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Pacquiao jumps from no. 72 to 24 in bloomberg businessweek most powerful athletes

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  • Pacquiao jumps from no. 72 to 24 in bloomberg businessweek most powerful athletes

    PACQUIAO JUMPS FROM NO. 72 TO 24 IN BLOOMBERG BUSINESSWEEK MOST POWERFUL ATHLETES

    By Ronnie Nathanielsz
    PhilBoxing.com
    Fri, 14 Oct 2011



    Pound for pound king Manny Pacquiao has jumped from No. 72 last year to No. 24 in the 2011 Power Sports 100 of Bloomberg BusinessWeek.


    In a statement on its choices, Bloomberg said that for the Power Sports 100, Bloomberg BusinessWeek worked with CSE, formerly known as Career Sports & Entertainment, and Businessweek.com columnist and Bloomberg TV contributor Rick Horrow of Horrow Sports Ventures to determine the 100 most powerful athletes on and off the field. “

    It reported that no coaches, owners, managers, executives or retired athletes were considered while “Off-field metrics included the results of polls on individual athletes by E-Poll Market Research and estimated endorsement dollars. On-field metrics were tallied on those who outscored, out-tackled, or outskated the competition during 2009 and 2010. Sports were weighted according to their popularity in the U.S.”

    In a statement articulating “What is power in sports?” the article said “ It's not simply the ability to bench-press a truck or crush a golf ball down the fairway. While such talents are impressive, there are other attributes that fans—and advertisers—value just as highly. It's the combination of athletic achievement plus the ability to connect with an audience on a deeper, more personal level that separates mere jocks from the stars. Indeed, the everyman image often earns the highest ranking and the biggest earnings. That explains why the No. 1 spot on the 2011 Power 100 ranking went to Peyton Manning, the well-liked, hard-working Colts quarterback who appeared in two of the last four Super Bowls and led his team to victory in Super Bowl XLI. “

    It added, “This year, 2010's No. 1, Tiger Woods, dropped in the rankings when his once-squeaky clean image was revealed to be a sham. Still, Woods has spent an unprecedented 623 weeks atop the World Golf Rankings and in 2010 managed to rack up more than $70 million in earnings, mainly from existing endorsement deals. Even with his earnings down 32 percent from the more than $103 million he took in last year, Woods outpaced all other pro athletes. It's not just likability that moves us. Fans also love the mental toughness it takes to crush competitors and dominate a sport in the manner of Roger Federer or Shaun White.”

    In its brief write up on Manny Pacquiao, Bloomberg BusinessWeek mentioned why Manny was on the list.

    “Known as "Pacman the Destroyer," Manny Pacquiao is often rated as the world's pound-for-pound best boxer, with championships in eight different weight divisions. Elected to the House of Representatives in his native Philippines, Pacquiao continues to fight.”

  • #2
    WOW!! Cong**** Manny. He is not only a influential athlete but human being. Not only powerful athlete but human with great power. He is amazing. Well deserved. My infinite respect and admiration for him. He has worked hard and he deserves everything.

    Good article. Thanks for sharing bro.

    Comment


    • #3
      Peyton Manning Tops Bloomberg Businessweek.com's Power 100 Ranking of the Most Powerful Athletes in Sports

      Football dominates list with 27 players ranked in the top 100. NFL Quarterbacks Peyton Manning (No. 1), Tom Brady (No. 5) and Drew Brees (No. 7) listed in top 10.

      NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Peyton Manning (No. 1), Shaun White (No. 2) and Tiger Woods (No. 3) top the Bloomberg Businessweek.com 2011 Power 100 ranking of the most powerful professional athletes in the U.S. To determine who the 100 most powerful athletes are on- and off-the-field, Bloomberg Businessweek.com teamed up with CSE, formerly known as Career Sports & Entertainment, an integrated sports and entertainment company that connects brands with fans; E-Poll Market Research; and Rick Horrow, president of Horrow Sports Ventures and regular contributor to Bloomberg Businessweek and Bloomberg TV, to create the 2011 Power 100 list.

