Black Man of the Day: Al Haymon - Most Powerful Man in Boxing

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Alan Haymon is an American boxing adviser/manager that is adviser to Floyd Mayweather Jr. and has twice won the Boxing Writers of America Manager of the Year Award.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Haymon

Fighters who are currently or were previously represented by Haymon include:

Floyd Mayweather Jr.
Adonis Stevenson
Julio Caesar Chavez Jr.
Amir Khan
Peter Quillin
Josesito Lopez
Erislandy Lara
Cristobal Arreola
Devon Alexander
Adrien Broner
Andre Berto
Danny Garcia
Austin Trout
Lamont Peterson
Anthony Peterson
Seth Mitchell
Gary Russell Jr.
Antonio Tarver
Sakio Bika
Vernon Forrest
Leonard Bundu
Artur Szpilka
Lamon Brewster
Jermain Taylor
J'Leon Love
Omar Figueroa
Paul Williams
Leo Santa Cruz
John Molina, Jr.
Deontay Wilder
Lucas Matthysse
Chris Pearson
Errol Spence
Marcos Maidana
Julian Williams
Keith Thurman
Paulie Malignaggi
Robert Guerrero
Shawn Porter
Luis Collazo
Rances Barthelemy
Semajay Thomas
Roberto García
Kevin Bizier
Lucian Bute
Andre Dirrell
Anthony Dirrell
 
Is Al Haymon good or bad for boxing?


From what I can see regarding boxing politics it often seems to go one step forward and two steps back. I was positive at the back end of last year when after Richard Schaefer’s departure from Golden Boy Promotions Oscar De La Hoya said he would do all he can to improve the relationship with Bob Arum and Top Rank.

This has allowed us to turn fantasy match ups like Ruslan Provodnikov v Lucas Matthysse into a reality. The WBC have also been spearheading summits with the other organizations (excluding WBO) to regulate in terms of unification bouts, mandatories, linear champions etc. Everything is starting to look pretty positive, enter Al Haymon.

Al Haymon

Many give him credit for breaking the HBO, Showtime monopoly with a new TV deal. His fighters generally seem to be loyal to him and feel he has their best interests at heart. He has a huge stable now and no particular ties to any promotion company so this should be a good thing right?

Negatives – Golden Boy Fighters

De La Hoya has lost several boxers as a result of the Schaefer departure. Adrien Broner and Danny Garcia were amongst the most high profile and recently Leo Santa Cruz has also jumped ship. Does this mean that Haymon fighters won’t face Golden Boy fighters? If this is the case then we are back to square one. We could miss a lot of big fights.

Quillin and Roc Nation

Peter Quillin relinquishing the WBO title only to fight for it 5 months later is one of the strangest things I have ever seen in boxing. On the face of it it looks like he wanted to avoid Matt Korobov only to face Andy Lee who knocked Korobov out? In reality it is suggested that Quillin gave up the title as a favor to Haymon because he was unhappy with the situation and involvement with Roc Nation promotions. Roc Nation have just signed a host of fighters including Andre Ward. They are looking to be a major player but once again if there are problems with Haymon then this could be a major issue.

Spike TV

It is a good thing for consumers when a monopoly is broken regarding television. There are too many PPV events with HBO and Showtime which are often free to watch in the UK through Sky Sports. With Haymon’s stable of fighters he can pack some very good cards with his Spike TV deal and as a cheaper alternative. Again though on the flip side if you have 3 different powerful networks each with exclusive fighters then cross over fights become extremely difficult.

Big fights

As aforementioned Leo Santa Cruz has moved from Golden Boy to Haymon exclusively. This seemed a surprise but Oscar revealed that it was due to a contract clause. The clause stated if Golden Boy opened negotiations with Guillermo Rigondeaux to fight Santa Cruz then Haymon could buy out the contract. What a fantastic knight in shining armor swooping in to deny fans one of the biggest fights in boxing. Santa Cruz says he is willing to tale the fight and he might even win it. Rigo was knocked down twice in his last fight nd he is 34. Someone will beat him eventually and after that they can make lots of money. Obviously that person won’t be Leo Santa Cruz.

Other Mischief

Recently I tipped Lucas Matthysse v Ruslan Provodnikov as the top fight for March. However as Al Haymon had already pre-booked the StubHub center on March 28th, but the date is in jeopardy. Haymon isn’t currently hosting an event there but has no intention of shifting. The new date tipped is April 18th alongside Terence Crawford’s light welterweight debut against Thomas Dulorne.

