Dana White expresses doubts about boxing venture

Dana White expressed some reservations and doubts about the boxing business in a recent interview…

Dana White has long teased that he was going to dive headlong into the deep waters of the boxing business. The UFC head promised a press conference last October to unveil his boxing operation. Yet October came and went. Then November, December, January … still nothing.

Now it appears he has cold feet.

In a video interview with Yahoo! Sports posted Tuesday, White was asked to comment on how he viewed the economic structure of boxing. He wasn’t so enthused.

“I hate speaking negatively about the sport of boxing,” White said, “other than the fact that it’s a mess – we all knows it’s a mess – and that it needs to be fixed, if it can be fixed.”

White continued: “I told you guys that I would have a press conference last October and announce all these things, but as I dove into this thing and started to look into the sport of boxing, the economics of boxing, that sport’s a mess. It’s a mess and it’s in big trouble. I don’t know. I don’t know if it can be fixed.”

What does White mean by “mess”? He didn’t say during the Yahoo! interview, but it doesn’t take a genius to grasp at least one of his objections.

As the largest mixed martial arts promotional group in the world, with nearly 600 fighters under exclusive contract, the UFC has considerable leverage when it comes to fighter compensation. The outfit signed a $1.5 billion broadcasting deal with ESPN in 2018. A few MMA experts, using publicly available financial documents, have estimated that UFC fighters take home anywhere from 13.6-16.3% of UFC’s total revenue in a given year.

The general consensus is that boxers do much better than that, which might be the reason for White’s reticence to wade in boxing waters. Promoter Bob Arum has been quoted in a recent UFC anti-trust suit as saying that his company Top Rank “pay[s] out 80%” of the revenue to fighters. According to Golden Boy’s financial documents that were brought to light during their anti-trust litigation against Premier Boxing Champions  (which was eventually rejected by the court), their fighter payout was 64% and 62% of total revenue in 2014 and 2015, respectively.

And it’s not a pattern that is likely to change anytime soon. In recent years, new players like the streaming platform DAZN have been doling out mind-numbing purses to fighters from all levels of the talent spectrum in an effort to bolster their presence in the market.

For White, who is accustomed to claiming the biggest piece of the pie, that’s a mess.

Fans cannot sue over Mayweather-Pacquiao bout, U.S. appeals court rules

Fans who were unhappy with the highly anticipated fight between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao cannot pursue a lawsuit on that basis.

Fans who felt swindled after learning that Manny Pacquiao was injured going into his long-awaited fight with Floyd Mayweather in 2015 cannot follow through with a class-action lawsuit because they were disappointed with the outcome, according to a verdict by the U.S. appeals court Thursday.

The ruling applies to both those who watched the fight on pay-per-view and fans in attendance at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

“The Fight of the Century” fell short of expectations, as Mayweather cruised to a unanimous decision victory. The fans turned their ire on defendants Pacquiao, Mayweather, HBO (which distributed the pay-per-view) and promoter Top Rank and its CEO Bob Arum.  However, The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 3-0 that the fans “got what they paid for” even if Pacquiao’s alleged injury was one of the reasons that the fight turned out to be a dud.

Judge Jacqueline Nguyen wrote: “Although the match may have lacked the drama worthy of the pre-fight hype, Pacquiao’s shoulder condition did not prevent him from going the full 12 rounds. Plaintiffs therefore essentially got what they paid for – a full-length regulation fight between these two boxing legends.”

Pacquiao revealed immediately after the fight that he had injured his right shoulder nearly four weeks earlier. His team believed that the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which presided over the fight, would have allowed Pacquiao to take an anti-inflammatory drug to numb the pain but paperwork reportedly was bungled. As a result, the commission learned of the injury three hours before the fight started. The commission denied the team’s request for a shot at that time. 

“We are very pleased,” Daniel Petrocelli, a lawyer for Top Rank and Arum, told Reuters. “The court established the very important principle that while sports fans may be zealous and passionate they do not have the right to sue because they are disappointed in how a contest was conducted, or in the outcome.”

As unsatisfactory as the fight was, Mayweather-Pacquiao generated a record 4.6 million pay-per-view buys and more than $400 million in revenue.