ldoodle Publish time 2-12-2019 21:48:27

Why is Boxing so lucrative

Just been reading an update about the Pacquiao/Mayweather fight and the former has been offered a guaranteed $40m purse. Pay-per-view is set to breach $100m which Pacquiao is getting none of.

Even if the fight goes the full 12 rounds, $40m seems a bit excessive (equates to about $100m per hour). Considering they only fight once or twice a year, what's the reason for the high salaries?

Ian J Publish time 2-12-2019 21:48:28

Supply and demand and most of the huge fees will be funded by television and huge profits will be made by all as it's still very popular.

DrWise Publish time 2-12-2019 21:48:29

TV rights, and if you get them 2 fighting which i highly doubt, but it will be the highest grossing fight

at the moment as it stands highest grossing fight has been Oscar DeLaHoya vs Floyd Mayweather 120million$ i believe on PPV, boxing is lucrative, but id rather watch that than football 100%, and rather see 2 guys going full pelt at each other trying to win a title, than seeing a football match any day of the week

Deadringers Publish time 2-12-2019 21:48:30

Not sure what the perfect technical reason for it would be but I can take a guess.

First off there are not many other sports that I can think of that you are purposefully trying to hospitalize the opponent with a crowd watching in such an intimate setting.

And on that note of harming the other man I guess it also comes down to they are getting paid to potentially have brain damage and other parts of their body messed up.

NorvernRob Publish time 2-12-2019 21:48:31

It's purely because of the amount of money generated by these megafights.

Bear in mind that PPV prices are much higher in the US as well, $50-$60 a time.

A Mayweather/Pac fight would do around 2m buys in the US alone and maybe a million elsewhere. (I think De La Hoya - Mayweather did 2.4m and this fight would outstrip that comfortably) The Casinos pay a huge chunk of cash to have the fight there, then there's gate receipts, sponsorship etc and that's a huge stack of cash to share around.

It's like football I guess, you get right to the top of the tree and you're rolling in it, if you're at the bottom you have to take another job to support your family.

Ian J Publish time 2-12-2019 21:48:31

I wouldn't mind betting that the viewing figures were much higher in the days of Cassius Clay / Muhammed Ali although PPV hadn't been invented then

Venu44 Publish time 2-12-2019 21:48:32

You obviously know nothing about the sport then.

Deadringers Publish time 2-12-2019 21:48:32

care to elaborate?

emcor99 Publish time 2-12-2019 21:48:33

The "Thrilla in Manila" was in fact the first boxing PPV data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7

NorvernRob Publish time 2-12-2019 21:48:33

You can't compare free to air broadcasts to PPV though - PPV is what generates the cash.

Benn v Eubank in 1993 had around 16m viewers, but would have generated peanuts compared to a US PPV with 500kbuys.

Haye v Klitschko last year got around 15m viewers in Germany alone plus a lot of PPV money around the world, which is how they were able to be paid £20m (ish) each.

If Ali was fighting today, he wouldn't have as many viewers but he'd be a whole lot richer.
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