In time it may show that Haymon is great for boxing but from what I see at the moment there are more questions than answers.
 
Spike TV unveils Al Haymon series

Another week, another television deal for boxing manager and adviser Al Haymon, who has the deepest stable of fighters in the sport and now has another outlet on which to have them televised.

On Thursday came the formal announcement of the second Haymon television deal in two weeks, as basic cable channel Spike TV unveiled plans to air Haymon's "Premier Boxing Champions" series.

Spike TV, which has been involved in combat sports as a television home to Bellator MMA and Glory kickboxing, will air boxing for the first time as part of Haymon's deal to purchase time on the network. Spike TV will carry a minimum of 33 monthly cards on Friday nights -- nine this year with 12 more apiece in 2016 and 2017. The network also said that if all goes well, additional cards might be added.

The first card will take place March 13 (9 p.m. ET/PT) at the StubHub Center in Carson, California, and be headlined by former welterweight titleholder Andre Berto (29-3, 22 KOs) against Josesito Lopez (33-6, 19 KOs). Former welterweight titleholder Shawn Porter (24-1-1, 15 KOs) and Roberto Garcia (36-3, 23 KOs) will meet in the co-feature.

"We share the vision of the 'Premier Boxing Champions' series to put the fighters first," Spike TV president Kevin Kay said. "The fighters are the stars, and we will give them a platform to demonstrate why they are among greatest and most exciting athletes in the world."

The broadcast team will be announced later, Kay said.

The announcement came one week after Haymon and NBC unveiled plans for 20 "Premier Boxing Champions" cards this year in a multiyear deal. The NBC deal, also a time buy, includes five cards on NBC on Saturday nights, six on NBC on Saturday afternoons and the remaining nine in prime time on NBC Sports Network.

That series begins March 7 in NBC prime time at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas with welterweight titlist Keith Thurman (24-0, 21 KOs) facing former two-division titleholder Robert Guerrero (32-2-1, 18 KOs) and former three-division titleholder Adrien Broner (29-1, 22 KOs) facing John Molina (27-5, 22 KOs) in the junior welterweight co-feature.

The second card, slated for April 11 at an East Coast site to be determined and also on NBC in prime time, will pit junior welterweight champion Danny Garcia (29-0, 17 KOs) against titleholder Lamont Peterson (33-2-1, 17 KOs) in a nontitle bout at 143 pounds.

Kay said he is a "legendary [Muhammad] Ali fan" and has wanted to bring boxing to Spike TV.

"I love that [Ali] era of boxing, and I have always felt that if somebody came along and could put together great fights and great cards and market and promote it in the right way, and do it on cable TV on a regular basis and be committed to it, that we could bring that back and kind of get boxing the comeback it deserves," Kay said. "Boxing needs a comeback right now. Right now I think you look at boxing and it's just a handful of guys that you know.

"I think that's because nobody is committed to a consistent place on [basic] cable TV where you can promote, market, and develop boxers and their brands. That's what I'm excited about. I have wanted to do it for a long time."

Haymon does not speak to the media, but Kay said he decided to throw in with Haymon after looking at various entities in the boxing business.

"Haymon has big names. What I wasn't hearing [from others] was that the fighters come first because I believe the fighters need to come first," Kay said. "It's not about the manager, the promoter -- that's what I think is actually not good for the sport. We're not talking about any of that [with Haymon]. Al's thing is that, and I always say, he's like a ghost, man. His spirit is with us. But the thing that I heard was he wants to innovate and wants to change the presentation of the sport because he feels, like I feel, which is what I had wanted to hear, is that I don't want to see a red, white and blue ring when I turn on a fight and feel like I'm still in 1975. I want to bring a presentation to this, and this is what we at the network do.

"We want to update the level of production and put a broadcast team out there that is young, diverse, that feels like the audience. We want to tell stories about fighters and build them as stars. Commit to shoulder programming for every single fight and run it a whole bunch of times on the channel so that we get to a place where the audience knows who these guys are and gets invested in them. We look at these kids today, and they are so charismatic and they have great smiles and winning personalities. Let's tell their stories and invest the audience in them, and I think if we do that, we have something really special here."

Berto, who has been featured for years on premium cable networks HBO and Showtime, said he believes bringing top-level fights (in which the fighters will earn similar purses) to basic cable is great for boxing.

