from BT:
The deal Jones negotiated on his own behalf doesn’t guarantee him a penny. Rather, the former light-heavyweight champion is working off an upside of the pay-per-view sale. If that turns out to be in the neighborhood of the 275,000 who watched him against Antonio Tarver in their PPV fight, RJ could wind up with what looks by comparison like an opponent’s purse, but if it gets close to the 525,000 who paid to watch his heavyweight title fight against John Ruiz six years ago, he is going to look like a shrewd negotiator indeed. And if ‘Bring on the Titans’ somehow crept into Mayweather-De La Hoya territory (which it won’t) Roy Jones would wind up with the single biggest payday in boxing history.
The deal Jones negotiated on his own behalf doesn’t guarantee him a penny. Rather, the former light-heavyweight champion is working off an upside of the pay-per-view sale. If that turns out to be in the neighborhood of the 275,000 who watched him against Antonio Tarver in their PPV fight, RJ could wind up with what looks by comparison like an opponent’s purse, but if it gets close to the 525,000 who paid to watch his heavyweight title fight against John Ruiz six years ago, he is going to look like a shrewd negotiator indeed. And if ‘Bring on the Titans’ somehow crept into Mayweather-De La Hoya territory (which it won’t) Roy Jones would wind up with the single biggest payday in boxing history.
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