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Mayweather Should Get The Most Money, Says Schaefer
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Originally posted by jrosales13 View PostI am not misremembering anything bro. He had an agreement with Zab nothing was signed. But, when Zab lossed to Baldomir. Floyd should of fought Margarito or Baldomir instead there was no point to fight an overrated frontrunner in Zab.
Zab lost to Baldomir on Jan 8th. Margarito already had a fight scheduled in a different venue (Aladdin) for Feb 22nd.
Arum had them both under contract. Floyd did not duck margarito. Everybody wanted to go forward with the Zab fight: Floyd, Arum, HBO, King, Judah.
I remember because Pepsi had a contract with Thomas & Mack.
See the article i just posted.
At the time the Judah fight was made, Zab was undisputed champion and #10 p4p. After he lost to baldo, then Zab slipped from the p4p rankings. And lost a belt. So they RE made the contract. Floyd tried to pressure Hatton to take the April PPV date, but Ricky wanted 3 tune-ups.
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Originally posted by Al Haymon View PostJ-RO.... REMEMBER, THE MARGARITO OFFER DID NOT COME UNTIL AFTER FLOYD BOUGHT OUT OF THE TOP RANK CONTRACT....WHICH WAS AFTER THE JUDAH FIGHT,
Updated: January 24, 2006, 2:53 AM ET
Judah, Mayweather to fight in Vegas on April 8
Dan Rafael
ESPN.com
Archive
LAS VEGAS -- One week ago, Zab Judah's claim as welterweight champion went up in smoke when he was shockingly upset by unheralded Carlos Baldomir. Also up in smoke: Judah's planned spring super-fight with pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather, Jr.
Or so everyone thought.
But this is boxing and the show apparently must go on.
Mayweather promoter Bob Arum and Judah promoter Don King told ESPN.com on Friday that regardless of Judah's stunning loss, he and Mayweather will still meet here in a 12-rounder on April 8 at the Thomas & Mack Center in an HBO PPV main event.
"We've reworked our deals but the fight will still go on," Arum said. "There are a lot of people who want to see the fight even though Judah lost. Is it as big as it was had Judah not lost? Probably not. Can it still be an exciting event for boxing fans? Sure."
Mayweather and Judah, both fast and flashy fighters, were once close friends. But they have grown more distant as they have viciously trash-talked each other for the past several months in anticipation of an eventual meeting, which, prior to Judah's defeat, figured to be one of the most significant fights of 2006.
A news conference announcing the fight is planned for Feb. 1 in New York, Arum said.
Longtime rivals Arum and King have reworked their deal, both confirmed. Arum also said that he and Mayweather worked out a new deal and that an agreement with HBO PPV was in place.
The one item remaining to be finalized is King and Judah agreeing to terms with each other. However, that appears to be a formality given that Judah has few options coming off a loss, and none nearly as lucrative as a fight with Mayweather (35-0, 24 KOs).
"Don't worry about that. Me and Zab are together. The fight will happen," King said.
Arum and King spent the past week reworking the terms of the fight after Baldomir won a unanimous decision against a woefully underprepared Judah (34-3, 25 KOs) on Jan. 7 in New York.
Mayweather, a junior welterweight titlist moving up to welterweight, had been scheduled to earn a minimum $6 million to face Judah while the Judah/King side was to earn $3 million plus a percentage of the profits.
However, with Judah losing, the deal points have changed significantly. Mayweather will earn a minimum $5 million while the Judah/King side will be guaranteed $1 million plus a percentage of profits above $7 million.
In addition, host casinos Caesars Palace and Wynn Las Vegas reduced the amount of their promised ticket buy by $600,000. Arum also reduced the top ticket price for the fight from $800 to $700.
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Originally posted by Al Haymon View PostJ-RO.... REMEMBER, THE MARGARITO OFFER DID NOT COME UNTIL AFTER FLOYD BOUGHT OUT OF THE TOP RANK CONTRACT....WHICH WAS AFTER THE JUDAH FIGHT,
Updated: January 24, 2006, 2:53 AM ET
Judah, Mayweather to fight in Vegas on April 8
Dan Rafael
ESPN.com
Archive
LAS VEGAS -- One week ago, Zab Judah's claim as welterweight champion went up in smoke when he was shockingly upset by unheralded Carlos Baldomir. Also up in smoke: Judah's planned spring super-fight with pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather, Jr.
Or so everyone thought.
But this is boxing and the show apparently must go on.
Mayweather promoter Bob Arum and Judah promoter Don King told ESPN.com on Friday that regardless of Judah's stunning loss, he and Mayweather will still meet here in a 12-rounder on April 8 at the Thomas & Mack Center in an HBO PPV main event.
"We've reworked our deals but the fight will still go on," Arum said. "There are a lot of people who want to see the fight even though Judah lost. Is it as big as it was had Judah not lost? Probably not. Can it still be an exciting event for boxing fans? Sure."
Mayweather and Judah, both fast and flashy fighters, were once close friends. But they have grown more distant as they have viciously trash-talked each other for the past several months in anticipation of an eventual meeting, which, prior to Judah's defeat, figured to be one of the most significant fights of 2006.
A news conference announcing the fight is planned for Feb. 1 in New York, Arum said.
Longtime rivals Arum and King have reworked their deal, both confirmed. Arum also said that he and Mayweather worked out a new deal and that an agreement with HBO PPV was in place.
The one item remaining to be finalized is King and Judah agreeing to terms with each other. However, that appears to be a formality given that Judah has few options coming off a loss, and none nearly as lucrative as a fight with Mayweather (35-0, 24 KOs).
"Don't worry about that. Me and Zab are together. The fight will happen," King said.
Arum and King spent the past week reworking the terms of the fight after Baldomir won a unanimous decision against a woefully underprepared Judah (34-3, 25 KOs) on Jan. 7 in New York.
Mayweather, a junior welterweight titlist moving up to welterweight, had been scheduled to earn a minimum $6 million to face Judah while the Judah/King side was to earn $3 million plus a percentage of the profits.
However, with Judah losing, the deal points have changed significantly. Mayweather will earn a minimum $5 million while the Judah/King side will be guaranteed $1 million plus a percentage of profits above $7 million.
In addition, host casinos Caesars Palace and Wynn Las Vegas reduced the amount of their promised ticket buy by $600,000. Arum also reduced the top ticket price for the fight from $800 to $700.
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Originally posted by jrosales13 View PostRoss Greenburg(spelling?) is too much of an idiot to put anything like that on HBO
Smart people in business make mistakes. It's an imperfect business.
What people don't realize is that Big corporations develop strat plans. And, as such, have to commit to revenue and profit projections to The Street. So, in the process of committing early, you make some not-so-great decisions.
New Coke
Pepsi Clear
Sony Betamax
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Originally posted by cortdawg25 View PostAnd Baldomir was the lineal champ!!!
Originally posted by cortdawg25 View PostTell me this....who did Margarito beat to become champion? Who did he take the belt from? Who did margarito even beat to deserve a shot at Floyd? what had he done?
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