Rey Vargas leaves Golden Boy for Premier Boxing Champions: report

Rey Vargas, a longtime Golden Boy fighter, has signed a new deal with rival outfit Premier Boxing Champions, according to The Athletic.

The talent drain continues at Golden Boy Promotions.

Rey Vargas, a junior featherweight titleholder who has spent most of his professional career under Oscar De La Hoya’s promotional banner, has entered a multi-fight deal with Premier Boxing Champions.

The news was first reported by The Athletic.

Vargas is the latest fighter to leave the Golden Boy stable. Andrew Cancio, a former junior lightweight titleholder, was recently cut from the lineup after he voiced his discontent with his promotional handlers. The Athletic also reported that Cancio has signed a multi-fight deal with Top Rank.

A tall, rangy junior featherweight, Vargas has a chance to defend his WBC belt against PBC stablemates Brandon Figueroa, Stephen Fulton, and possibly current bantamweights Guillermo Rigondeaux and Luis Nery.

Frustrated Terence Crawford lashes out at Errol Spence Jr.

Terence Crawford, apparently fed up, called out Errol Spence on social media on Sunday, accusing him of ducking a fight.

Welterweight titleholder Terence Crawford appears to have least one New Year’s resolution: tweet more often. That is, tweet more often at division rival Errol Spence Jr.

The Omaha, Nebraska native unleashed a slew of fiery tweets directed at Spence on Sunday night, apparently in response to a tweet that Spence posted earlier about his willingness to fight anyone in the weight class.

Crawford flexed his fingers and responded in kind.

“So what’s been the hold up homie?” Crawford wrote. “When I came to the division y’all all said I had to get a title first. Now you changed yo mind and talking about wrong side of the street. So I’m just here for another excuse what’s up.”

A Spence-Crawford unification fight is one of the best possible matchups in the sport. But efforts to make it are borderline nonexistent because both fighters are aligned with rival entities. Bob Arum’s Top Rank, which promotes Crawford, generally doesn’t do business with Al Haymon’s Premier Boxing Champions, which manages Spence. The Feb. 22 Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder fight is an exception.

The 32-year-old Crawford (36-0, 27 knockouts) is coming off an entertaining beat down of competent but unknown Egidijus Kavaliauskas on Dec. 14 in New York City. Spence (26-0, 21 KOs) is recovering from a car crash in October, in which he was ejected from his Lamborghini. He appeared to be in good health when he was interviewed during the Tony Harrison-Jermell Charlo card on Dec. 21. He said he would return to the ring in the summer. In his last fight, Spence outpointed Shawn Porter in a thrilling title-unification bout on Sept 28.

The promotional gridlock hurts Crawford more than it does Spence, 29. Therein lies the source of Crawford’s evident frustration. Crawford’s 2018 campaign was dogged by his inability to land a significant fight, as Top Rank simply does not have access to the best welterweights in the division. PBC, on the other hand, has a host of viable options for Spence to keep things in-house, including titleholder Manny Pacquiao and Danny Garcia. A Pacquiao-Spence fight, in particular, would do great business.

Crawford isn’t buying that as a legitimate argument. He accused Spence – and for that matter, every other PBC welterweight – of hiding behind their handlers. “… Stop using the f- promoters, managers and advisors for that weak ass excuse y’all doing they work for us y’all dumb mf if you really want a fight you tell them i don’t give two f—s that’s who I want to fight. let yo nuts drop you say you yo own boss…”

 

There is also the question of whether Spence will be ready to engage in a high-level bout anytime soon. If the plan is for Spence to take a tune-up and then aim for showdowns against Pacquiao and Garcia, it may be close to two years before a Crawford fight enters the realm of possibility.

In other words, brace yourselves for more tweets.

Eddie Hearn: Tyson Fury is ‘his own boss,’ Deontay Wilder not so much

Eddie Hearn believes it will be easier to make a Joshua-Fury fight, rather than a Joshua-Wilder fight, he said in a recent interview.

