Al Haymon is finished

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  • Bennyleonard99
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    #1

    Al Haymon is finished

    It's finally all over for Al Haymon. His name has not been mentioned in about a year, he has no relevant shows, he has nothing in the works. Floyd is on his own doing his WWF scams. Tank sold out to Jake Paul and will quit after he dives for the cash. Wilder Charlos have zero value. All he has left is the Fundora-Thurman set up which will be a fake fight to try to increase both of their value. The sport of boxing can finally say good riddance to the Al Haymon horror show of PBC in house phony WWF skits. Haymon and Floyd did irreparable damage to boxing in America - no stars other than Crawford and it's unknown if he can sell on his own. No American heavyweights. No network deals for boxing. Haymon's rubbish ran HBO and Showtime out of the sport.
  • Spray_resistant
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    #2
    Correct on everything, your post is the first I have heard about him in a while. Was Jared Anderson promoted by him? Not sure but someone tried to build a new black U.S HW, he just didn't have it though.

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    • RJJ-94-02=GOAT
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      #3
      The well has run dry and they have no dates. Al certainly has lost the majority of the influence he had over the world of boxing.

      One thing I always respected about Haymon is he never actually lied to us. All promoters, executives, managers, advisors etc just want to suck money out of the sport, I hate hearing them talk about “we’re here to grow the sport and do this and that”. Nah you’re here to make what you can. At least Al did it in silence without the need for camera time. He has damaged boxing massively though, he essentially killed both HBO and Showtime as boxing broadcasters, which I still think boxing is reeling from.

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      • LA_2_Vegas
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        #4
        Originally posted by RJJ-94-02=GOAT
        The well has run dry and they have no dates. Al certainly has lost the majority of the influence he had over the world of boxing.

        One thing I always respected about Haymon is he never actually lied to us. All promoters, executives, managers, advisors etc just want to suck money out of the sport, I hate hearing them talk about “we’re here to grow the sport and do this and that”. Nah you’re here to make what you can. At least Al did it in silence without the need for camera time. He has damaged boxing massively though, he essentially killed both HBO and Showtime as boxing broadcasters, which I still think boxing is reeling from.
        That's the main thing that really started to grate me about the PBC - I remember early on saying I thought it might be a good idea to have a PBC frontman who'd be able to speak up the fighters and company and provide vision about what is going on. The broadcast people are not suitable for that.

        Contrast that with how TKO immediately provided their vision statement - to build fighters from the ground up and hopefully become like Tuesday Night Fights.

        Also, look at how Eddie Hearn, Oscar, or Arum talk about fighters - they can go on for days giving intricate accounts of almost every fighter in the sport off the top of their head. PBC doesn't have a public version of that guy.

        When Oscar promoted Haymon managed fighters, that's when they had something going. 10 years later, those same guys are still the most popular names they've had - all started with Oscar. They need that spokesman again to be out there grinding on behalf of PBC and its fighters. Still not too late - I'd love to see it.



        One thing I appreciate about PBC is there are no women's fights. Bring back the blue ring mat sometimes though. Grey is just OK.
        Last edited by LA_2_Vegas; 10-04-2025, 04:40 PM.

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        • SouthpawRight
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          #5
          Originally posted by LA_2_Vegas

          That's the main thing that really started to grate me about the PBC - I remember early on saying I thought it might be a good idea to have a PBC frontman who'd be able to speak up the fighters and company and provide vision about what is going on. The broadcast people are not suitable for that.

          Contrast that with how TKO immediately provided their vision statement - to build fighters from the ground up and hopefully become like Tuesday Night Fights.

          Also, look at how Eddie Hearn, Oscar, or Arum talk about fighters - they can go on for days giving intricate accounts of almost every fighter in the sport off the top of their head. PBC doesn't have a public version of that guy.

          When Oscar promoted Haymon managed fighters, that's when they had something going. 10 years later, those same guys are still the most popular names they've had - all started with Oscar. They need that spokesman again to be out there grinding on behalf of PBC and its fighters. Still not too late - I'd love to see it.



