Premier Boxing Champions postpones all cards in May
Premier Boxing Champions announced today that it has postponed all events scheduled for May.
Sports blog information from USA TODAY.
Premier Boxing Champions announced today that it has postponed all events scheduled for May.
Errol Spence Jr. reiterated that he plans to overcome frustrating obstacles and fight Terence Crawford no later than next year.
Errol Spence Jr. reiterated that Terence Crawford remains in his plans.
The welterweight titleholder, who has recovered from his horrible car crash in October, insists the fight can – and will – happen in spite of the fighters’ competing promotional-managerial and television loyalties.
“[That fight can happen] whenever, this year or next. We are going to fight. If we do not fight this year, it will definitely be next year,” Spence said to FightHype.com.
Spence was expected to fight Danny Garcia early this year but those plans changed the moment Spence’s Ferrari hit a center median and flipped multiple times, ejecting the boxer. Somehow he survived and has returned to training.
He reportedly is targeting Garcia again for a fight this summer, assuming the coronavirus shutdown ends and boxers are able to get back to work.
Spence also had been a possible opponent for Manny Pacquiao but the Filipino icon appears to focusing his efforts on making a fight with Mikey Garcia this summer.
Meanwhile, Crawford, a Top Rank fighter whose top rivals are aligned with Premier Boxing Champions, has had trouble finding legitimate opponents since becoming a 147-pounder.
While the PBC welterweights have been fighting each other the past few years, Crawford has fought Jeff Horn, Jose Benavidez Jr., Amir Khan and Egidijus Kavaliauskas. Those foes were solid but no where near Crawford’s level.
And Crawford reportedly has not embraced the possibility of facing Shawn Porter, the PBC fighter who lost a close decision to Spence last September and a genuine threat to Crawford. The Nebraskan is reportedly leaning toward a fight with Kell Brook, who was stopped by Spence in 2017.
Brook outpointed Porter in 2014 but most observers believe the Brit is in decline, which means he would be perceived as another second-tier opponent for Crawford.
Maybe Crawford is holding out his best-possible opponent, Spence. That’s certainly the fight fans want to see. And apparently Spence does too.
The Regis Prograis-Maurice Hooker fight and three PBC cards have been shelved as a result of the coronavirus threat.
Premier Boxing Champions is canceling cards through at least the end of April and Matchroom Boxing is calling off the Regis Prograis-Maurice Hooker bout because of the coronavirus pandemic.
PBC decided Monday to shelve three cards, including super middleweight David Benavidez’s homecoming scheduled for April 17 against Roamer Alexis Angulo at the Arizona Federal Theater in downtown Phoenix.
“The health and safety of the boxers, fans and those working the events are of utmost importance to us,” Tom Brown, president of TGB Promotions and lead promoter for the canceled PBC shows, said in a statement. “We are all disappointed, and as we get more information we will address future events.”
Prograis-Hooker, an intriguing junior welterweight bout, had been scheduled for April 17 at MGM National Harbor in Oxon Hill, Maryland.
Matchroom’s Eddie Hearn said he will try to re-schedule the bout.
Two other PBS cards were scheduled, one featuring Luis Nery vs. Aaron Alvarado in a bantamweight bout on March 28 at the MGM’s Park Theater in Las Vegas and Jamal James vs. Thomas Dulorme in a welterweight bout on April 11 at The Armory in Minneapolis.
The MGM announced Sunday that it was closing its casinos and hotels in Las Vegas for “the foreseeable future.’’
Meanwhile, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in an advisory Sunday that events with more than 50 people should not be held over the next eight weeks. That means there might not be any boxing in the U.S. until at least May 11.
Bob Arum is more confident than ever at the chances of 2 million pay-per-view buys for the Deontay Wilder-Tyson Fury rematch Saturday.
LAS VEGAS – Bob Arum is more confident than ever at the chances of 2 million pay-per-view buys for the Deontay Wilder-Tyson Fury rematch Saturday night on ESPN/Fox at the MGM Grand.
