Nobody held up anybody. HBO had matching rights. Stevenson's job was to go get the best offer he could and then HBO had the right to match it. The best offer Stevenson could get was from Showtime because they wanted him to fight Hopkins. At the time, Hopkins was considered the man in the division, not Kovalev. All HBO had to do was match and Stevenson would have been fighting Kovalev. HBO decided to be cheap and let Stevenson walk over $50,000. That is not a ridiculous amount of money. You're characterizing the situation very unfairly.
No, taking the bigger fight for more money is not a duck. All HBO had to do is kick in $50,000 to match and Stevenson would have gladly fought Kovalev. This is prize fighting. Wanting to fight the biggest name for the biggest prize instead of the smaller name for a smaller prize is common sense.
Well then blame HBO. Stevenson is supposed to take short money because that's "how HBO works" when SHO is offering more? What universe do you live in?
This is why facts are so important. Kovalev's HBO contract had expired. That is what is so crucial about Kovalev ducking the very 50/50 purse bid he had demanded.
HBO had matching rights on one last fight, but Kovalev didn't want to risk losing to Stevenson, so instead he signed another HBO deal.
In the scenario you presented, where Showtime offered more than HBO, forcing Kovalev to fight on Showtime, that would NOT have been a violation of his HBO contract as the last fight of his deal with Pascal, he was a TV free agent, and he was only stuck with HBO if HBO matched the offer. So the scenario you're presenting is impossible because if HBO doesn't match the offer, it's not a violation.
You've allowed HBO & Main Events to distort your view of this situation because Haymon doesn't speak. So his adversaries know they can lie as much as they want and nobody will call them out on it.
Stevenson was on record - multiple times - saying he would fight Kovalev "...if the money is right". That's a duck bro.
He already knew HBO wasn't going to pay top dollar on him because that's not how HBO works.
Fast forward to 2016. HBO is now on one side of the table, Showtime on another side of the table, with Main Events on the other side not able to pay the money the purse bid would swell to, thus forcing Kov to fight on Showtime, which is a violation of his HBO contract.
HBO had matching rights on one last fight, but Kovalev didn't want to risk losing to Stevenson, so instead he signed another HBO deal.
In the scenario you presented, where Showtime offered more than HBO, forcing Kovalev to fight on Showtime, that would NOT have been a violation of his HBO contract as the last fight of his deal with Pascal, he was a TV free agent, and he was only stuck with HBO if HBO matched the offer. So the scenario you're presenting is impossible because if HBO doesn't match the offer, it's not a violation.
You've allowed HBO & Main Events to distort your view of this situation because Haymon doesn't speak. So his adversaries know they can lie as much as they want and nobody will call them out on it.
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