          One thing I appreciate about PBC is there are no women's fights. Bring back the blue ring mat sometimes though. Grey is just OK.
          why Americans no longer do white ring mats

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          • RJJ-94-02=GOAT
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            #6
            Originally posted by LA_2_Vegas

            That's the main thing that really started to grate me about the PBC - I remember early on saying I thought it might be a good idea to have a PBC frontman who'd be able to speak up the fighters and company and provide vision about what is going on. The broadcast people are not suitable for that.

            Contrast that with how TKO immediately provided their vision statement - to build fighters from the ground up and hopefully become like Tuesday Night Fights.

            Also, look at how Eddie Hearn, Oscar, or Arum talk about fighters - they can go on for days giving intricate accounts of almost every fighter in the sport off the top of their head. PBC doesn't have a public version of that guy.

            When Oscar promoted Haymon managed fighters, that's when they had something going. 10 years later, those same guys are still the most popular names they've had - all started with Oscar. They need that spokesman again to be out there grinding on behalf of PBC and its fighters. Still not too late - I'd love to see it.



            One thing I appreciate about PBC is there are no women's fights. Bring back the blue ring mat sometimes though. Grey is just OK.
            Oscar and Al were so good together. 2013 is probably the best year I can remember in the last 15 years. Obviously, behind the scenes things were a lot of moving parts and Schaefer was ready to stab Oscar in the back, but for the few years GBP and Al Haymon worked together, boxing was in a great place.

            They definitely missed that frontman. I always expected it to be Floyd to be honest. Especially as PBC launched the same year of his retirement and him and Al had a longstanding relationship.

            I always got the impression Al didn’t really care about promotion though, he just wanted to get paid and get his fighters paid. He didn’t crave the limelight like a Hearn or have an emotional attachment to his company like Arum, he was all business. I mean we barely ever saw the guy.

            I’ve got to give him some credit as the vast majority of fighters who’ve had a working relationship with him speak very highly of him. He clearly made good money for a lot of fighters but in doing so I think he’s left boxing in a far worse state than he found it from a viewers perspective.

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            • TelMex
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              #7
              He's still got a few more dollars to milk out of Pac.

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              • IronDanHamza
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                #8
                Originally posted by RJJ-94-02=GOAT

                Oscar and Al were so good together. 2013 is probably the best year I can remember in the last 15 years. Obviously, behind the scenes things were a lot of moving parts and Schaefer was ready to stab Oscar in the back, but for the few years GBP and Al Haymon worked together, boxing was in a great place.

                They definitely missed that frontman. I always expected it to be Floyd to be honest. Especially as PBC launched the same year of his retirement and him and Al had a longstanding relationship.

                I always got the impression Al didn’t really care about promotion though, he just wanted to get paid and get his fighters paid. He didn’t crave the limelight like a Hearn or have an emotional attachment to his company like Arum, he was all business. I mean we barely ever saw the guy.

                I’ve got to give him some credit as the vast majority of fighters who’ve had a working relationship with him speak very highly of him. He clearly made good money for a lot of fighters but in doing so I think he’s left boxing in a far worse state than he found it from a viewers perspective.
                That could possibly have been the idea when they had Floyd start the promotional company properly but there was only one problem, Floyd.

                He can't be anything but the centre of attention and the most important thing in the room.

                His stint as a "promoter" was never going anywhere for that reason.

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                • RJJ-94-02=GOAT
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                  #9
                  Originally posted by IronDanHamza

                  That could possibly have been the idea when they had Floyd start the promotional company properly but there was only one problem, Floyd.

                  He can't be anything but the centre of attention and the most important thing in the room.

                  His stint as a "promoter" was never going anywhere for that reason.
                  100%. He’d have only have promoted himself.

                  I think we saw how it would’ve ended when you look at Floyd and Tank’s relationship, however, the association with Mayweather did undoubtedly help make Tank a big star.

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                  • NihonJim
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                    #10
                    Remember the LDBC lol, they loved haymon

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