"This series is something that the sport has been needing and yearning for," he said. "I believe this is a huge message from Al Haymon. He has always been a man behind the scenes, but he is making huge power moves, and this right here is one where he is definitely sending out his message to everyone in general. For everyone that has been trying to find out what he really is about or who has doubted what he is able to do, this right here is a huge platform for his fighters. We are going to be in about 90 or 100 million homes. It doesn't get any better than that. This is taking it back to the days of Sugar Ray Leonard, [Roberto] Duran and Marvin Hagler. They were stars, and now we are getting a taste of that now. It's an exciting moment."

Besides the opportunity to make good money against a quality opponent, Porter said he is excited the fighters will have their stories and personalities exposed to a wide audience.

"I think they just want everyone out in the world to be aware of what the talent is in boxing now," Porter said. "It's talent that hasn't been seen by everyone. I think with launching this on Spike TV, and also NBC, it's going to show people out in the world that boxing has great talent and excitement that everyone can tune in to.

"For me personally, it's very cool because people know me from a boxing standpoint, but to cross over, touch so many more people and have them get to know you, I'm built for that. I'm excited for that and I'm ready for it. It's very exciting for me personally and all the boxers coming to do this as well. I think we will all have something to look forward to."
 
Al Haymon MIA as NBC announces new prime time boxing schedule
NBC revealed a deal to broadcast 20 live boxing cards in 2015 featuring some of the top fighters in the sport.

Perhaps the most intriguing part of Wednesday's press conference to announce NBC Sports Group's new venture in boxing wasn't the news itself.

Word that NBC had struck a deal to broadcast 20 live boxing cards in 2015 — five in prime time on NBC — featuring some of the top fighters in the sport was long rumored to be a done deal.

All that was missing was the press release.

Instead, the most fascinating aspect of Wednesday's display was whether Al Haymon, the powerful power broker and driving force behind the boxing series, would appear.

Or talk.

Or just stand next to Sugar Ray Leonard, who will do on-air commentary with Al Michaels on the shows.

Haymon, who advises and manages more than 150 fighters, including Floyd Mayweather Jr., whom he transformed into the world's highest-paid athlete, was nowhere to be seen.

And this was not surprising.

For all the power he wields- talk is that Haymon is trying to reinvent the sport by moving it away from the premium cable networks and onto network television where it once thrived — he is just as reluctant to appear or talk in public.

Though countless stories have been written about him, none have apparently quoted Haymon.

So even though Haymon, a former concert promoter with a Harvard MBA, was the main reason the "Premier Boxing Champions" series, as it's called, was being hyped, he was a ghost on Wednesday.

"He's definitely around," said Lamont Jones, vice president of operations for Haymon Boxing. "He's definitely in the building."

"He's everywhere," a public relations flack piped in with a laugh.

Will he speak?

"Who knows, bro," Jones said with a smile.

The first show in the series will take place on March 7 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas and features a pair of sensational match-ups: Keith (One Time) Thurman against Robert (The Ghost) Guerrero.

And Adrien Broner against John Molina Jr.

The next show, on April 11 will set Danny Garcia against Lamont Peterson in another exciting scrap.

All of them are advised by Haymon and all were present at the Saturday Night Live studio at 30 Rock, where the announcement was made — and where half the questions were about Haymon.

"I feel like Dorothy being asked about the Wizard of Oz here," Mark Lazarus, chairman of NBC Sports Group said in response to a question about the no-show Haymon. "My dealings with him have been terrific. He's an understated type of person but he's direct and honest and forthright and has a plan and backs up his plan with facts. We're betting that he's good for the sport."

Haymon is said to have purchased time on NBC and NBC Sports Network for $20 million for 20 shows in 2015.

The breakdown is as follows:

Five of the cards will take place Saturday in prime time on NBC. Six will occur Saturday afternoon on NBC, and nine will be on Saturday in prime time on the NBC Sports Network.

There will be an ad for the first card during the Super Bowl pre-game show on Feb. 1, Lazarus said.

The Academy Award-winning composer Hans Zimmer will produce scores for the shows.

At one time, Haymon had so many of his boxers performing on HBO, the network came to be known as the "Haymon Boxing Network" by those critical of his vast sway.

He then took those fighters, including Mayweather, to Showtime before his latest reincarnation on NBC.

While NBC executives downplayed the move as a take-down of HBO and Showtime, Broner suggested a changing of the guard.