Eddie Hearn believes a fight between Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury will be much easier to make than a fight between Joshua and Deontay Wilder.

Wilder and Fury are scheduled to face each other in a pay-per-view rematch on Feb. 22. Whatever the outcome, a trilogy is reportedly in the works for the summer. That could leave Joshua as the odd man out. Joshua, who recently reclaimed his three heavyweight titles from Andy Ruiz on Dec. 7 in Saudi Arabia, has mandatory defenses against Kubrat Pulev and Oleksandr Usyk. It appears he’ll face Pulev first.

In any event, a showdown between Joshua and either Wilder or Fuy is not likely to happen in 2020, Hearn explained on a recent episode of the Chris Mannix Boxing Podcast.

“It may just be Pulev and Usyk for us (in 2020),” Hearn said. “… With Joshua losing against Ruiz, it was all over. Now it’s back on, and it’s bigger than ever. But how long do you want to wait. How greedy do you want to be?”

Hearn continued: “As Anthony said the other night, I think if Fury wins, that fight happens just like that, with Joshua. If Wilder wins, it’s a little bit more complicated. Few more egos, a bit more politics.”

Attempts to make a Joshua-Wilder fight last spring culminated with DAZN, the sports streaming company that holds rights to Joshua and Hearn’s Matchroom stable, offering Wilder a reported nine-figure multi-fight deal. Wilder, along with managers Al Haymon and Shelly Finkel, met with DAZN CEO John Skipper in March. Wilder ended up declining the offer.

“The difference is, with Fury, he will make things happen personally,” Hearn said. “If Fury wants that fight, he will find a way to make it happen, with him and MTK. [Fury’s promoter Frank] Warren don’t got any involvement with Fury anymore, a little bit on the U.K. side. Obviously Top Rank do and MTK is driving it, but fury is like his own man. He’s his own boss. He’ll just tell them. They’ll fall out, but Fury’s not afraid of that.”

“Whereas I feel like Wilder is being told what to do. That’s the difference. AJ is his own boss as well. If AJ turns around to me and says I want that fight, we have to go and make it, and if we don’t make it, we haven’t done our job.”

Tyson Fury blasts Deontay Wilder for being an ESPN no-show

Tyson Fury launched a rhetorical assault on Deontay Wilder after Wilder withdrew from a scheduled appearance on ESPN, saying he was ill.

Tyson Fury wasted no time in launching a rhetorical assault on Deontay Wilder, who withdrew from a scheduled appearance on ESPN at Louisiana State’s rout of Oklahoma Saturday in Atlanta, saying he was ill.

Fury addressed Wilder directly on Instagram in an expletive-filled post.

“This is Tyson Fury, AKA the Gypsy King,” said Fury, who was in Glendale, Arizona, for a series of interviews before Clemson’s victory over Ohio State in Saturday’s second college football playoff game.  “This is a message to Deontay Wilder, the Bronze Bomber, the big (expletive).

“He’s not turned up to any of the media events today, blagging he’s got the flu, because he doesn’t wanna be in the same room as me because I’ll take him to school.”

Fury said Wilder knew he would be “humiliated” if they faced off on camera.

“His management team are afraid to put Deontay Wilder in the same room as Tyson Fury — facts. Keep him away, Al (Haymon), keep him away, Shelly (Finkel).”

Fury and Wilder were scheduled to appear at the respective games after their rematch on Feb. 22 at Las Vegas’ MGM Grand was formally announced late Friday. In a series of wide-ranging interviews, Fury said he would make Wilder quit.

“He ain’t going to touch me this time,’’ said Fury, who got up from a crushing right-left combo in the 12th round of their controversial draw on Dec. 1 of last year at Los Angeles’ Staples Center. “I’m gonna make him say no mas.’’

He also called the sequel the greatest match of the era.

“Brit-versus-American, talker-versus-talker, entertainer-versus-entertainer, a pure boxer-versus-a pure power puncher,’’ Fury said. “This is the clash of styles.’’

