Canelo Alvarez vs. Gennadiy Golovkin III in September? Could happen

DAZN’s John Skippper met with Canelo Alvarez to discuss a three-fight plan that includes Gennadiy Golovkin in September.

A third fight between Canelo Alvarez and Gennadiy Golovkin could happen yet.

DAZN Executive Chairman John Skippper met with Alvarez to discuss a three-fight plan as part of the Mexican star’s 11-fight deal with the streaming service, according to a report on BoxingScene.com.

Alvarez would face, in order: Billy Joe Saunders, on May 2 in Las Vegas; Golovkin, on September 12 most likely in Las Vegas or Texas; and possibly Ryota Murata as early as December in Japan.

Golovkin likes the idea of fighting Alvarez in the fall, according to the report.

Alvarez and Golovkin fought to a controversial split-decision draw in September 2017. Most observers thought Triple-G had done enough to win. And Alvarez defeated Golovkin by a majority decision a year later.

Alvarez has said his business with Golovkin is finished but, obviously, Skipper is hoping he’ll reconsider.

DAZN announces global expansion, with boxing as focus

DAZN announced Monday that it is increasing its global presence to 200 countries this year…

DAZN, the so-called Netflix of sports, is doubling down on its global footprint. And boxing will be the focus.

The subscription streaming app announced Monday that it will expand its English-language service centered on boxing to 200 countries and territories from the nine in which it currently operates.

The inaugural event in the rollout will feature Mexican superstar Canelo Alvarez in his annual Cinco de Mayo Weekend appearance on May 2. Alvarez’s opponent has not been confirmed, but 168-pound titleholder Billy Joe Saunders appears to be the front runner.

“Beginning this spring, most of the world will have access to DAZN and its unmatched schedule of boxing events,” said DAZN’s Executive Chairman John Skipper. “Our roster of championship fighters represents some of the world’s most popular athletes, and we’ll be working with them to stage spectacular international events for years to come.”

The global service will include DAZN’s growing archive of classic fights, many of which feature top names like Oscar De La Hoya and Floyd Mayweather. New subscribers will also gain access to DAZN’s original shoulder programming, like the Peter Berg and Mark Wahlberg-produced “40 Days, a documentary series that takes a look at fighters’ training regime, and the Sylvester Stallone-producedOne Night,which chronicles the sport’s most historic fights.

DAZN, which is backed by billionaire Len Blavatnik, first launched in 2016 in Japan, Germany, Austria and Switzerland with a focus on international soccer. Two years later it entered the United States behind a lucrative 8-year, billon-dollar partnership with British promoter Eddie Hearn in a bold attempt to corner the boxing market. It has not been shy about its ambitions, paying top dollar to retain exclusive rights to some of the best fighters in the world, including Gennadiy Golovkin, Anthony Joshua and Alvarez, whom it signed to a five-year, $365 million deal in 2018.

“Since our launch in 2016, we’ve seen an encouraging level of interest around our key events from both international fans and potential partners, which highlighted the opportunity to capitalize on our existing rights portfolio within boxing to fuel our expansion,” said DAZN Executive Vice President Joseph Markowski, who will oversee the global service. “Establishing DAZN as the global home of fight sports is just the first step, and we couldn’t think of a better attraction for our inaugural event than Canelo’s traditional Cinco de Mayo Weekend fight.”

DAZN’s global plans will have particularly dramatic ramifications for the boxing landscape in the U.K., where the company is headquartered but has never operated. Heavyweight stars Tyson Fury and Joshua have exclusive deals with traditional networks BT Sport and Sky Sport, respectively.

According to the DailyMail, DAZN is planning to charge a £4.99 ($6.39) monthly subscription in the U.K. and aims to bid heavily for the rights to stream the third match between Fury and Deontay Wilder tentatively scheduled for July in Las Vegas.

Last November, it was reported that DAZN was up to nearly 8 million subscribers worldwide.

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DAZN hits 8 million global subscribers, according to report

Conspicuous absence and the politics of promoter-network relations

Lou DiBella used to put on a lot of shows for Showtime, but that hasn’t been the case recently. The promoter gives his take on why.

Showtime has presented a robust slate of programming in recent months featuring the likes of Gervonta Davis, Claressa Shields, and most recently, welterweight contender Danny Garcia. The same goes for ShoBox, the premium network’s long-running series devoted to up-and-coming prospects.

But conspicuously missing from these shows have been fighters connected to Lou DiBella, the longtime New York promoter who has worked extensively with Showtime in the past.

What’s going on?

DiBella says he has been embargoed, meaning Showtime isn’t doing business with him. Stephen Espinoza, president of Showtime Sports, insists that isn’t so. The only thing we know: Fighters from DiBella’s stable, many of whom need dates, aren’t fighting on the network.

