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Myth Buster: Timothy Bradley Needs PBC

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  • #31
    Bradley doesn't need PBC. Not at this point. Maybe down the line. Can you imagine Crawford beating Manny and then fighting Bradley next? On the other hand, PBC would love to have Bradley but I don't think they necessarily need him either.

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    • #32
      Originally posted by Eff Pandas View Post
      Okay I guess you are right in the literal sense.

      Looking at the 5 dimes odds looks like GGG was a -1600 favorite, Lara is about a -6000 favorite with a couple weeks til the fight & Loma was a -14000 favorite, but basically they are all huge favorites for the level of fight they were/are in & lets be real there isn't a lot of -1600 PPV headliner fighters, -6000 ESPN headliner fighters or -14000 HBO undercard fighters you are trying to bet against or expecting to win money on if you do bet against if are a betting man. And they are being paid according for their low risk fights, $2M, $1M & $750k respectively.
      except that ggg was turned to ppv to recoup most of that salary. GGG hasn't ever made that much before or Lemieux who got 1.5. Loma was one of the highest odds I have actually seena line made for. That was a terrible hbo fight.

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      • #33
        Bradley's earned those paydays the guy always puts everything into it I'm happy for him but I don't want to see him jump to 154lbs.

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        • #34
          Originally posted by Dirk Diggler UK View Post
          Yeah I saw some guy posting yesterday about how Bradley needs to leave Arum and go to Haymon to make big money
          After graduating from MIT, Sonnenfeldt began his career as an Associate at Goldman Sachs, from 1978-1979, in the Merger & Acquisitions Department and then transitioned to the Goldman Sachs Realty Corp.

          In 1980, Sonnenfeldt conceived and initiated the then-largest commercial renovation in the country. With his partner, David Fromer, he transformed the 2.4 million square foot Harborside Terminal in Jersey City, New Jersey into The Harborside Financial Center. He and Fromer spearheaded the development team of over 100 professionals working on the project.

          Sonnenfeldt and Fromer sold The Harborside Financial Center in 1986 for over $100 million to a major US pension fund in what is considered to be one of the most successful real estate deals in the history of the New York metropolitan area.[1] The Harborside Financial Center continues to operate as one of the top-performing assets in the New Jersey marketplace. At the time, the complex was believed to be the most valuable single commercial real estate asset in the state of New Jersey.

          After the sale, Sonnenfeldt founded Real Estate Resources Corp, which created online databases of Real Estate information prior to the widespread use of the internet. The business was closed in 1990. In 1991, he founded Emmes & Company, a private real estate investment group based in New York City, to invest in the portfolios of distressed real estate being sold by the Federal Government, from the inventories of the banks they had taken over in the savings and loan crises peaking at that time. When Mr. Sonnenfeldt sold his interest in the business in 1998, the company had grown to own and control more than 200 properties from New York to Florida, consisting of 20+ million square feet of real estate valued at over $1B.

          Current Businesses[edit]
          In June 1998, after selling his interest in Emmes & Company, Sonnenfeldt founded MUUS & Company, a private investment company. Sonnenfeldt directs the company’s portfolio of financial, real estate and private equity investments.

          In 1999, Sonnenfeldt founded TIGER 21 (The Investment Group for Enhanced Results in the 21st Century), a network of peer-to-peer learning groups for high-net-worth investors, after recognizing that the skills that made him a successful entrepreneur did not necessarily translate into successfully managing his own portfolio of investments.[2][3][4] Sonnenfeldt continues to operate the company as Chairman and is regularly used by news outlets as a resource to discuss investing and high-net-worth investor activity. [5][6][7][8][9][10]

          Sonnenfeldt is also the Chairman of SOL, Inc. (formerly Solar Outdoor Lighting, Inc), North America’s largest and oldest dedicated manufacturer of commercial and industrial grade solar-powered outdoor lighting systems. SOL’s systems are used to illuminate roadways, parking lots, jogging trails, billboards and transit shelters.

          In 2013 Sonnenfeldt became non-executive Chairman of Carmanah Technologies (LTD), a publicly traded company in Canada (CMH) that manufactures solar LED lights and solar power systems. Mr. Sonnenfeldt is the company’s largest shareholder.[11]

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