ruining a mega fight. During the press tour to promote the 1985 fight both fighters got under each other's skin in a big way. They were primed and ready for battle.

In all my years of announcing I have never felt the same kind of intensity from fighters as I did when doing one-on-one interviews with hagler and Hearns several days before the fight. The producers were worried that Marvin would not even sit for his interview, and then when he was on his way they worried he would be unresponsive, or something worse, when he got there to talk with me. When he arrived, I was warned that his mood was surly at best. I wasn't worried. I assured them that I had established a strong relationship with Marvin and more importantly he was always a professional. He came, he interviewed and it was riveting. At one point when I asked him what we would see in the ring he said nothing, but simply pointed to the front of his baseball cap. The word on the cap was WAR.

When the fight started Marvin made sure the word on his hat was prophetic. He went to war and so did Tommy Hearns. Marvin charged out hard and attacked. Tommy landed a huge right hand early that had us believing on the telecast that Hagler might have been shook up. He would tell me after the fight it didn't hurt him it only made him mad. The rest of the round was Hagler attacking viciously with shots to the body and head and Hearns responding with powerful right hands and uppercuts. I am not given to hyperbole, but I said the end of the round, "perhaps one of the best rounds in middleweight history." Since then no one has ever argued with that declaration.

The noise, even in an outdoor stadium, had reached an epic level and it was as if everyone present had realized after one round that this fight was never going the distance. That point was driven home when round 2 was almost as good as round one. Hagler, with blood streaming down his face from bad cuts, kept attacking with Hearns counterpunching to beat the band. I thought during that round that against any other fighter the huge counter punches that Hearns landed would have produced a knockout. Against Hagler they just slowed him temporarily.

In round three was a seminal moment in this fight. Referee Richard Steele stopped the action to bring Hagler over to be examined by the the ring doctor. Everyone in that arena held their breath; no one wanted that fight stopped at that point. Doctor Donald Romeo let the fight continue and Hagler would say later that was the moment that sealed the doom of Hearns. Marvin then knew that there was a real possibility he could lose the fight due to cuts -- he would not let that happen. He attacked even harder. An avalanche of punches ending with a straight right sent Hearns down. He barely got up, but could not continue. Eight minutes of hell was over.

Had that fight continued even a round more it might have been Hearns winning by TKO due to Hagler's cuts. As a side note, it did it end right on time for my friend and uber boxing fan Garry Shandling. He was performing as the opening act for Joan Rivers at Caesar's Palace that night, but couldn't resist coming to the fight. When the fight ended he raced back to the Caesar's Palace showroom to barely make it in time to get on stage. He told me, "I only had enough time for a 2 1/2 round fight and that's what it was." I'm guessing that accommodating Garry was not a priority for Hagler that night, but cementing his place in history certainly was. He did that in a profound way.

In the post fight interview I did with Marvin he said simply, "Tommy is a great fighter." Amen. In losing his second fight as a pro (the other to Sugar Ray Leonard in an epic battle) Tommy Hearns did nothing to endanger his status as a Hall of Famer. And on the day of his enshrinement in the International Boxing Hall Of Fame he joked to Marvin, "we can do it again." Any acrimony that existed before that fight has long since melted away and I can't even imagine any other two men who better represent how special boxers are as athletes. Also during the post fight interview Marvin asked the rhetorical question, "Do you think everyone got their money's worth tonight." I never got to answer that in the ring that night, but some 30 years later I can say to him we are STILL getting our money's worth.

That was then and this is now. My good fortune continues because I will be ringside as part of the announcing team for the Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao fight in Las Vegas at the MGM Grand Garden arena, the current home of big fights in Las Vegas. In the intervening years since Hagler-Hearns my enthusiasm and zeal for announcing big fights like this has not waned, nor has the public's appetite for a mega event that features two iconic boxers. Yes, boxing is more of a niche sport (especially in America) than it was for the Hagler-Hearns fight, but it can also be said that the sport is in the midst of a mini-renaissance. It can also be said that both Mayweather and Pacquiao are mainstream sports stars. Unlike other boxers today they ARE covered by the mainstream sports media even when they fight against other opponents. Fighting each other has created a firestorm of media coverage and also attention on something that did not exist in 1985—the internet. The burgeoning world of social media has given Mayweather-Pacquiao a leg up that Hagler-Hearns did not have.

