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#1
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This is an interesting article regarding historic Pay-Per-View buys. The writer, IMO, is being biased against Floyd, but there are some good stats here.
http://www.examiner.com/x-21442-Figh...t-the-PPV-King Quote:
1. As a headliner, Brock Lesnar has the highest all-time average. Of course, I think it'd be important to add his wrestling headliner PPVs if you were to make it completely accurate. But in a REAL fighting sport, he's #1. 2. Total buys, nobody comes close to Oscar De La Hoya. 3. For boxing, Mike Tyson definitely has the highest all-time average. 4. No doubt, Floyd Mayweather has the highest average since his fight with De La Hoya. Any other analysis?
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#2
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You know I've always got analysis!
I will respond to your points though Rock... 1. Brock Lesnar fights for the UFC, so it's a different comparison entirely. At UFC 100 and UFC 87, he fought with GSP on the card. At UFC 91 he fought against one of the sport of MMA's top money makers in Randy Couture. When he fought his first fight for K-1 he had Royce Gracie on the card and the buyrate was only like 35,000 people. Also, adding Brock's WWE PPV's would be absolutely ridiculous considering that company basically laid the groundwork for the business style that UFC uses. The WWE never needed Brock Lesnar, not in a million years. They made Brock Lesnar the star he is today. You take Brock out of the WWE, nothing changes for WWE. You take WWE away from Brock and nobody knows who he is outside of college wrestling buffs. That would be like saying every buy on the Anderson Silva vs Chael Sonnen card should go to Silva because he is the "headliner" and bigger draw than Chael, when you have Matt Hughes fighting on the same card. It don't work like that, lol 2. Of course Oscar has the number for total buys, but Oscar also fought on PPV 19 times. He didn't just go from doing roughly 1 million buys against Hopkins and Mayorga to setting the all time record with 2.4 million buys against Floyd without Mayweather being the opposite end of that equation. So you can say Floyd didn't break it big until he fought Oscar, but Oscar and Golden Boy became MAJOR players after the Mayweather fight. They needed each other at the time, just like Manny and Floyd need each other now. 3. Mike Tyson could announce he was gonna take a dump in one of the bathrooms at Madison Square Garden tomorrow night and the building would sell out and it would get a million PPV buys. That's because Mike Tyson was the last American Heavyweight that made people truly excited. I believe that an era of Heavyweight dominance in North American Boxing culture died along with Tyson's career. 4. When Floyd says he's number one in PPV, he is talking about Boxing. Not UFC, not WWE, none of that. It is simply another made-up title that exists in the fight-game similar to "pound-for-pound" champion that fighters use to gloat over and play as bargaining chips. Oscar and Tyson are retired (no matter what rumors may come to light) so it's about who are the kings of the sport TODAY. In my opinion, Floyd right now has proven to be the bigger PPV attraction than Pacquiao, especially when you actually put a dollar amount on it. However Pac is still right there with him, and it's clearly going to be those two men who break the PPV records if they come together and fight. 5. If they had PPV in the 60's and 70's Muhammad Ali would probably dwarf all of these guys numbers. Last edited by J.B.; 06-06-2010 at 08:41 PM. |
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#3
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I wasn't clear with what I was seeking, what you gave is a response to my analysis, or rather, an analysis of my analysis
I also forgot... 5. Pac is clearly the biggest foreigner PPV boxer, but is #2 in overall comparison to Mayweather.
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#4
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My analysis would be that Rick Rockwell, Michael Marley, Ronnie Nathanieslz, and just about every article I see from the Examiner are always extremely slanted against Mayweather. Those guys make Kevin Iole seem like the most level headed fight journalist out there. (Kevin isn't terrible all the time by any means, but that's another thread)
Basically, Rockwell's conclusion is Mayweather is not the king. What a shocker. Well, as I said in my previous response, Oscar and Mike are retired from the sport almost without a doubt for good, so they are not even a part of this discussion. The discussion is about Mayweather and Pacquiao, and he can't even just admit that Floyd has outsold Pacquiao without finding a way to take Mayweather down a peg. Last edited by J.B.; 06-06-2010 at 09:34 PM. |
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#5
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There isn't really much more to say about the numbers in the article. The whole Boxing world has always known that Mike Tyson was the original PPV mega-star in Boxing.
It's funny how Rockwell has to assume that after Manny, Floyd can't generate big numbers with anybody else. As if Seldon, Ruddock, Bruno, and Mcneely were mega-star attractions when Tyson was still pulling over a million buys. Same goes for Manny too, both guys can, and will, be able to generate big PPV money after fighting each other (providing they don't retire permanently). |
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#6
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Also, here is another point that just came to mind.
Star power has always gone a long way with casual fans pre-fight predictions, and historically the major betting lines as well (not always, but rather typically). The one fight that people like to refer back to as the barometer when comparing Floyd and Manny's PPV numbers is, of course, the fight with Oscar de la Hoya. So, let's look a little deeper... When Floyd fought Oscar, he was widely considered the favorite to win the fight, and the betting lines favored Mayweather as well. Even though at the time Floyd still hadn't fully grown into the celebrity status he has today, he was still the favorite to win by people who still to this day don't know who Carlos Baldomir or Zab Judah are. When Pacquiao fought Oscar it was slightly different. A lot of the Boxing world's more hardcore fans, and of course all the Pinoy fans, thought that Pacquiao would beat Oscar (because we all know Oscar's history of basically losing every major fight of his career). However, a lot of the media, and lot of the casual fans said Oscar would be too big and too strong for the little Filipino, and the betting lines favored Oscar to win the fight with a similar edge that was afforded to Mayweather in their fight two years earlier. Then, we go back to looking at the actual numbers. The fight between Oscar and Floyd did almost DOUBLE what Pacquiao and DLH did, and I think that it's obvious to see that Oscar could have never done that big of a buyrate without Floyd Mayweather. After Floyd beat Oscar, then Hatton, he took his layoff and Pac emerged on the mainstream scene as the guy who was moping up Floyd's leftovers in a "more impressive" fashion. See, right there is the kicker. Even when Manny was looking awesome against Oscar and Ricky, the conversation still had the name Mayweather attached to it. As the hype surrounded this mega-fight more and more, people began to get attached to the debate and they took sides. Now the two are feeding off each other, but we can't forget how it all really got started, and that was May 5 2007. The end point in this comparison is that it's wrong of people to say that Mayweather's rise to fame rests solely on the shoulders of his fight with Oscar, or that Oscar was responsible for all of the buyrate. The proof is shown in the press, and in the numbers, that Floyd was considered to be one of the P4P Kings of the sport before he fought Oscar, and after he beat DLH it only solidified it in the minds of more of the doubters. I take nothing away from Manny Pacquiao's accomplishments when saying this, but I do believe it to be true, without a superfight with Floyd Mayweather on the horizon I don't think Manny would have skyrocketed to success in mainstream North American fans hearts as much as he has so quickly. Manny was always gonna have the Filipinos, but it wasn't until Mayweather was tossed in the mix that he really blew up here with casual American fans. Essentially, it has been the perfect storm for both fighters, and its going to be a true meeting of two living legends (providing it happens, lol). Last edited by J.B.; 06-06-2010 at 11:05 PM. |
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