Originally posted by Golovkin
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Comments Thread For: Wilder: I Don’t See Myself Staying in Boxing Too Long
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well, look at the bright side, 10 years is a long time, maybe in that lapse he can actually fight someone worth of it
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i don't like this kind of talk. we heard it from haye and look how he reacted when the going got tough. this is what separates wlad from his contenders. wlad is 100% all-in on boxing. he faced worse adversity in his career than haye, wilder or fury did and he picked himself back up became great
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Originally posted by Scipio2009 View PostTo make a way for his daughter and family, when he almost believed that there was no way. He wasn't a boxing super fan when he was a kid, he didn't have any ambitions to being a boxing champion or win an Olympic gold medal, and he didn't give his life to the sport.
Public disclosure doesn't show every bit of money that was picked up (let alone what was left to the fighter after everyone else gets their piece), but Deontay Wilder made, at least, almost $1m for the Stiverne, $1.5m for the Molina fight, and will likely be PBC's first $2m man for the Duhuapas fight next week.
You add that Wilder-Povetkin is a gigantic fight (possibly PPV) and, if he were to win, Klitschko-Wilder being a PPV fight in the United States and you've easily picked up a pair paydays that would dwarf the Duhuapas payday. It's taken time, but over just those 5 fights, Wilder would've been able to clear $10m-$15m in fight purses.
If he were to beat Klitschko and become undisputed/unified heavyweight champion of the world ... he'd be a license to print money (only heavyweight he'd have to worry about, imo, is Anthony Joshua).
Las Vegas would definitely be interested in Wilder's fights, but Deontay would be the type of personality who you could take across the country and sell premium tickets for; simply line up the mandatory challengers and go.
Come late 2017/2018, the buzz behind Wilder-Joshua would finally break that fever, and you make that fight on PPV (in the new PBC model, every Wilder fight is likely to be on primetime NBC/CBS/ABC or Showtime and I'd imagine that sponsorship money plus the live stadium gate, plus the PBC money would make better sense than just going to PPV, for every showdown but those super elite ones), leaving the option for a series of fights based on how the first one goes.
You figure 6-7 fights, between the Klitschko PPV fight and the potential Joshua PPV fight(possible PPV series of at least 2), and Wilder's likely cleared $100m [a long bit of time to predict, but simply completing the example].
Payouts/other revenues/tax structure/etc are in flux, but Wilder could potentially have taken home $35m, before counting the Joshua series of PPVs (I imagine Joshua to be more of a boxing lifer, even though both guys had relative late starts with boxing).
Boxing wasn't the first love, you would've already made a ton of money, and (as America's undisputed heavyweight champion of the world) there are likely to be marketing opportunities galore [Nike, Addidas(Reebok), and UnderArmour are basically the three major players in sports apparel and I have no doubt that they'd be interested in working with Wilder].
Unless he just saws through Anthony Joshua (which I doubt), why keep fighting on? He'd be all of 32/33, made more money from the sport than he ever could've imagined, won a world championship, unified all of the belts, had a pretty good run with the belt, and would then be in a position where he'd have to slog through a few fights, get into a mandatory position, bide his time for another shot, and then face a guy he'd battled again (likely a 2-year process to get his own shot at the undisputed heavyweight champion).
He'd accomplished everything he set out to accomplish with boxing before the age of 34, leaving him the full rest of his life (having just over ten years in the sport, and not having too many out and out beatings should have him fresh enough to enjoy his fruits).
Who else is there? Jennings? Fury? Parker? 5-6 more fights and Wilder will have fought everyone of note.
Who wouldn't want to get out before serious brain damage sets in?
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Haters can hate all they want.
All I ask is that folks stand by there words when things go left, rather than trying to pretend that they said no such thing.
So, when Golovkin gets destroyed by Andre Ward, or when Kovalev starts giving up his belts to avoid getting one-punched by Stevenson or mauled by Beterbiev, don't go into hiding.
Stand by your statements, take the criticism of your opinion as a stand-up individual, and wallow in that ****.
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