Yes definitely. Waste of time and wouldn't mean anything.
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Would you oppose a PBC world title?
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Originally posted by saint laurentAnd PBC is the only chance there is of that happening.
Any boxing fan that wants one champion per division should be supporting PBC and encouraging fighters to join PBC.
If PBC is successful, boxing fans will have the one champion per division they desire, boxing fans won't have to buy PPVs or pay for premium subscriptions anymore, boxing fans will be able to see all of the match ups they desire, etc.
The current fragmented four belt system benefits the fighters, networks and promoters, but is terrible for FANS.
For the boxing fan, PBC is the hope that nobody really thought would ever come along. There will obviously be growing pains. PBC is trying to take over a sport ruled by decades of corruption. It's not going to be easy. But if they pull it off, the fans benefit more than anybody.
The best boxing prospects know they can earn 6 figure purses without signing with Haymon, so there is no incentive for them to do it and give him a cut. Especially as they know it could possibly block them from getting big money fights or title opportunities against fighters handled by promoters Haymon won't do business with.
If Al allowed anybody to fight for a PBC belt, and invited the highest ranked fighters in every division to come and have a shot, whether they were signed with him or not, and played it strictly by the book, no favouritism shown, then eventually you might end up with a situation where the PBC belt became the most respected title in boxing. Which would make the alphabet boys redundant and superflous.
It would take a while though, and there would be many obstacles to overcome.
But who knows. Maybe what Haymon is aiming for, as his ultimate objective, is for the PBC to become the boxing equivalent of FIFA, the world governing body of football (soccer), rather than boxing's UFC.Last edited by kafkod; 11-20-2015, 03:06 PM.
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Originally posted by saint laurentTechliam -
Reforming themselves how? You honestly thing the four organizations consolidating into one without another organization springing up is more likely than the smartest man in boxing with a 500 million dollar war chest and TV on every major network managing to cut them out of the equation?
As for Japan... the lower divisions ARE the minor league. What is a guy at 108 pounds getting paid compared to a guy at 160 pounds? How much more of a minor league could you be?
The comment regarding pay is a big shift in the goal posts then. You once argued it was about hoarding the prospects, if you want to be the champion you'll have to fight in the PBC, give the next generation would be the champions - has now become the PBC would be the place you'd get paid most. Am I wrong there? Whats your argument? Using what you've said makes no sense.... as the 'minor league' as you put it gets paid enough to remain where it is, well away from the PBC. Given PBC would literally have no equivalant down there, it'd be the only league.
Would your vision of PBC titles only affect a few divisions, then? What about Carl Froch, who made millions fighting in Wembley, how would PBC aim to snatch him? I doubt the US audience mattered too much in that scenario, apart from a new few extra notes in Hearn's pocket. He wouldn't make anywhere near as much fighting in the US, much less on PBC. Foreign stars are well placed to fight in their home countries, at least thats how the progression seems to be going. Heavyweight? Well the irony here is that Haymon loves the WBC title up there. But other than him (a top 5 HW) its a European dominated division, with BIG money coming from Russia. How do you see PBC challenging that? In the long term, the heavier divisions look to be absolutely dominated by Eastern Europe. Talking about the most powerful man in Boxing, Haymon couldn't lay a finger on Ryabinsky, hence a reasonable chance that Wilder, the US Hw titleholder could fight in Russia. That would have been unimaginable a few years ago.
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Long term it's a good idea. Just eliminate all of the rediculous sanctioning bodies.
Haymon signs all of the talent. PBC on Fox, PBC on CBS, PBC on NBC and PBC on ESPN.
Long term it's the best thing that can be done. Don't recognise any titles, don't pay the sanctioning fees and make it 1 champion per weight class.
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Originally posted by dr.french View PostPBC is a sham. It will continue to grow smaller and smaller as it has been. Ratings keep sliding.
PBC is clearly expanding its influence. They have more shows, they are adding Fox as a network in 2016 & they will be dipping their toe in the UK market soon. If they go belly up it won't be for years & in years who knows what sorta top fighters they'll have or how all the TV time they have have created popular fighters that fans enjoy watching (I still believe Artur Beterbiev could be massive if pushed well + they need to get him speaking English sooner rather than later). This is a long term play yet people continual act like a L or a claimed L means all that much yet.
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pbc is just the XFL. did anyone take the XFL champs seriously? no but they still had a championship so why not. they already lost half their value and thats why haymon is subsidizing his fighters by having most of the big money guys fight on showtime. so are the pbc champs going to fight on showtime and still be the champs or will they make a showtime championship too? the unified pbc-showtime champ
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Completely against it. It gives Haymon fighters even more of a reason not to fight anyone that isn't a Haymon fighter or a threat. Guys like Quillin and Jacobs can fight and have the winner be marketed as the best middleweight.
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Originally posted by techliam View PostWould your vision of PBC titles only affect a few divisions, then? What about Carl Froch, who made millions fighting in Wembley, how would PBC aim to snatch him?
But other than him (a top 5 HW) its a European dominated division, with BIG money coming from Russia. How do you see PBC challenging that? In the long term, the heavier divisions look to be absolutely dominated by Eastern Europe. Talking about the most powerful man in Boxing, Haymon couldn't lay a finger on Ryabinsky, hence a reasonable chance that Wilder, the US Hw titleholder could fight in Russia. That would have been unimaginable a few years ago
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