Originally posted by about.thousands
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What we know about Haymon complete summary
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Originally posted by about.thousands View PostDo you think the article was necessary?
To people who have been following it all along no it was not needed really.
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Originally posted by about.thousands View PostThomas Hauser just spent 2500 words quoting articles we've already read about Haymon/interviewing the writers of those articles.
— Corey Erdman (@corey_erdman) March 23, 2016
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Originally posted by Eff Pandas View PostHow do you mean? I mean 99.9% of books, articles, forum posts & writing in general isn't necessary I think one could easily argue. Love or hate Hauser he's free to write what he wants to write, Ring is free to pay guys for writing they deem worthy of their magazine/website & we are all free to read or not read anything either of those parties writes or puts out.
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Originally posted by Eff Pandas View PostThats what he did with the USADA article too. Thats Hauser's style I think lol. Google some **** then gloss it up with some fancier words & get long winded about ****. If I knew the difference between then & than Hauser would give me hope I could be a writer. Although I did notice there was a bunch of spelling errors (Sean Porter) & one or two date errors in there so maybe that doesn't even matter.
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Originally posted by The Gambler1981 View PostSure because some people don't really have time to follow all this stuff and finding it all spread out would be a pain. So bringing it all into one place can be useful.
To people who have been following it all along no it was not needed really.
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There wasn't much here, certainly not to justify this being a 5-part series...but I'm sure Ring website probably got a lot more traffic this week than usual which is probably why they did it.
As for what little there was in Part 5, there were a few small items:
Rafael says that Haymon’s contract with NBC and his contract with ESPN called for him to pay each network in advance on a yearly basis ($20 million per year for NBC and $8 million per year for ESPN) but, when Haymon closed a deal with Fox Sports 1 in mid-2015, it called for monthly payments and he declined to give them a letter of credit for the full amount.PBC is also cutting back on TV production expenses. The staging has become less elaborate. Fewer people are traveling to the shows. Less money is being spent on on-air talent than at the start.Multiple sources say that Haymon tried to make a title unification bout between Wilder and Martin but the WBC refused to release Wilder from his obligation to fight mandatory challenger Alexander Povetkin. Then, in a further effort to protect Wilder, an overture was made to Team Povetkin to see if the Russian would fight Martin instead but the Povetkin camp said no.
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Not impressed but whatever. It was kind of cool to hear from his old college roomate, but not significant.
One interesting note was NBC & ESPN requesting monthly payments for the time-buys once Haymon included FOX, and Haymon declining to go along.
My biggest issue with Haymon/PBC, he wasted the money more focused on blocking out competitors rather than developing names/following for certain fighters. He planned quantity over quality.
Spreading out the fights over different channels and different times didn't grow any demand/interest, more so it just saturated and depressed existing interest. He should've stayed on 1 or 2 channels, regular weekly times slots, and focused on far fewer fighters with atleast an illusion that those fighters would be on a collision course with one another. For example right now, guys like Garcia, Broner, and Thurman all exist in alternate universes. The 'innovative' bells & whistles were not only an annoying distraction, but turns out a costly waste.
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