A buzz was evident Friday from a capacity crowd for the weigh-in. Five thousand fans jammed the available seats at the Grand Garden Arena. People had to be turned away by security when the last seat was filled.
“People are talking about this fight all over the country,” Arum said of a heavyweight fight that has been marketed with ads on several platforms, including the Super Bowl.
When Arum first predicted 2 million for the PPV telecast, it sounded like another exaggeration. It’s still bold. But the signs are promising. Arum, who co-promotes Fury with Frank Warren, believes the 2 million buys could be split evenly between the U.S. and the U.K.
“Frank thinks it could hit 1 million in the U.K., even at 4 a.m. (Sunday),’’ Arum said.
If it hits 2 million, Fury and Wilder are expected to collect more than $40 million each.
“It all depends on the pay-per-view in the U.S. and the U.K.,” Arum said.
Contracts filed with the Nevada State Athletic Commission include a purse number of $5 million for each. However, the guarantees are about five times more than that. Fury and Wilder are guaranteed between $25 and $28 million, according to sources tied to the promoters for each heavyweight. Wilder is represented by Premier Boxing Champions (PBC).
Bob Arum, the founder and CEO of Top Rank, is serious about selling his company to the highest bidder. Potential suitors include DAZN.
Bob Arum, the founder and CEO of Top Rank, is listening to offers from those interested in buying his storied company. And potential suitors have lined up around the block.
Arum, 88, told Business Insider recently that he has had discussions with at least three entities about selling his promotional firm: Endeavor, Liberty Global and DAZN.
“Endeavor, here we are,” Arum said. “We’re talking to Endeavor. We’re talking to Liberty Global. We’re talking to DAZN. I met with [DAZN owner] Leonard Blavatnik last week. We’ll see. Maybe we don’t sell.”
DAZN, of course, is the sports streaming platform best known in boxing circles for showcasing stars Canelo Alvarez, Gennadiy Golovkin and Anthony Joshua, among others.
Endeavor is one of the premier talent agencies in the world. In addition to representing stars from across the entertainment spectrum, the company owns the Mixed Martial Arts behemoth UFC, which it bought for $4.025 billion.
And Liberty Global is a telecommunications giant that owns the British cable company Virgin Media.
Arum envisions remaining with the company even after a sale, as Dana White did with UFC. “Anything is for sale if I can stay alive in the business,” Arum said.
Founded in 1973, Top Rank has promoted some of the greatest fighters in the sport, such as Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Leonard, George Foreman, Oscar De La Hoya and Manny Pacquiao. The company currently promotes elite talents Vasiliy Lomachenko, Terence Crawford, Naoya Inoue and Tyson Fury, who faces Deontay Wilder on pay-per-view in a highly anticipated rematch Saturday in Las Vegas.
Included in the potential sale would be fighters under contract with Top Rank, mortgage-free Las Vegas real estate and a film library of more than 10,000 Top Rank-promoted fights.
It’s not clear what Top Rank is worth. According to Business Insider, Arum said that his company represents the “biggest combat sports asset” in the market since the UFC sale.
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The Impact Network is the latest broadcaster to enter boxing, with a card taking place in New Mexico featuring Austin Trout.
What do Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, Joel Osteen and Paula White have to do with boxing? Not much. But that will soon change.
On Feb. 1, pugilism and evangelism will become unlikely bedfellows when the Impact Network, an African American-owned, urban Christian cable channel whose core programming consists of ministries by popular pastors, televises a boxing card in Ruidoso, New Mexico headlined by former junior middleweight titleholder Austin Trout. And that, alas, is only the beginning.
For the next two years, Impact, which claims to be available in over 85 million homes, plans to air 52 live fight cards. It will also produce 60 episodes of a new reality television series devoted to chronicling the lives of its pugilists called “Champions and Stars“. The first episode airs on Jan. 31.