Fury had plenty to say. Wilder had nothing to say. He didn’t show up. Then again, neither did Oklahoma.

Dana White says Floyd Mayweather fight could happen next fall

Dana White appeared on the Jim Rome Show to discuss his potential collaboration with Floyd Mayweather Jr.

So maybe it wasn’t just an attempt to garner attention on social media.

UFC boss Dana White appeared on The Jim Rome Show on Thursday and discussed his meeting with Floyd Mayweather in November at a Los Angeles Clippers game at Staples Center. White said that a deal to work with Mayweather was consummated on the spot and that he will most likely sit down with Mayweather’s manager, Al Haymon, next spring to finalize details.

“We started talking and we literally got a deal done right there on the court,” White said. “And if things play out the way things Floyd and I think they will, I will probably sit down with Al Haymon in March and get a deal on paper.”

White said the target date for a Mayweather fight is next fall.

“If everything goes our way, Floyd and I would be doing something in October or November.”

It’s not clear what type of fight Mayweather is envisioning, but the fact that he is working with White might mean the event will be some kind of crossover between boxing and mixed-martial arts.

After the Clippers game, Mayweather posted on his social media that he would be “working together” with White “to bring the world another spectacular event in 2020.” A few days later, Mayweather published another post depicting himself in fight gear, doubling down on a supposed ring return next year.

Mayweather, who will be 43 on Feb. 24, retired in 2017 after he stopped the UFC’s Conor McGregor in a lucrative crossover bout. Since then, he participated in an exhibition match against in Tokyo against Japanese kickboxer Tenshin Nasukawa, knocking him out in the first round.

 

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Coming out of retirement in 2020

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Premier Boxing Champions strikes pay-per-view deal with In Demand

PBC has entered into a multi-year PPV deal with distributor In Demand to provide up to at least four boxing PPV shows per year.

Premier Boxing Champions is doubling down on the pay-per-view business.

The boxing management stable headed by Al Haymon has signed a multi-year output deal with In Demand, a major pay-per-view distributor owned by Comcast Cable, Charter Communications and Cox Communications, it was announced today in a release.

“PBC has the best fighters and most anticipated bouts in the boxing world today,” said Mark Boccardi, In Demand’s senior vice president of programming and marketing. “We’ve been distributing PBC’s exciting matches on pay-per-view for some time, but we’ve now cemented our alliance for the next several years.

“It’s gratifying that Premier Boxing Champions recognizes the benefits of committing to a long-term partnership and reaping the rewards that In Demand offers our pay-per-view content providers: revenue, distribution and marketing support.”

PBC has exclusive output deals with Showtime and Fox, an enthusiastic proponent of the pay-per-view business model. In Demand distributed all four Fox Sports/PBC pay-per-view events in 2019, including the recent Deontay Wilder-Luis Ortiz rematch last month. That fight was the sixth pay-per-view boxing event In Demand distributed this year.

In Demand was left with a gaping void in its programming to start the year after the UFC left Fox for ESPN+, the streaming app, and Canelo Alvarez, perhaps the most bankable active boxer in the sport, signed an exclusive deal with streaming upstart DAZN, which started its early ad campaign with a heavy anti-pay-per-view slant.

But the absence of some familiar players in the pay-per-view market is not necessarily leading to its demise, as some had predicted. At Fox Sports, Executive Vice President of Programming Bill Wanger said he remains “very bullish” on pay-per-view. Including the Wilder-Ortiz II show, Fox has broadcast four pay-per-view boxing shows this year. The other three: Manny Pacquiao-Keith Thurman, Errol Spence-Mikey Garcia and Errol Spence-Shawn Porter.

According to Multi Channel News, In Demand’s first boxing event in 2020 could be the joint pay-per-view effort between ESPN and Fox for the Wilder vs. Tyson Fury rematch pegged for Feb. 22.

In Demand also inked a concurrent pay-per-view deal with All Elite Wrestling.