"Fighters (once) made more money (fighting on Showtime)," Broner said. "(But) that's in the past. This is the new."

However, those hoping to see Mayweather, Haymon's top client on NBC, will be be disappointed.

For all the bluster on Wednesday, the top fighter in the sport remains exclusively signed with Showtime for two more fights when he has suggested he may retire.

Jones declined to name the other fighters in Haymon's stable who will participate in future cards on the series.

"Yeah, he's the top PPV fighter of his generation, maybe of all time," Jones said. "So he's said that he only has a couple fights left, so I'm sure he'll handle those on the appropriate platform."

http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/m...-new-prime-time-boxing-plan-article-1.2078099
 
Frank Warren column:

Music mogul Al Haymon calls tune with Deontay Wilder



Deontay Wilder’s brilliant acquisition of the WBC heavyweight championship makes heavyweight boxing a whole new brawl game, both in the ring and outside the ropes.

The lopsided victory of the charismatic clouter from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, over the holder Bermane Stiverne not only brings a long-awaited American renaissance for the sport’s flagship division but cements the emergence of a new behind-the-scenes power broker in world boxing.

One Al Haymon, a multimillionaire mogul from the music industry, is now near to becoming American boxing’s Mr Big. Is he the new Don King?

His influence is enormous. He not only manages Wilder but has a stable of around 150 elite fighters either as manager or adviser, among them Floyd Mayweather Jnr, Amir Khan, Julio Cesar Chavez, and, it is rumoured, a comeback-making David Haye. Oscar De La Hoya’s Golden Boy Promotions settled their multimillion-dollar lawsuit with him last month.

Unlike King, he does not promote fights himself but he has influence over those who do and has just launched a $20m (£13.2m) prime-time deal with NBC that marks the sport’s regular return to network television.

So just who is Big Al? He’s a fascinating figure, something of a publicity-shy mystery man, rarely seen at ringside. He doesn’t do interviews and dislikes having his photo taken. He is friendly enough to reporters he knows personally, but does little more than shake hands and say hello.
Read more: Wilder interest excites Fury

He actually comes from the same city, Cleveland, Ohio, as King but has a vastly different background. A Harvard graduate with a master’s degree in economics, he made his fortune in music by promoting such acts as MC Hammer, Whitney Houston and The O’Jays, then quietly moved into the boxing background over a decade ago, gradually becoming the prime architect of Mayweather’s career.

His new main man Wilder surprised us. Most thought, with his record of quick-fire finishes, he would come out swinging like Mike Tyson. Instead he jabbed and moved like Muhammad Ali. On Ali’s 73rd birthday Wilder reminded us what boxing used to be like in the great man’s heyday, even mimicking him at the end, declaring, “Ahhm so pretty... I shook up the world.” Well, good as it was, it was hardly as earth-shattering as Ali’s win over Sonny Liston 51 years ago.

But it has opened up a new era for heavyweight boxing. The fight was televised live in America on Showtime and was the highest-rated card on the network for more than two years.

A lot of people wondered what might happen if Wilder went beyond six rounds but he had the stamina and heart to take all the fight out of Stiverne. What impressed me more than anything was his jab, which is reminiscent of Larry Holmes. He also took a couple of shots on the whiskers but used his brain and boxed intelligently.

Wilder seems a worthy successor to the crown worn with such distinction by Vitali Klitschko, and a reunification fight with Wladimir for the other three titles would be a record-breaking blockbuster. But it won’t happen yet – and may not happen at all. Wilder has spoken of Tyson Fury, the leading contender for Wladimir’s WBO crown, as a potential opponent and this could be a natural fight between two undefeated giants who can both box and punch. In fact, I have had a call from Wilder’s team for a possible bout in May or June, so fingers crossed.

Fury is certainly up for it if he gets past a very capable German, Christian Hammer, at the O2 on 28 February, as he should. But nothing is ever certain in boxing, as boxing’s new Mr Big may yet discover.

Referee Davies quits ring after frustrating fall from favour

British boxing has shamefully lost one of its best referees of recent years as Richie Davies has handed in his licence to the British Boxing Board of Control. Although he hasn’t made it public, I understand Davies feels aggrieved at apparently being frozen out of handling the really big fights over the past couple of years.

