Originally posted by Weebler I
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It's about delivering to the boxing fans an exposition on Haymon's business practices. It sheds light on these practices and how he operates. It's fairly clear what he's up to, and it's also clear imo that the brighter the light shone upon him the less desirable he becomes to those interested in operating transparently. That's why he's at pains to avoid exposure.
For example, if Waddell & Reed are a rumoured potential investor, I'm sure those high up would be more than interested in what kind of character they'd be involving themselves with and due diligence will lead them to articles such as this. The net is closing on Haymon, lawsuits are coming in.
You can not like Haymon (I don't care for him either). I just think it's wrong, especially with how long Hauser has been around, to carelessly toss that **** in there. His work is filled with bias and it co
Beyond that, while Haymon's stable has grown, boxing doesn't need those guys, there are enough HBO stars and international fighters coming through that no one will bother with the likes of old Stevenson, old Dawson and old Mayweather particularly if he continues to avoid the best opposition with PPV numbers falling. Showtime will soon tire of getting fleeced for mismatches.
The European knockout artists coming through are far more exciting and they're coming in numbers with no links to Haymon. Your Kovalevs, Lomachenkos, Golovkins, that's the future not Showtime Shawn.
Also to your other point about boxing doesn't need them. If NBC is providing a nice chunk of change to host his cards, then why can't boxing fans look forward to that?
Obviously the problem is that Haymon would exploit those cards and make just godawful mismatches like the 8/9 card on Showtime. Hopefully, NBC Sports learned from the Top Rank-Versus fiasco, but Haymon always wins so that's doubtful.'
edit:
Originally posted by some other poster a while back
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