Originally posted by Own3d
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New study reveals boxing's fan base has almost doubled this decade
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Originally posted by howdy potna View PostPossibly, as will many of the African American audience who will leave when Floyd does.
Originally posted by croz View PostBoxing has been huge in Mexico and the Philippines for Aeons now. The difference is back then they didn't have the proper boxing infrastructure like they do today. Granted it seems to be much bigger in those places now more than ever. You can look at Filipino TV listing and see them repaying Froch vs Bute on their main sport network almost 1 year later. They wouldn't even do that in the UK.
This is a phenomenon. Before him, the entire country wouldn't sit down and watch a boxing match.
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No way you can tell me boxing dead when it is Boxing Website popping up everyday and it is so many people on youtube with Boxing Channels talking about boxing
Boxing just not as big as it was in AMERICA...but as far as the rest of the WORLD, boxing has actually became more POPULAR for a Global Standpoint...that is the advantage it has over a sport like MMA
Only problem is that in America they don't make the effort to cover boxing on a GLOBAL PLATFORM they just want to focus on what is going on in America...I thought the Super 6 Platform was Great and it clearly helped not only Ward but it also helped guys like Froch...Super 6 was a major boost to Froch Legacy even though he did not win the entire Tournament and quietly it did make Ward a bigger star which many thought would never happen, he is now a Top 5 P4P FighterLast edited by KnockUTheFukOut; 11-20-2012, 07:16 PM.
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Originally posted by croz View PostBoxing is on HBO. Only a small percentage in the US have HBO and a channel like that likely wouldn't attract even most boxing fans. Coupled with the fact the last Canelo fight showed that Showtime and HBO have almost two completely different boxing audiences to cater to, meaning not all boxing fans choose the same channels to watch boxing on.
- 70.1% of 12-17 year olds,
- 66.6% of 18-34 year olds, and
- 56% of 35-54 year olds
are boxing fans, why are none of the major networks especially interested in showing it?
Presumably these people are self-identifying as fans without any qualifying questions to test the accuracy of that self-identification.
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Originally posted by Capaedia View PostYes. That's how it works.
When Pacquiao fights the entire country shuts down. One man suffered a heart attack from anxiety while watching the Hatton fight.
This is a phenomenon. Before him, the entire country wouldn't sit down and watch a boxing match.
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Originally posted by Own3d View Post50 million fans but they can't break 2 mil viewers on non PPV? How the hell did they come to that number? LOL
17% of the country = boxing fans?
thats 1 in 6 people ... boxing would be a mainstream sport if that was the case ... I doubt you'll find 1 out of 16 people claim they're boxing fans if you go to a busy street of a random big city and ask
mayweather and pac are the only big "household" names ... I doubt its even that big in Mexico or Britain, percentage wiseLast edited by TysonBomb; 11-20-2012, 07:16 PM.
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Originally posted by Dr Rumack View PostRight, but if, as the article claims:
- 70.1% of 12-17 year olds,
- 66.6% of 18-34 year olds, and
- 56% of 35-54 year olds
are boxing fans, why are none of the major networks especially interested in showing it?
Presumably these people are self-identifying as fans without any qualifying questions to test the accuracy of that self-identification.
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Originally posted by Dr Rumack View PostRight, but if, as the article claims:
- 70.1% of 12-17 year olds,
- 66.6% of 18-34 year olds, and
- 56% of 35-54 year olds
are boxing fans, why are none of the major networks especially interested in showing it?
Presumably these people are self-identifying as fans without any qualifying questions to test the accuracy of that self-identification.
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Originally posted by Capaedia View PostYes. That's how it works.
When Pacquiao fights the entire country shuts down. One man suffered a heart attack from anxiety while watching the Hatton fight.
This is a phenomenon. Before him, the entire country wouldn't sit down and watch a boxing match.
You don't measure the health of a sport by mega-events though. You measure its health by the numbers who watch it on a regular basis, a weekly basis if possible.
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