I think I know why. The 59-year-old former London cabbie fell foul of the board when he attended – merely as a spectator – the David Haye-Dereck Chisora fight I was involved with at Upton Park in July 2012. The board had refused to license this show because of Chisora’s suspension and it went ahead under the auspices of the Luxembourg Federation. Davies’ presence is believed to have displeased the board, particularly its chairman Charlie Giles, who also heads the Referees Commission.

It seems an odd coincidence Davies did not work as a referee for a while and when he eventually did he was not allocated any of the title fights his rating as a star-class official merited. There may well be other issues but Davies clearly feels frustrated and the result is the loss of world-class ref.

Rios-Alvarado on Saturday night

Trilogies in boxing have served up some classics over the years. In the 1940s Tony Zale-Rocky Graziano, in the 70s Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier, in the 80s Sugar Ray Leonard-Roberto Duran, in the 90s Evander Holyfield-Riddick Bowe, and in the 2000s Marco Antonio Barrera-Erik Morales plus Arturo Gatti-Micky Ward.

This Saturday night live and exclusive on BoxNation fans will get to see this decade’s most exciting trilogy when Brandon Rios and Mike Alvardo collide in Colorado with the Vacant WBO World Welterweight title on the line.

Going into the fight they are one apiece - Rios won the first encounter, stopping Alvarado in seven rounds in October 2012, then five months later Alvarado got revenge winning a close points decision, both fights were fight of the year candidates - so the third chapter should be the final decider.

http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/...n-calls-tune-with-deontay-wilder-9996358.html
 
CBS bringing back Saturday boxing as part of Showtime, Al Haymon deal

CBS and its premium cable partner Showtime announced a multiyear deal with powerful boxing manager Al Haymon on Tuesday that will bring the sport regularly to network television and include bouts anchored by Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., Adonis Stevenson and Jhonny Gonzalez.

Mexico's Gonzalez, the World Boxing Council featherweight champion, will defend his belt March 28 in Showtime’s season-opener against Gary Russell Jr., a card that will also include super-welterweights Jermell Charlo vs. Vanes Martirosyan.

CBS will follow April 4 by airing Premier Boxing Champions fights, the circuit formed by Haymon, starting with light-heavyweight champion Stevenson defending his belt against former super-middleweight champion Sakio Bika.

The first CBS fight will begin at noon Pacific time, a return to the Saturday afternoon staple of televised boxing that increased the star-power of fighters including Sugar Ray Leonard and Ray “Boom Boom” Mancini.

Premier Boxing Champions also has a deal with NBC and Spike TV, with cards airing on those networks March 7 and March 13, respectively.

No sites have been announced for the CBS/Showtime bouts yet, but it’s believed Stevenson will fight in his native Canada.

Chavez, who left promoter Bob Arum’s Top Rank stable to join Haymon, is expected to fight in the Southland in his April 18 light-heavyweight bout on Showtime against Andrzej Fonfara.

The second scheduled CBS show is May 9, featuring unbeaten former lightweight world champion Omar Figueroa, in his junior-welterweight debut, against former world champion Ricky Burns.

The May 9 card and the ones to follow on CBS will begin at 1:30 p.m. Pacific time.

The network announced it will stage as many as eight Saturday afternoon cards this year, with others to follow in June, July and September.

The fights will be promoted across multiple platforms, including CBS, Showtime and CBS Sports Network, the networks said in a news release.

“With the support of our parent company, we are uniquely positioned for a three-tiered approach that includes live boxing broadcasts on America’s No. 1 network … the benefit of elevating the sport across these platforms for all involved, including Showtime, is immeasurable,” Showtime Vice President Stephen Espinoza said in a prepared statement.

Showtime announced the fights will “support and be supported by” the May 2 pay-per-view fight on Showtime that is expected to match Floyd Mayweather Jr. against Manny Pacquiao.

Negotiations for that long-awaited welterweight title bout are nearing a conclusion, according to officials involved in the talks.
 
Wow, this guy is really trying to bring boxing back to the mainstream. CBS, NBC, and Spike TV....sounds like a winner.

I hope he can pull it off, because boxing has been on life support with the casual sports fan for years.
 
Wow, this guy is really trying to bring boxing back to the mainstream. CBS, NBC, and Spike TV....sounds like a winner.

I hope he can pull it off, because boxing has been on life support with the casual sports fan for years.

one of my mentors pulled my coat and told me about...
I was shocked he accomplished nearly all this without any fanfare
 
:cool:

* two cents *

This black man putting in work keeping his name out of everything essentially did a hostile takeover of golden boy pretty much controls the sport the Latino market and now various big ticket media outlets covering all revenue streams. ..

everything so called boxing experts have been talking about but never lifted a finger or had the vision drive and just force of will to accomplish.

