Gennady Golovkin vs David Lemiuex Does Roughly 150,000 PPV Buys
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As they should, if PPV's are gonna continue, then we need to hold these fools to a higher standard, just like in the last 3 PPV's.
You want me to pay an extra $60-70 on top of my cable bill, start showing a better product.Comment
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at that time 525k was great for Cotto and Margarito who the last did not have the fan base that Canelo have, Plus who tough that May-Pac was going to make 4m+ PPV?? Nobody everybody was actually predicting they were gonna make around 2.4 to 2.8m PPV, my point is that when 2 popular fighters with huge fan base collided PPV sells.Comment
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at that time 525k was great for Cotto and Margarito who the last did not have the fan base that Canelo have, Plus who tough that May-Pac was going to make 4m+ PPV?? Nobody everybody was actually predicting they were gonna make around 2.4 to 2.8m PPV, my point is that when 2 popular fighters with huge fan base collided PPV sells.Comment
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Same difference as in boxing. Only difference is its a more consistent product. In boxing theres numerous en****** who put out PPV's for several different reasons.
For example most agreed GGG vs Lemieux wasn't a PPV quality fight in appeal, competitiveness or name value, but HBO's budget wasn't going to be able to cover it. So its a PPV or it probably doesn't happen. On the flip side everyone agrees Cotto vs Canelo is a PPV quality fight under whatever qualifying factors you wanna use. And you'll see drastically different results for these events I predict (& most would too I imagine).
Something else notable few have mentioned is when you have 3 PPV's in a 10 week period they are bound to cannibalize each other a lil exactly because boxing isn't structured like the UFC is. The UFC wants to minimize cannibalization of its own product. In boxing there are so many different en****** & different levels of PPV thus cannibalization isn't a concern or less of a concern.
PPV is still viable, but people are way more selective nowadays.
In 1991 Tyson vs Ruddock had over 2M buys (1.2M + 900k) for their 2 heavily hyped & discussed fights. Same year two unproven, largely unknown HW prospects (Mercer & Morrison) had 200k buys for their fight.
In 2015 the two biggest PPV draws in the history of the sport fought in a perceived competitive fight by many fans & had over 4M PPV buys. This month it appears one growing name fought a largely unknown name in a fight not deemed very competitive & it fails to hit 200k.
Things aren't really that different if you really look into boxing PPV numbers over the last nearly 3 decades its been around. There isn't really much that doesn't have a story attached to it that makes sense with the numbers that the PPV did.Comment
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