The only recent exception was DiBella-promoted Alicia Napoleon, who fought on the Claressa Shields-Ivana Habazin card on Jan. 10. And DiBella cautioned not to read anything into the inclusion of Napoleon. “That’s only because they wanted Alicia as a future opponent for Claressa,” he said.

The fissure evidently stems from a meeting set up by DiBella that brought together heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder, the star of the Premier Boxing Champions stable who fights on Fox and Showtime, and DAZN, a rival of PBC, in March of last year.

Plus, DiBella has brought other fighters to the U.K.-based streaming service, including Regis Prograis. The former junior welterweight titleholder’s most-recent fight on Showtime was against Julius Indongo on March 9, 2018. His next fight was on a Top Rank-promoted main event on ESPN. Afterward, Prograis joined the World Boxing Super Series, in which he lost in the final to Josh Taylor. That fight was streamed on DAZN.

“No one is beholden to a network. [DiBella] doesn’t owe me his business, but at the same time there is a consistent evaluation,” Espinoza told Tha Boxing Voice in a Jan. 22 interview. “Part of the calculation of who we do business with … part of it is who is loyal and who we believe does business in the right way with us. I was not happy that we put that much into Regis Prograis and he went somewhere else.

“OK, that doesn’t mean I’m never doing business with Lou again but [Sergiy] Derevyanchenko, [DiBella] took him to DAZN. … Put it another way. You’re in my shoes, you’ve seen guys come up with Lou and then see them pay off somewhere else. Would you forget [that]?”

DiBella doesn’t buy that story. The promoter contends that the real reason he is “persona non grata” at Showtime is because of the meeting between Wilder and DAZN’s Executive Chairman John Skipper. Wilder’s managers Al Haymon, who heads PBC, and Shelly Finkel were also reported to have attended the meeting, in which Skipper reportedly offered Wilder a $100 million, three-fight deal to fight on the streaming platform. Wilder turned it down, citing “dishonesty” from DAZN, and went on to face Dominic Breazeale on Showtime and reportedly made in the neighborhood of $20 million. (Skipper later conceded to The Athletic that he was “too brash” during negotiations.)

DiBella promoted nine straight Wilder fights, beginning with his first title defense against Eric Molina in June 2015 and ending with his first fight with Tyson Fury in December 2018, according to BoxRec.com. DiBella believed he was acting “out of incredible loyalty” to Wilder when he arranged the meeting with DAZN but that it did not sit well with Espinoza, Finkel and Haymon, who has lucrative output deals with Showtime and Fox.

It’s not clear whether DiBella’s decision “to go rogue,” if that’s what it was, forced Haymon and Espinoza to meet DAZN’s outsize financial offer to ensure that Wilder did not join a rival entity. But as DiBella put it, “My only loyalty was to Deontay.”

“DiBella Entertainment is not embargoed by Showtime,” Espinzoa told Boxing Junkie in a statement. “No promoters are. But it would not serve any useful purpose to continue this in a public forum. Lou and I can discuss future business privately.”

DiBella feels differently. Showtime’s main content partner is the PBC; the two entities have a deal that takes them through next year. With that being the case, DiBella believes there was never going to be a significant offer from Showtime to have Prograis appear on its main platform precisely because the majority of Showtime’s budget was allocated to PBC fighters.

“Even though I was embargoed by Showtime because of the Wilder-DAZN meeting, after the conclusion of the WBSS, I personally offered Regis to Showtime in a meeting with Espinoza at the Palm restaurant [in New York City] on Friday, November 15, 2019,” DiBella said. “I made it clear to him that we were open to one fight or a multi-fight deal with Showtime. On a stack of Bibles and my father’s grave, I have not received any offer from Showtime, for one or more fights, to this date.

“In fact, in multiple conversations, Stephen conveyed to me that he was concerned about a lack of big fights for Regis because Al Haymon would not provide his fighters to fight Regis on Showtime. Obviously, Regis is managed by Pete Berg, Sam Katkovski and Mark Wahlberg, not Al. Obviously, I am no longer a PBC promoter. Stephen also reminded me that he had a Haymon-PBC deal through the conclusion of 2021 and that most of his budget was committed to that deal. All of the above has been conveyed to Regis’ management. ANY offer would have been conveyed and strongly considered. It still would be.”

Added DiBella: “This has nothing to do with Regis. I continued to work with (Showtime) a year after, including Wilder-Fury 1, and ShoBox events (O’Shaquie Foster-Jon Fernandez on Sept. 21), after Regis moved on from Showtime and prior to the Wilder meeting with DAZN. It has everything to do with the meeting between Deontay Wilder and DAZN.”