Love him hate him you gotta respect him.
 
He is just part of the harvard mafia...

aka scroll and key...!!!

Its their time now!!

Yale stole it for eight years

bush skull and bones mafia

and now scroll and key took over...



anybody graduating from harvard.. with

some connections should be doing very very

well now...

Not to mention dude is no fuckin idiot, and

has to be a cut throat dude, because if you pussy,

you cannot survive in that world

its nothing but gangstas on all levels....

each boxing camp is a gang within itself...


because if you dont have a gang and you weak

vegas mafia will own your ass...

you need people in the boxing game...


That being said, you cant take nothing away

from this brother he is making it happen...
 
He is just part of the harvard mafia...

aka scroll and key...!!!

Its their time now!!

Yale stole it for eight years

bush skull and bones mafia

and now scroll and key took over...



anybody graduating from harvard.. with

some connections should be doing very very

well now...

Not to mention dude is no fuckin idiot, and

has to be a cut throat dude, because if you pussy,

you cannot survive in that world

its nothing but gangstas on all levels....

each boxing camp is a gang within itself...


because if you dont have a gang and you weak

vegas mafia will own your ass...

you need people in the boxing game...


That being said, you cant take nothing away

from this brother he is making it happen...

Understood
 
If ESPN Rumors Are True, Al Haymon Has Already Won The War

If the stories about Al Haymon’s takeover of ESPN’s “Friday Night Fights” are true, you can consider the war over. Al Haymon has won. A couple years from now the only promoter that will matter will be Al Haymon. Everyone else will have to work with him under his own terms.

Five years from now boxers will probably be competing for the only belt that matters… the “PBC World Championship Belt”. Al Haymon may not have HBO, but he has taken control of every supply route that leads to the network. NBC, CBS, Spike TV and now ESPN?

Consider ESPN “Normandy”. In World War II, overtaking Normandy was a turning point for the allies that immediately threatened Germany’s industrial heart and opened up a land base through which the allies could safely bring in more troops. If the stories are true, Al Haymon can now use ESPN (along with other partners) as another avenue through which he can build his brand while denying his competition the most valuable resource in all of boxing… exposure.

In this “war” that Al Haymon has waged, the “industry” is the media and and “troops” are the fighters. ESPN is not just a content provider. They, more than any other source, create the narrative of the sports industry. ESPN makes stars. They turn regular season games into events and nobodies into celebrities. A partnership with ESPN means having a hand in molding the boxing narrative.

First, the obvious: having your fighters on ESPN increases their exposure. That should be a no-brainer. ESPN has a large audience and getting your prospects in front of a large audience is one of the main ingredients for star-making. If Al Haymon controls which young fighters appear on ESPN, he has a hand in deciding which young fighters take that next step to stardom.

Where will Top Rank build their stars of the future? NBC? Nope, Haymon has it. Spike TV? Nope, Haymon’s got it. CBS? Nope. Do you see what is happening? Al Haymon is controlling all avenues through which boxing stars can be built and ESPN with it’s 115 Million sports fans, is the ultimate strategic stronghold. Al Haymon is paving roads for his troops.

It’s not just about getting fights in front of people. There is also the ability to influence the message… let’s call it “propaganda” to continue with this war thing that I am doing. ESPN is the sports news provider for over 100 million people. Being in business with ESPN means having a hand in what they decide to talk about. It may be very subtle, maybe an extra question about Danny Garcia on “Around the Horn” or an extra minute on Sportscenter about the next PBC card. It’s the combination of little things like this that can mold public perception, and ESPN has hundreds of ways to do this kind of thing.

This isn’t even something that has to be specifically agreed upon between Al Haymon and ESPN. “The Worldwide Leader” is in the ratings business. It is in their best interest to increase the viewership and prestige of anything they choose to air. If adding some shine to Haymon’s “PBC” brand will result in adding value to ESPN’s boxing shows, you can be sure they will do it. They would be foolish if they didn’t.

A partnership with ESPN not only allows Haymon to get the inside track on influencing the limited boxing coverage but it also allows him a soft-monopolization of it. As Haymon’s guys get more ESPN online polls, stories and interviews, everyone else’s coverage will suffer. This will result in less discussion of Top Rank/Golden Boy fights and fighters, fewer polls, less talking points and ultimately less star-making power.