In other words, boxing, a violent pursuit often associated with a certain moral low ground, will play alongside programming featuring noted televangelists sermonizing on topics like the Beatitudes and gospel singers like Bobby Jones.
It’s not exactly what one would call a match made in heaven. But why pigeonhole one’s audience?
“Just because the person may say that he’s African-American or I like a certain kind of food or that I’m a Christian and I don’t like sports – no,” Royal Jackson, Impact’s creative director, told Boxing Junkie. “Many believers are sports fans, whether it’s football, basketball and certainly boxing. It’s very narrow minded to stereotype people that way.
“We’re looking to cast a wider net. We don’t just want to preach to the choir. We want to open the borders up a bit to invite people to come to Impact who otherwise are not inclined. It’s not so much about retention, it’s about expansion.”
Indeed, there may be more similarity between boxing and the Bible than meets the eye.
“There is a redemptive aspect to Impact as well,” Jackson said. “We want to take the people that society has forgotten about and support them and be able to give them chances as well. Boxing is another way. A lot of boxers have checkered pasts and they’re fighting their way through it. If you open up your arms to embrace them and help them become something better and give them a new vision of themselves, it’s an opportunity versus closing another door on their face.”
From a pragmatic standpoint, boxing also offers fresh content for a channel looking to expand and diversify its programming horizons. Impact was founded by Jackson’s father, Bishop Wayne T. Jackson, Impact’s CEO and a prominent pastor of the Detroit mega church Great Faith Ministries, and his wife and fellow pastor, Beverly Jackson. The couple created Impact in 2010 out of a desire to establish a platform for ministers who could promote faith-based values.
Initially distributed through a local power station, where it grew to 200,000 homes, Impact was added to the Charter Communications family in 2017. (Impact is available when you sign up for the Spectrum Silver package.) Now, they are ready to expand on that initial vision.
“Impact is a lifestyle company and a lifestyle brand when it comes to creating enriching and empowering entertainment,” Bishop Jackson said. “Just like MTV first started with music videos and that was their core programming, but later you saw reality TV shows, movies, award shows. If people can go to Impact and see boxing … why have it where someone has to change the channel to get that programming? Why not keep them locked on Impact?”
Of course, the fights on Impact will reflect the greater spiritual ethos of the network. That means any swearing during the broadcast will be bleeped out and ring card girls won’t be scantily clad.
“We want Impact to impact you not just spiritually, but also with good wholesome, family programming,” Bishop Jackson said.
Bishop Jackson also notes that sport has abounded with men of faith, including heavyweights Evander Holyfield and George Foreman, and current welterweight titleholder Manny Pacquiao.
“One of our strategies is that we would love to give former champions and current champions an ability to have a platform to represent their message,” Bishop said. “So I don’t think it’s a strange vehicle, having boxing on Impact.
Added Royal Jackson: “We’re not in the business of shoving the gospel down anybody’s throat. We’re really in the business of highlighting the life of these people who have integrity and letting their life shine. We’re taking a new approach to faith-based media.”
While boxing marks Impact’s first foray into the sports realm, its executives are careful to note that it is merely one of a number of items on their menu.
“We’re not a sports channel, just want to make that clear,” Bishop Jackson said. “Boxing is added programming.”
Boxing, depending on whom you ask, is also undergoing a renaissance of sorts. Impact will join a space that has become relatively crowded in recent years. Established linear networks like Fox, ESPN and Showtime have a hand in the sport, as well as over-the-top streaming platforms like DAZN. For some, the competition is a sign of the sport’s renewed health; for others, it might be spreading the sport too thin.
Steven Marcano, the architect behind Impact’s entry into the sport, is clearly of the former opinion. A longtime showrunner who has worked with the likes of Don King and Mike Tyson, Marcano is perhaps best known for conceiving the boxing reality television series “Knockout,” which ran for three seasons and featured Roy Jones Jr. and Shane Mosley. The sport’s current best fighters and top stars are already been spoken for, but that doesn’t concern Marcano, whose ambitions lie with showcasing boxers who don’t quite have a home, including budding prospects and contenders who have been written off by other promoters.