On this 30th anniversary of Hagler-Hearns, many have suggested comparisons between Mayweather-Pacquiao and the big matches in the 1980s. Back then I ended up announcing nine major fights involving the four kings against each other or different opponents. In recent years I have done two of Pacquiao's pay-per-view fights and four of Mayweather's. I have lived both eras. I can say that Mayweather-Pacquaio does indeed have the same feel to it as those earlier blockbusters. Like those fights it has captured the attention of most sports fans, transcending just boxing afficiandos. It will again make Las Vegas the center of the sports world and create excitement and gridlock on the famous Vegas strip.

So, on May 2nd when Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao are in the ring set for battle, from my seat at the ringside announcer's table, I will try to really live that moment as well, just as I did 30 years earlier. And I will fervently hope that they can give us something even approximating what two of the four kings gave the world on that spring night in 1985.
Topics: Mayweather vs Pacquiao, BOXING
 
May 13, 2002
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Decent article on why PBC is a succes so far.

In the NBC Saturday prime time slot they are up an average of 190% in the 18-49 demo. NBC sports execs are apparently happy.





Al Haymon still pulling all the strings as boxing's unknown czar

One of the most familiar phrases in boxing news coverage these days is, "Al Haymon doesn't speak to the media."

Boxing is going through a renaissance of sorts, and Haymon is at the forefront of it. The owner of the Las Vegas-based Haymon Boxing, he created the Premier Boxing Champions series that has brought the sport back onto network television.

PBC cards are broadcast in prime time on NBC and also appear, or soon will, on CBS, Spike, ABC, ESPN, NBC Sports Network and CBS Sports Network. So far, the fights have been of high quality and have gotten better than expected ratings.

The PBC's debut in prime time on NBC on March 7 became the most-watched boxing telecast since an Oscar De La Hoya card on Fox in 1998. It averaged 3.4 million viewers, peaked at 4.2 million and, perhaps most significantly, won the coveted 18-to-49-year-old demographic on broadcast television.

The second NBC prime time show, on Saturday from Brooklyn, was also a success, though not as overwhelming as the original show. It finished second on network television behind a NASCAR race on Fox in the 18-49 demographic.

It averaged 2.9 million viewers and peaked at 3.4 million. According to NBC, ratings were up 162 percent overall and 190 percent in the 18-49 demographic compared to the afternoon series that was on NBC from 2012-2014.

The PBC on NBC is 54 percent ahead of the rest of broadcast television in the 18-49 demographic for its two shows.

"Just to even be in the conversation with a property like NASCAR is incredible for us," said Lou Ferrer, the director of programming acquisitions for NBC Sports.

Yet some fellow promoters blast Haymon's efforts. Media has dogged him for his "time buys," as if something were wrong with putting quality fights on free broadcast television. Fans, particularly the hard-core ones, have blamed him for virtually every problem facing the sport.

UFC president Dana White, though, raved about what Haymon has done. White said the fact that Haymon raised money and is using it to put on high-quality events demonstrates an interest in the long-term future of the sport.

White has long been critical of boxing promoters for what he said has been siphoning off profits and not investing back into the business. He also criticized them for the lack of in-arena experience and said many of their "new" ideas were simply stolen from what the UFC has done.

Haymon raised a reported $100 million to fund the PBC, which White thinks is an example of desperately needed unconventional thinking in boxing.

"The product hasn't changed much at all for years and all of these [promoters] have taken and taken and not put a penny back into growing the business," White said. "I think what Haymon is doing is fantastic. He's done a few things I wouldn't do, but I don't want to criticize him because he's investing in the business and planning for growth."

Haymon advises more than 150 boxers, who in the ring after their fights on television routinely and almost comically thank God and then Haymon for their success. A popular meme among boxing fans is the hashtag #ThankYouAlHaymon.

The most prominent of his fighters is Floyd Mayweather, and Haymon's business savvy and shrewd advice played a large role in Mayweather's rise to iconic status in his sport.

Mayweather fights Manny Pacquiao on May 2 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas in a bout in which both men will make in excess of $100 million.

But Haymon is perceived to be the man behind the curtain even by those most closely involved. Top Rank CEO Bob Arum, who promotes Pacquiao, has been irate because a contract has not been completed with the MGM to host the Mayweather-Pacquiao bout.

He suggests that it is Haymon behind the strings manipulating things, causing the delays.

