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What has happened to Premier Boxing Champions? Dan Rafael Article

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  • What has happened to Premier Boxing Champions? Dan Rafael Article

    What has happened to Premier Boxing Champions?

    When Al Haymon's series began with massive hype in March 2015, PBC rolled out one fight card after another on numerous networks as part of its extensive time buy. It was almost impossible to keep up with all the fight announcements and the networks they were on -- NBC, CBS, ESPN, NBCSN, Spike, Bounce TV, Fox, FS1. Did I miss any?

    Now, it is not so hard at all. In fact, it is easy. There is but one single card on the schedule and it is nothing to get excited about. It's a weak show on Sept. 27 in Santa Fe, New Mexico on FS1 that is headlined by welterweight Bryant Perrella against Yordenis Ugas. A significant and interesting fight this is not.

    This is a long way from when there were often multiple PBC cards per week populated by name fighters as Haymon spent his investors' roughly $500 million lavishly as though it would never run out.

    Now it is plainly clear that the war chest has been badly depleted, even though PBC officials are loathe to talk about it.

    I regularly examine purse payout sheets from the state commissions and the PBC fighter purses have dropped substantially from where they were last year. The production costs have been slashed also, which is why the huge stage and the blue and red fighter holding areas are gone; it costs a lot to truck them around the country. Other bells and whistles have also been eliminated to save money, according to multiple people involved in producing PBC telecasts.

    And since there is less money being thrown around, it is why the quality of fights has been dramatically reduced. One only has to look at the recently completed summer ESPN run of PBC cards. Last year we got big-time fights like Leo Santa Cruz against Abner Mares at Staples Center in front of a huge Los Angeles crowd and fights with major names such as Keith Thurman and Danny Garcia. Those fights cost millions.

    This summer we got the likes of Sergey Lipinets against Walter Castillo in a quiet casino in a main event that cost a tiny fraction of what the previous year's main events cost.

    Showtime (which pays for fights as opposed to being a time buy) is planning some fall PBC cards but there are only two more slated for Spike (none until Nov. 12). Those networks figure to have some of the better names and higher level fights. However, one outlet that has had the most significant PBC fights is NBC, which said Wednesday that it will not televise any other cards this year, either on the main network or its NBCSN cable network. Several dates for the remainder of the year have been canceled, including two December prime time NBC cards and at least three NBCSN cards.

    "We are working with the PBC folks to move remaining shows to better dates in first 2-3 months of '17," an NBC spokesman told ESPN.com on Wednesday.

    Since the cards on FS1 and Bounce TV are generally prospect oriented or lower level fights, there are few outlets left this year for the slew of top PBC fighters to fight on. There are no more ESPN cards this year (and they were turned into lower-level cards anyway) nor are there any more scheduled for Fox or CBS.

    Yet there are a whole bunch of top fighters aligned with PBC who have only fought once this year who are in need of bouts. They include Daniel Jacobs, Garcia, Thurman, Shawn Porter, Adonis Stevenson, Andre Berto, Jermall Charlo, Jermell Charlo, Julian Williams, Erislandy Lara, Vanes Martirosyan, James DeGale, Badou Jack, Anthony Dirrell, Andre Dirrell, Austin Trout, Adrien Broner, Rances Barthelemy, Gary Russell Jr., John Molina Jr., Dejan Zlaticanin, Jose Pedraza, Edner Cherry and Lee Selby, among others.

    Perhaps some of the fighters have fought only once by design but certainly not all of them or even most of them. But when so much of the money that was once there to bankroll PBC cards is gone, it's hard to keep guys busy at their expected purse level.

    There are others who have not fought at all this year, including Peter Quillin, Devon Alexander, Lamont Peterson, Jesus Cuellar and Abner Mares.


    Of course, some of these fighters will be scheduled before the end of the year. It would seem as though a fight such as the Cuellar-Mares featherweight title bout, called off in July, will be rescheduled before the sun sets on 2016. Also, for example, there is supposedly a deal between junior middleweight titlist Jermall Charlo and mandatory challenger Julian Williams to fight this fall, which is why the purse bid was canceled. Stevenson likely will face mandatory challenger Eleider Alvarez this fall. And Jacobs, a secondary middleweight titlist and a mandatory challenger for unified titleholder Gennady Golovkin, may wind up crossing the street to HBO for the high-profile/big-money fight in late November or early December.

    "Most people in TV sports programming stay away from trying to counter program college football, the NFL, MLB playoffs and the start of the NBA season in October and November," PBC spokesman Tim Smith said. "PBC is a TV boxing series and as such it's mindful of the sports programming around it and it wants to maximize potential viewership among sports fans."

    Of course, that was not an issue last fall, when the money was flowing and there were several PBC cards.

    So will there really be room for all of these fighters given that there are so few remaining PBC dates left in 2016, especially now that NBC is dormant until 2017?

    http://www.espn.com/blog/dan-rafael/...xing-champions

  • #2
    He fat doe.....

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    • #3
      Yeah, but boxing budgets everywhere are being slashed.

      Dios mio, how will our fighters be (over)paid? What's next, Kickstarting our favorite fight's purse?

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      • #4
        Interesting stuff I can understand why NBC would push fights on their network to next year makes no sense to up against college football on Saturday nights.

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        • #5
          If Haymon's monopoly goes down, this would go down in history of boxing.
          Haymon got at least 3/4 of the best boxers in the world, is like of Don King instead of robbing his fighters and give the fans good fights, started to pay too much for the fighters for fighting low caliber opponents or even avoid any type of fight.

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          • #6
            We are ****ed. Thanks Al

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            • #7

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              • #8
                Originally posted by yngwie View Post
                If Haymon's monopoly goes down, this would go down in history of boxing.
                Haymon got at least 3/4 of the best boxers in the world, is like of Don King instead of robbing his fighters and give the fans good fights, started to pay too much for the fighters for fighting low caliber opponents or even avoid any type of fight.
                Lmao Haymon has a stronghold at 147 and 154 aside from that it's very sparse.

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                • #9
                  What's now going to happen to the PBC divas who are used to getting $1 mil per cab driver? Hope they would just disappear and leave this sport.

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                  • #10
                    Boxing is dying.

                    The quality of fights are poor, everyone thinks they are worth more than they actually are, stars refuse to let their "skills" do the talking.

                    It's just a mess.

                    And you're all to blame. Shelling out money for crap like Manny/Floyd - showing promoters that you have money to spend, but no fkn clue how to spend it wisely.

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