In theory, Haymon could grow powerful enough over time to be able to influence how much airtime ESPN devotes to negative stories about his fighters. The NFL has taken advantage of the partnership in this way. In the last year, ESPN suspended Bill Simmons for three weeks for calling NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell a liar and the NFL reportedly forced ESPN to cancel their involvement in a PBS head injury special. Haymon may not be as powerful as the NFL, but these stories show that there is a precedent for ESPN doing what is in the best interest of their business relationships.

If Al Haymon can get ESPN in his pocket, he will control the information. The narrative is his. ESPN will make Al Haymon and Premier Boxing Champions look like the center of the boxing universe and that, in turn, will become the reality. A partnership with ESPN will a deathblow to the continued growth of any other rival promotions. It’s a strategic attack on the future of their industry, and it’s another brilliant move by Al Haymon.

The dynamic of the boxing industry is changing for the first time in 30 years. Bob Arum and Oscar De La Hoya look to be on the losing end of the first war. While Bob Arum was focusing on China, the real war was right in his own backyard. Top Rank and Golden Boy won’t go away, but their roles in the industry will be diminished as a direct result of their own complacency.

ESPN, CBS, NBC and Spike TV have all been available for years. Al Haymon was the only one that recognized their value and planted his flag. Instead of coming up with fresh ideas and new approaches, the old guard stuck with an antiquated battleplan that will leave them starved for resources. The war is almost over, and the ramifications will be felt in the years that come.

http://thaboxingvoice.com/if-espn-rumors-are-true-al-haymon-has-already-won-the-war/40803?var=no
 
https://www.boxingnewsandviews.com/2017/08/27/al-haymon-appears/

Mysterious Al Haymon Appears After Mayweather Beats McGregor
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by NIALL DORAN - 14 hours ago in


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Al Haymon appears on camera for the first time in a very long time following Floyd Mayweather’s win over Irishman Conor McGregor in Vegas.

Floyd Mayweather’s long time manager and adviser and the man widely considered to be the most powerful man in world boxing over the last decade, Al Haymon, has been seen on a rare occasion following his client’s win tonight.

In the below still shot Haymon can be seen embracing Mayweather moments after beating McGregor back stage after what was no doubt a massive financial win for the pair tonight:

(Hat tip Pound4Pound Twitter)

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Pound4Pound @P4P_1995

The guy who has run boxing for a decade manager of floyd mayweather the kind and generous @Real_AlHaymon@ego_biggest
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#MayweatherMcGregor

1:25 AM - Aug 27, 2017
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The pair have worked together for long over a decade since Floyd Mayweather initially broke ties with Bob Arum and Top Rank to go out on his own and become his own boss.

Subsequently starting his own promotional company Mayweather Promotions which put on tonight’s event.

Mayweather has said time and time again in recent weeks that tonight’s bout was in fact his last ever – as he moved his boxing record to 50-0 tonight.

Prior to tonight’s fight Mayweather was reported to have broke routines last night and on the way to the venue today – as he was said to be feeling nostalgic that it was his last time ever in a boxing ring.

If it is his last fight, it’s been quite a run for him and Al Haymon over the years.
 
Less-than-capacity crowd still paid dividends for Mayweather-McGregor gate



LeBron James, left, and Sean Combs were among the celebrities at the Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Conor McGregor fight on Saturday at T-Mobile Arena. (Christian Petersen / Getty Images)


The T-Mobile Arena attendance Saturday for the Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Conor McGregor fight was 14,623, about 6,000 shy of the capacity crowd for the Canelo Alvarez-Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. bout in May.

“You’re not going to always get it right,” Mayweather Promotions CEO Leonard Ellerbe told the Los Angeles Times Saturday night after the bout.

“It’s all about delivery. The fans who were here enjoyed themselves.”

Mayweather’s powerful manager, Al Haymon, set prices for UFC champion McGregor’s pro-boxing debut that matched Mayweather’s 2015 victory over seven-division champion Manny Pacquiao — $10,000 for floor seats, and nothing in the lower bowl for less than $3,500.

One section appeared mostly empty in the building, and the massive number of Irish seen on the Strip were noticeably not represented the arena.

Yet, the prices did accomplish the intended goal.

Mayweather said after the bout that the money generated from the bout set a new live-gate record fro combat sports of nearly $80 million.
 
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