In addition to not getting dates on Showtime, DiBella no longer promotes any PBC-related cards in the New York area. For several years, DiBella was the chief promoter for PBC events at Barclays Center. The last PBC show he promoted was the Showtime-televised main event between Brain Castano and Erislandy Lara on March 2, 2019. He orchestrated the Wilder-DAZN meeting roughly two weeks later. Most of the Barclays Center cards since then have been promoted by California-based Tom Brown of TGB Promotions.

Timothy Smith, spokesperson for the PBC, said in a statement that “The PBC has a deal with Showtime where we provide content for its boxing programming. Showtime uses other promoters for its SHOBOX programming. Whatever the business relationship is between Stephen and Lou, you have to ask them about that.

“As far as being embargoed by PBC, I’m not sure I know what that means. We have consolidated much of the promotional work for the PBC with TGB because they do a fantastic job. We continue to work with other promoters, depending upon the show. We’re currently working with Top Rank to help stage Wilder-Fury 2.”

In the Tha Boxing Voice interview, Espinoza went on to say: “Lou has never once said to me any of the names (prospects Junior Fa and Charles Conwell) that you just said, not one time. Lou has a lot of business at DAZN and when he is tired of doing business over there he’ll pick up the phone and call me. Never once – and I will say this to you definitively – he has never once mentioned any one of those names to me and that’s not what a good promoter does. If a good promoter wants guys on a network, he is emailing, texting, sending me flyers, [direct messaging] me, saying, ‘You’ve got to see this guy,’ and I’ve never once heard any one of those names once from his mouth in a conversation.”

DiBella not only remembers the situation differently, but he called Espinoza’s explanation “empirically false,” pointing out that Showtime had a contractual claim on Prograis.

“I asked Stephen if there was an interest in stepping up because (at that point) Regis was looking for more money and not being on ShoBox and Stephen basically told us to take that opportunity,” DiBella told Boxing Junkie. “Regis went to ESPN and WBSS amicably. I have unequivocal proof of that. Showtime waived the right of first negotiation-last refusal that they were granted when they televised Prograis-Indongo. In exchange, I told Showtime that I would offer them Regis’ first fight after the tournament.

Added DiBella: “I’m in shock over the [Espinoza] interview. I thought we were finally getting to normalized things. I’m beyond disbelief.”

DiBella was referring to the fact that his fighter, Napoleon, fought on the Shields-Habazin main event on Jan. 10. Espinoza’s interview with Tha Boxing Voice took place two weeks later. DiBella takes issue with Espinoza’s comment that he was not offering his fighters to his network, citing what he believes is the ongoing embargo. Recently, DiBella says Espinoza offered another ShoBox date to one of his fighters, middleweight prospect Charles Conwell. Dibella is hopeful that this is the beginning of a thaw.

“I recently just had Alicia Napoleon on a Showtime fight time card,” he said.” I thought the embargo was lifted a month or two ago. He called me to use Alicia Napoleon in a fight. How come the embargo was sort of finally lifted and [Showtime senior vice president] Gordon Hall told me and [co-promoter] Tony Holden that Charles Conwell has a April ShoBox? So that happened because I was never offering him or that happened because maybe he was lifting an embargo? If this all started with Regis Prograis, how come I did so much work for Showtime after Regis fought on ESPN?

“What can a good promoter do when he’s embargoed?”

DAZN hits 8 million global subscribers, according to report

Sports streaming service DAZN has nearly eight million global subscribers, according to a report,

Sports streaming service DAZN is up to nearly 8 million subscribers worldwide, according to a report.

DAZN, which is offered in nine countries, doubled its number of subscribers since June – by roughly four million – after it launched in Brazil and Spain, according to London-based SportsPro Media. DAZN’s key selling point for its international customer base is its rights to European soccer leagues.

DAZN’s U.S. operations account for nearly 10 percent of its global subscriber base, or around 800,000 subscribers, according to SportsPro. DAZN streams boxing, Bellator and a wrap-around Major League Baseball talk show in the U.S, where it launched last year. Its long term plans are presumed to include rights to major sports leagues like the NFL and NBA.

By comparison, it was recently announced that ESPN’s streaming app ESPN+ – which is available only in the U.S. – had surpassed 3.5 million subscribers. That number is expected to spike after the unveiling of Disney+, the streaming app produced by ESPN’s parent company. Along with Hulu, the apps are offered in a bundle at a low cost.

In a recent interview, DAZN’s Executive Chairman John Skipper, who formerly ran ESPN, said the company does not plan to release its subscriber numbers.