fat dan outing AJ/hearn

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  • Curt Henning
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    #1

    fat dan outing AJ/hearn

    http://www.espn.com/boxing/story/_/i...ean-fight-next

    its bad when fat dan is out there throwing some shade at you for not wanting the fight

    sad days for the UK and joshua
  • Redd Foxx
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    #2
    Not a fan of the fat one, but he makes some good points;
    "...to be offered a flat fee is not a real offer. It's an offer meant for the Joshua team to be able to run around and say, "Hey, we made an offer, and Team Wilder turned it down." It's called playing games, and it's nothing new in boxing.

    A little history lesson: When we were bogged down in the will-they-or-won't-they nonsense of the Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao saga, Mayweather at one point offered Pacquiao a flat fee of $40 million. That's monster money, but not in the context of that event. Pacquiao rightfully said no. When the fight was finally made, Pacquiao got 40 percent of the pie and earned well over $100 million."

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    • Curt Henning
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      #3
      Originally posted by Redd Foxx
      Not a fan of the fat one, but he makes some good points;
      "...to be offered a flat fee is not a real offer. It's an offer meant for the Joshua team to be able to run around and say, "Hey, we made an offer, and Team Wilder turned it down." It's called playing games, and it's nothing new in boxing.

      A little history lesson: When we were bogged down in the will-they-or-won't-they nonsense of the Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao saga, Mayweather at one point offered Pacquiao a flat fee of $40 million. That's monster money, but not in the context of that event. Pacquiao rightfully said no. When the fight was finally made, Pacquiao got 40 percent of the pie and earned well over $100 million."
      not a fan

      but dan is sensible and reasonable....any reasonable and sensible person can see whats going on...its not difficult....

      **** these AJ fanboys

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      • Redd Foxx
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        #4
        Originally posted by Curt Henning
        not a fan

        but dan is sensible and reasonable....any reasonable and sensible person can see whats going on...its not difficult....

        **** these AJ fanboys
        You can dispute their points and point out the common sense business applications of why the flat offer is not reasonable, and they always go back to this moronic, "it's more than he ever made."

        They are all either truly ******, or they're just acting that way because they don't have the integrity to admit this fighter they like is avoiding Deontay Wilder.

        I'll be damned if my appreciation for a fighter ever goes to the extent of me acting the fool for them. *** that. I watch them for entertainment, I'm not devoting myself to them like these fanboys do.

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        • Squ□redCircle34
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          #5
          Damn when Fat *** Dan calls you out on your waffling then YOU know there's some smoke with that fire!

          AJ talking like he want that work but we going see!

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          • Squ□redCircle34
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            #6
            Originally posted by Redd Foxx
            Not a fan of the fat one, but he makes some good points;
            "...to be offered a flat fee is not a real offer. It's an offer meant for the Joshua team to be able to run around and say, "Hey, we made an offer, and Team Wilder turned it down." It's called playing games, and it's nothing new in boxing.

            A little history lesson: When we were bogged down in the will-they-or-won't-they nonsense of the Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao saga, Mayweather at one point offered Pacquiao a flat fee of $40 million. That's monster money, but not in the context of that event. Pacquiao rightfully said no. When the fight was finally made, Pacquiao got 40 percent of the pie and earned well over $100 million."
            The sig quote and bolded lines is ether to all of AJ fan girls souls! Holy Cucamonga

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            • TheBigLug
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              #7
              He's right though.

              A flat fee offer for a PPV event is bull****. Like when Golden Boy offered GGG a flat fee, Arum and others come out and said it's not the way it works for big fights. Hearn knows it too.

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              • JimRaynor
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                #8
                Hearn throwing out ****ty offers to preserve his fighter. Rock Neuman did the same thing with Rid**** Bowe vs Lennox Lewis and many other opponents.

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                • Curt Henning
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                  #9
                  Originally posted by Redd Foxx
                  You can dispute their points and point out the common sense business applications of why the flat offer is not reasonable, and they always go back to this moronic, "it's more than he ever made."

                  They are all either truly ******, or they're just acting that way because they don't have the integrity to admit this fighter they like is avoiding Deontay Wilder.

                  I'll be damned if my appreciation for a fighter ever goes to the extent of me acting the fool for them. *** that. I watch them for entertainment, I'm not devoting myself to them like these fanboys do.
                  exactly...its sad

                  these dudes dont have to look anyone in the eye and sit by their keyboards and just say outrageous **** they dont actually believe

                  i give every fighter a chance to win me over.....what they do with that is up to them

                  thats why i hate on golovkin yet have respect for kovalev and loma......it has nothing to do with my race or their race.....everyone starts with a clean slate

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                  • Robbie Barrett
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                    #10
                    Originally posted by Redd Foxx
                    Not a fan of the fat one, but he makes some good points;
                    "...to be offered a flat fee is not a real offer. It's an offer meant for the Joshua team to be able to run around and say, "Hey, we made an offer, and Team Wilder turned it down." It's called playing games, and it's nothing new in boxing.

                    A little history lesson: When we were bogged down in the will-they-or-won't-they nonsense of the Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao saga, Mayweather at one point offered Pacquiao a flat fee of $40 million. That's monster money, but not in the context of that event. Pacquiao rightfully said no. When the fight was finally made, Pacquiao got 40 percent of the pie and earned well over $100 million."
                    1.Pacquiao wasn't offered 6x his highest payday, not even 2x.
                    2.Pacquiao was much closer in drawing power than WIlder is to Joshua.

                    If Pacquiao was worth 40%, Wilder is worth 5%.

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