In addition to Trout, the Feb. 1 card will feature El Paso featherweight Abel Mendoza and heavyweight Alonzo Butler, who has served as chief sparring partner for Deontay Wilder in the past. For Marcano, activity is key.
“We will put on seven fights a month from a roster of 20 fighters,” said Marcano, who plans to announce the full stable soon. “I’m fighting guys six times a year. Austin Trout fought two times in the last three or four years. Austin is fighting Feb. 1, he’s fighting again in May, then September, and he may even fight in November. And it’s all scheduled already.
“Inactivity is what hurts fighters.”
Marcano is also cognizant of the constant infighting that takes place between rival promoters and network entities. He stresses that Impact will welcome collaboration with other promoters.
“We don’t have a wall over here,” Marcano said. “This helps Bob Arum, Al Haymon, Oscar De La Hoya. Then you have all these guys that don’t get mentioned because they don’t have TV spots, like (Lou) DiBella and (Kathy) Duva. They’re great promoters, and if we can do a deal that makes sense, then we would be open to working with every last one of them.
“It’s not about us changing the landscape of boxing, it’s what does boxing need. Boxing needs somebody like Impact that can fill the void.”
But where Marcano believes Impact will make the biggest difference in the sport is the way it will introduce fighters to new revenue streams and possibly new career paths after they finish boxing.
“If you look at reality television stars, most of the people aren’t making astronomical numbers off the shows,” Marcano said. “They make them off endorsements, appearances and sponsorships. Fighters don’t have any ancillary income. If you’re the best promoter in the world, you should be able to get ancillary income for your fighters so they have a life after the sport when they’re not in the ring.
“What we’re trying to work on is becoming a multimedia group for boxing because there is no reason why boxers shouldn’t have commercials and endorsements. Boxers have never had that. Outside from a few, the majority are doing the cookie cutter stuff.”
Working with Marcano on the promotional side is Teresa Tapia, the wife of the late three-division titleholder Johnny Tapia, and Sterling McPherson, who will be oversee the nuts and bolts of the actual boxing cards. Together, Marcano believes they will make an imprint on the sport sooner rather than later.
“In 2021, we’re going to make (Impact) the biggest outlet for boxing in the country,” he said. “The only way we can do that is to work with other promoters. We want our fighters to fight three times a year and get them in shape and make them into stars in a short period of time.”
Oscar De La Hoya, the promoter of Canelo Alvarez, said that Billy Joe Saunders is not the front runner to face his fighter on May 2.
Billy Joe Saunders isn’t the leading candidate to fight Canelo Alvarez on May 2, according to Alvarez’s promoter Oscar De La Hoya.
Saunders, a 168-pound titleholder had been rumored to be Alvarez’s first choice for his next fight.
De La Hoya was talking about Alvarez’s immediate plans during a SecondsOut video interview when he squelched the rumor.
“I’ll tell you one thing,” he said. “Saunders is not the front runner, that’s for sure. I have no idea who threw that name out there. But once we nail down who it’s going to be, we’ll make an announcement shortly
“I have a trip to Mexico with Canelo and his team [scheduled}. We’ll sit down, I’ll stay there a few days, iron out a deal and take it from there.”
Saunders has been considered a leading candidate for several reasons. One, everyone seems to agree that 168 pounds would be the best weight for him. And Saunders is one of the four super middleweight titleholders.
A fight with Saunders and Callum Smith, another beltholder, would be the easiest fights to make. David Benavidez and Caleb Plant also hold 168-pound titles but they fight for rival Premier Boxing Champions, which would make negotiations complicated.
Another option would be a move back down to 160, although De La Hoya doesn’t seem to be keen on that idea.
“Just because of experience, going up to 160 and coming back to 147, maybe it would be a little difficult for him. But he has the option.”
Alvarez hasn’t fought at 160 since he defeated Gennadiy Golovkin by a majority decision in September 2018.
