Comments Thread For: Hearn: Wilder Won't Be at MSG Because He Doesn't Want Joshua
Collapse
-
-
Deontay Wilder and his team had several problems with the most recent contract promoter Eddie Hearn sent them for a proposed heavyweight showdown with Anthony Joshua. Their primary problem was that there was only a rematch clause in the contract in the event Joshua lost. If Wilder would’ve won, he would’ve had to fight Joshua again in an immediate rematch. If Wilder would’ve lost, Joshua wouldn’t have been contractually obligated to a rematch with him.Comment
-
Deontay Wilder and his team had several problems with the most recent contract promoter Eddie Hearn sent them for a proposed heavyweight showdown with Anthony Joshua. Their primary problem was that there was only a rematch clause in the contract in the event Joshua lost. If Wilder would’ve won, he would’ve had to fight Joshua again in an immediate rematch. If Wilder would’ve lost, Joshua wouldn’t have been contractually obligated to a rematch with him.Comment
-
Wilder: 'I want to catch a body on my record.'
Wilder on AJ: 'Be patient. I need the most money for risking my life, my head is not supposed to be hit like that, I will not accept 50/50, I will not fight him until maybe 2020, we have other plans, etc, etc'.
Seriously, stop supporting this bitch.Comment
-
Lolx....... You are pretty way backward and uninformed.
Get reliable information before you post shyytes on this platform.Comment
-
You flipping back t year old topics again. You haven't a leg to stand on so want to discuss the past, Wilder is clearly the one ducking.
Comment
-
Deontay Wilder and his team had several problems with the most recent contract promoter Eddie Hearn sent them for a proposed heavyweight showdown with Anthony Joshua. Their primary problem was that there was only a rematch clause in the contract in the event Joshua lost. If Wilder would’ve won, he would’ve had to fight Joshua again in an immediate rematch. If Wilder would’ve lost, Joshua wouldn’t have been contractually obligated to a rematch with him.Comment
-
In Brettcappe reality it's 2018 and Wilder hasn't exposed himself as the one not wanting the fight yet.
Comment
-
Honestly these guys have clouded my unbiased judgement , it's why I picked Breazeale but that fight was within a punch of difference as all Wilder fights are. All the alts would have been in hiding had Breazeales just landed one solid one. Oh well.Comment
-
Whichever way you paint it, wilder isn't getting a 50/50. Dnt crack your head trying to fix that. I already know how this thing will play out. Whenever wilder think hez ready for the fight, AJ will not be ready again. So you better be ready to scream another round of duck soon.Frazier and Muhammad Ali
each earned $2.5 million for their heavyweight title fight.
—Heavyweight champion George Foreman earns $5 million and the former champion Ali earns $5.45 million for The Rumble in the Jungle.
—Holmes and Cooney made 10 million a piece for their fight.
—Tyson was paid 30 million and Holyfield 35.
—Mayweather 250 million and Pacquiao 160
—Canelo vs GGG was a 55/45 split
—Wilder 14 million and Fury 10
—Lewis 17.5 million and Tyson 17.5 million
—Haye vs Klitschko 50/50 split
I could go on and on and on. Notice the trend here? That’s right I know you see it. Prizefights typically are and have been equitable for both fighters. Some on this list brought much more than the other. The bottom line is, I don’t care who is A,B,C,D fighter. When fighting for a belt that is going to generate potentially a million + ppv buys you make the split equitable and not 10-20 million flat pay s h ! t.Comment

Comment