      As the $750 billion business of sports grows, the stakes become higher, and the decisions more meaningful. Endorsement contracts become significantly more important for the player, the team, the brand, and the industry. The Power 100 rankings are based 50 percent on "on-field" performance using a variety of industry statistics and 50 percent on "off-field" measurements, such as endorsement deals, name awareness, appeal, influence, trustworthiness, and overall popularity. The most notable drops this year include controversial Tiger Woods dropping from No. 1 to No. 3 and LeBron James dropping from No. 2 to No. 11. Olympian Shaun White's (No. 2) emergence on the list had largely to do with the fact that he excels in both a summer and winter extreme sports and crosses over to mainstream marketing with various endorsement deals. The top female athlete on the list is Olympic skier Lindsey Vonn (No. 13).

      In addition, this year's Power 100 rankings also emphasize the importance of team sports, with the NFL dominating the list with 27 players ranked in the top 100. NFL quarterbacks Peyton Manning (No. 1), Tom Brady (No. 5) and Drew Brees (No. 7) are all listed in the top 10. Major League Baseball came in second with the most athletes on the Power 100, with 23, followed by the NBA basketball (18), golf (7), motorsports (7), tennis (6), Olympics (5), hockey (3), soccer (2), boxing (1), cycling (1).

      The 2011 Power 100
      Top 20

      Rank Name Sport
      1 Peyton Manning Football
      2 Shaun White Olympics
      3 Tiger Woods Golf
      4 Phil Mickelson Golf
      5 Tom Brady Football
      6 Shaquille O’Neal Basketball
      7 Drew Brees Football
      8 Lance Armstrong Olympics
      9 Albert Pujols Baseball
      10 Apolo Anton Ohno Olympics
      11 LeBron James Basketball
      12 Michael Phelps Olympics
      13 Lindsey Vonn Olympics
      14 Kobe Bryant Basketball
      15 Roger Federer Tennis
      16 Eli Manning Football
      17 Serena Williams Tennis
      18 David Beckham Soccer
      19 Dwyane Wade Basketball
      20 Lee Westwood Golf
      The Power 100 special report is available on Businessweek.com at http://www.businessweek.com/go/11/power100_2011/

      Comment


      • #4
        this is mere opinion. you'd have to be an idiot if you don't think floyd should have gotten the pick for boxer. floyd generates more money, fans, ppv shares, demanding and receiving OST, 24/7 king, cursing out larry merchant live on hbo and they'll never get rid of him, etc.

        basically, the article is a joke.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Hyacinth View Post
          this is mere opinion. you'd have to be an idiot if you don't think floyd should have gotten the pick for boxer. floyd generates more money, fans, ppv shares, demanding and receiving OST, 24/7 king, cursing out larry merchant live on hbo and they'll never get rid of him, etc.

          basically, the article is a joke.
          I honestly don't care for the list either, but you seem a bit butt hurt?

          Comment


          • #6
            No Floyd...lol he made in 1 fight what manny has made his last 3

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Hyacinth View Post
              this is mere opinion. you'd have to be an idiot if you don't think floyd should have gotten the pick for boxer. floyd generates more money, fans, ppv shares, demanding and receiving OST, 24/7 king, cursing out larry merchant live on hbo and they'll never get rid of him, etc.

              basically, the article is a joke.
              Floyd isn't active enough to be on there.. Pacquiao stays fighting, Floyd doesn't.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by GreatestIam View Post
                No Floyd...lol he made in 1 fight what manny has made his last 3
                You've seen their payouts personally?

                Comment


                • #9
                  The list seems pretty wack to me. Shaun White at number 2? Come on. Tiger, Lebron, Kobe, among others should be above him. Unless Shaun has some massive international popularity and/or endorsements I'm not aware of (Stride Gum? Lol I'll give him Red Bull) I don't think he should be up there.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Hyacinth View Post
                    this is mere opinion. you'd have to be an idiot if you don't think floyd should have gotten the pick for boxer. floyd generates more money, fans, ppv shares, demanding and receiving OST, 24/7 king, cursing out larry merchant live on hbo and they'll never get rid of him, etc.

                    basically, the article is a joke.

                    Comment

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