Article about Showtime and CBS possibly coming together for Boxing on Regular TV...
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I understand your point, but getting boxing on national TV is crucial to boxing from almost every aspect. You tolerate the ads on ESPN and Versus, so what is different about this? Depending on HBO and Showtime to carry the TV part of the sport is very short sighted and dangerous.Comment
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dawson in the main event, darchinyan in the co feature.......that would be a good way to get that **** started if it happens......
darchinyan gives a brutal KO(get Smoger in there, so we dont see a quick stoppage).....
dawson, a big young decent looking black guy with great skills who can build a following.....Comment
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Seeing as how EliteXC, Showtime's last idea to CBS, bombed out and proposed budget cuts by CBS in 2009. I don't see them taking on any boxing events any time soon.Comment
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Possibly...unless there was a Mega-fight on, which I doubt will happen because of $$$$$$
If it were big Names they would put it on. They put Tyson vs. Mathis on. A young Tyson would still work today.
Americans still have more of a love-affair with boxing than MMA because boxing is part of tradition; MMA is new.
The key would be getting hold of young talent that are in the Olympics that win medals. But, I don't see that talent to be honest. I don't see the "Stars" as far as Americans go.
I think it would work, but American boxing doesn't have the resources it seems; it doesn't have the young quality fighters that want to build up their records on regular TV...and fight often like they did back in the day.Comment
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Updated article:
Boxing has quietly undertaken a pilot program that, in the face of competition from mixed martial arts, may serve as a business model for its future.
Bob Arum wants to make boxing more visible
Ethan Miller / Getty Images
Bob Arum, left, photographed with Manny Pacquiao on Tuesday in Las Vegas, is working on a pilot program designed to bring boxing back to network television.
Promoter says getting fights back on network television is key to keeping the sport popular.
Bill Dwyre
December 5, 2008
Reporting from Las Vegas -- Boxing has quietly undertaken a pilot program that, in the face of competition from mixed martial arts, may serve as a business model for its future.
Promoter Bob Arum of Top Rank said recently that a series of events working well in Mexico may be the key to his sport's future. That future is bringing boxing back onto network television rather than relying on cable and pay-per-view to grow the audience.
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"I see something that gives me hope," Arum said.
On Jan. 27, 2007, for its show from the Honda Center in Anaheim -- one that featured popular Mexican fighter Jorge Arce, as well as rising American star Kelly Pavlik -- Arum and fellow Top Rank executive Fernando Beltran gave the fight broadcast signal free to Mexican Azteca television.
The ratings turned out to be surprisingly good.
"We thought boxing was pretty much dead down there, ever since Julio Cesar Chavez stopped," Arum said. "We were surprised."
That led to stop No. 2 in the experiment, a Sept. 16, 2007 show at the Hard Rock Casino in Las Vegas. That also featured Arce, as well as Mexican entertainment stars.
It was Mexican Independence Day, and the boxing was going head to head on Azteca with one of Televisa's ultra-popular Telenovelas, or soap operas.
"We didn't beat them, and we didn't expect to," Arum said. "But we got something like 40% of the audience."
That convinced Arum, and others in boxing, that there might be a future in getting back to the days of network telecasts of the likes of the Pabst Blue Ribbon fight of the week and the Gillette Friday night fights. The success in Mexico triggered regular shows on Azteca, called "Latin Fury," that have continued to bring good ratings.
"Some days, we beat soccer in Mexico," Arum said.
The economics of that, of course, are tricky. Networks long ago stopped paying rights fees for boxing shows. But networks are open to having boxing purchase that time, and Arum thinks that is do-able, by marketing the package to sponsors to cover costs.
He sees this as a way to get boxing in front of millions of additional people, those who either don't have cable or don't buy pay-per-view fights.
He used the heavyweight division, once the backbone of the sport, as his example.
"When kids are growing up now, they see basketball and football, and that's what excites them," he said. "If they saw as much boxing, more of them would try it.
"Think of LeBron James, going against those Ukrainian guys [the heavyweight champion Klitschko brothers, Wladimir and Vitali]. What a show that would be.
"That's what we have to get back to."Comment
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