In his last fight, Alvarez stopped Sergey Kovalev to win a title at 175 pounds. He gave up the title shortly afterward, an indication that he has no plans to fight at light heavyweight.
Deontay Wilder promises Tyson Fury that we will not get up from the canvas the next time they meet inside the ring on Feb 22.
LOS ANGELES – Deontay Wilder’s chant sounds like an alarm.
“Bomb Squad,” he shouts at an almost concussive volume that forces just about anybody within the scream zone to cover their ears or look for shelter.
Yet, Tyson Fury, a singer when he’s not boxing or wrestling, just smiles. He’s not alarmed. He’s heard the scream. He’s seen the bomb. He even got up from the bomb, or at least the physical manifestation of it. It landed, along with a left hand, on Dec. 1 in the final moments of their first fight more than 13 months ago.
That makes Fury a survivor, a lone exception, yet proof, perhaps, that Wilder’s right is not quite as lethal as he and his long list of KO victims – 40 in 42 fights – might think. It’s no coincidence that Fury is using that moment, reminding Wilder of it again and again as their Feb. 22 rematch approaches at Las Vegas’ MGM Grand in a Fox/ESPN+ pay-per-view bout.
Fury reminded Wilder of that moment, taunting him about as often as Wilder broke into his trademark chant, during repeated face-to-face poses at a news conference Monday.
“Yeah, I told him I got up with my heart and balls,’’ Fury said in a tone that promised a lot more of both would be there for the rematch.
For the clever Fury, it represented an opening salvo in the psychological byplay expected to unfold over the next few weeks. No skillset is world class without a mastery of head games.
“I’m already living in his head,’’ Fury said.
Wilder, of course, laughs at that, screams Bomb Squad and promises to rip off Fury’s head.
In the first fight, Wilder said he gave Fury a baptism, which is an initiation. It’s a new beginning.
“Rising up is part of baptism,’’ Wilder said. “But this a different story. This is unfinished business.’’
Further business, Wilder says, that will end with no improbable rise from the canvas. There’s no counter for his power, he says.
“When you’re facing power there’s no way around it,” Wilder said. “You can’t prepare for that. You just have to hope that when it lands, it doesn’t do that much damage. He doesn’t even know how he got on the ground or how he got up in the first fight. He’s been dealing with that feeling ever since the end of the first fight’’
Fury might not remember how he landed. But the confidence he gained in getting up might be a seed for some doubt in Wilder, who is defined by a right with a dimension as singular as it is powerful.
Fury will try to plant it and Wilder will try to knock it out. Have no doubt about it.
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.
Sources: 122-pound champion Rey Vargas has signed a multi-fight deal with PBC. Vargas was previously campaigning under the Golden Boy Promotions banner. Vargas and Brandon Figueroa could be matched at some point down the road. Stephen Fulton in the mix for PBC at 122, too
— Mike Coppinger (@MikeCoppinger) January 11, 2020
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.
The exciting Jermell Charlo-Tony Harrison rematch Saturday was the second most-watched boxing match of the year, according to a report.
So much for the notion that boxing fans are too busy during the holidays to enjoy a good fight.
The entertaining rematch between Tony Harrison and Jermell Charlo on Fox Saturday had an average audience of 2.223 million, according to a report on BoxingScene.com. The website’s source was Nielsen Media Research.
The Premier Boxing Champions card peaked at 2.233 million during the main event, in which Charlo scored an 11th-round knockout to avenge an earlier loss to Harrison.
Those figures make Harrison-Charlo the second most-viewed boxing match of the year, according to BoxingScene. Only the Keith Thurman-Josesito Lopez (which peaked at 2.765 million viewers) had better numbers.
The telecast was Fox’s last of the year. The network’s 10 boxing shows averaged 1.403 million viewers, which is 12% higher than last year’s average.
Also, PBC on Fox averaged 103% more viewers than Top Rank Boxing on ESPN, which averaged 692,000.