"This whole thing is a ticket play by Haymon," Arum said of the fact that tickets are still not on sale and a contract with the MGM is not finished despite the fight being less than three weeks away.

Mayweather Promotions CEO Leonard Ellerbe, though, insists Arum is mistaken and said that Haymon has nothing to do with when tickets go on sale, the MGM contract or any of a myriad of other issues between the two companies promoting the fight.

Those are all his jobs as CEO of Mayweather Promotions, and Haymon is not involved in them. Ellerbe is clearly devoted to Mayweather and has given nearly 20 years of his life to growing Mayweather's brand as well as his company.
Haymon's involvement with Mayweather Promotions is routinely portrayed incorrectly in the media, Ellerbe said.

"Al doesn't have a thing to do with this company," Ellerbe said. "He's Floyd's adviser. He has done a great job advising Floyd, as he has done a great job helping a lot of other fighters, as well. He's the best at getting guys the most [money].

"But I'm the one running Mayweather Promotions. He's not involved in it. I was in [MGM executive] Richard Sturm's office for six hours last week, not Al."

Haymon, who has an economics degree from Harvard, is a polite and agreeable sort whose business strategy includes never speaking to the media.

There is a sense of paranoia around his employees when they engage with the media. They're not allowed to discuss even the most minute of details without first checking with the boss.

His mysterious ways have led to many incomplete or inaccurate portrayals of him, those close to him say.

And he's an easy target for some media members to attack since he doesn't fire back. He doesn't speak publicly when he's happy and he doesn't speak publicly when he's angry.

When he chose not to speak to the media to explain his vision for the PBC and for returning boxing to prominence via network television, it allowed some of his competitors to chip away at him.

Both Top Rank president Todd duBoef and Main Events CEO Kathy Duva blasted Haymon for the time buys.

They have argued strenuously that Haymon is making it difficult, if not impossible, for other promoters to operate by what they believe is giving the product away.

Buying the airtime instead of having a network pay a rights fee to acquire it will have a chilling affect on the industry, they said. No matter the success of the PBC, they insist, networks will no longer be willing to pay for boxing if there is someone like Haymon willing to give it away.

However, it should be noted that Top Rank landed a deal with cable outlet TruTV after the PBC had debuted.

One source with knowledge of Haymon's operation spoke with Yahoo Sports on the guarantee of anonymity because he's not authorized to speak to media. He said that even if networks won't buy fights in the future, there is essentially no difference between obtaining the money from investors or obtaining it from a television network. The fights will still go on, the fighters will be paid and tickets will still be sold.

Promoter Lou DiBella called himself thrilled with his first effort at promoting a PBC show. He promoted the doubleheader on NBC in Brooklyn on Saturday, which drew a little more than 12,000 fans with a $1 million paid gate.

The ratings were good, which is the case for all PBC shows. Spike's first effort, on March 13, more than doubled the ratings ESPN2 usually gets in that same time slot on a Friday night.

CBS showed a bout on a Saturday noon on April 4, attracting 1.3 million viewers, which is roughly the audience a very successful HBO card would get in prime time.

"It attracted a much younger audience and did well with a demographic that had been said had tuned out boxing," DiBella said. "In both of the shows [in prime time on NBC] to this point, the demo has done very well."

Haymon, of course, isn't available to talk about it. Or to talk about the Mayweather fight. Or to talk about anything else going on in boxing.

He's the most powerful man in the sport, but he's not going to share his thoughts with the public for any reason. Every scrap of information he provides is on a need-to-know basis only. The president of the United States is more accountable than Haymon.

Ferrer, though, isn't complaining. Known as Luis Barragan when he was an executive at HBO Sports, Ferrer said the PBC is clearly a viable property for NBC.

"Every way you could possibly look at this, the raw numbers, the key demographics, whatever, the PBC is an unmitigated success," Ferrer said. " … This is a real, powerful property for us, no question about it."

Boxing is in the midst of a rebirth, and Haymon has played a large role in it.

Just don't expect to hear a word from him about it.
 
Aug 31, 2003
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Exactly 65 years ago today, Pone Kingpetch beat HOFer Pascual Perez to win the world flyweight title and become the first of many Thai fighters to ever win a title. Pone didn't make it into the hall himself but he did beat Perez twice and then split fights with the great Harada.

Not great quality..