Sports Biz: How much money did Mayweather v Pacquiao make?

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How much money did Floyd Mayweather make vs Manny Pacquiao

GOING into last weekend’s “Fight of the Century” against Manny Pacquiao, Floyd Mayweather was expected to earn more in one bout than any athlete ever had in a whole year.

The number tossed about was $180 million, the lion’s share of a split of $300 million with Pacman.

At $180 million, Mayweather would easily surpass Tiger Woods’ record of $125 million in 2008.

But those numbers were based on a forecast of 3 million pay-per-views and, according to a report from Yahoo! Sports today, that estimate was modest to say the least.

“Yahoo Sports on Thursday learned sales figures for the Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao fight on DirecTV and Dish Network, as well as AT&T’s uVerse and Verizon’s FIOS services,” the report said.

“Those add up to 2.25 million sales, which even without one sale from a cable company customer would make it tied for the second-highest-selling pay-per-view of all time.

“DirecTV sold 1.15 million pay-per-views, while Dish’s number was 500,000. The telephone companies combined for 600,000. Combined, that is 2.25 million already.

“If cable systems wound up being 60 per cent of the total, that would mean the final figure is a mindboggling 5.625 million.”

5.625 million: almost double the initial forecast.

So what does that mean in terms of dollars?

Well, if the initial forecast was based on $100 per pay per view, Mayweather will now be splitting roughly $560 million.

If that were the case, Mayweather’s split would be an incredible $336 million, while Pacquiao would pocket $224 million.

641284-9c31bf0c-f517-11e4-9416-e181221d5c3b.jpg

http://www.news.com.au/sport/boxing...s-manny-pacquiao/story-fndkzthy-1227346641336

Meanwhile, Mayweather has branded Pacquiao a “sore loser” and a coward and says he won’t delay his planned retirement to grant the Filipino icon a rematch next year, in an apparent U-turn.

And he dismissed Pacquiao’s claim that he had been carrying an injury in Sunday’s (AEST) one-sided win for Mayweather, the American calling it, “Excuses, excuses, excuses.”

In an interview recorded this week to be aired on Showtime television on Saturday, Mayweather said he did text ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith that he would grant Pacquiao a rematch — but he has changed his mind.

The 38-year-old says he couldn’t detect any physical problem for Pacquiao during the bout, after which the Filipino and his camp said he was suffering from a right shoulder injury.

“Absolutely not,” Mayweather said. “He was fast. His left hand was fast. His right hand was fast and he was throwing them both fast and strong.”

Although Pacquiao had arthroscopic surgery to repair a torn rotator cuff in Los Angeles on Wednesday, Mayweather said his plea of injury was nonsense.

“He lost. He knows he lost. I lost a lot of respect for him after all of this,” said Mayweather.

As to the flip-flop on a possible rematch, Mayweather said simply: “I change my mind.

“At this particular time, no, because he’s a sore loser and he’s a coward ... If you lost, accept the loss and say, ‘Mayweather, you were the better fighter.’”

Pacquiao, 57-6-2 with 38 knockouts, is expected to be out of the ring for nine months to a year.

Mayweather has said his last fight will be in September, when he will complete his six-fight deal with Showtime and then retire.

With a victory in that fight against a still-to-be-named opponent, Mayweather would match Rocky Marciano’s iconic 49-0 ring record.

He has insisted he would be happy to retire with that mark and wouldn’t be tempted to stay around and try to make it a round 50 victories.
 
HIGHEST PAID ATHLETES FOR A SINGLE YEAR

Figures adjusted for inflation and courtesy of Business Insider.

180m-plus: Floyd Mayweather, boxing, 2015

$125m: Tiger Woods, golf, 2008

$120m-plus: Manny Pacquiao, boxing, 2015

$120m: Tiger Woods, golf, 2009

$115m: Michael Jordan, basketball, 1998

$115m: Michael Jordan, basketball, 1997

$113m: Tiger Woods, golf, 2010

$113m: Tiger Woods, golf, 2007

$112m: Mike Tyson, boxing, 1996

$105m: Tiger Woods, golf, 2005

$105m: Tiger Woods, golf, 2006

$104m: Floyd Mayweather, boxing, 2014

$104m: Evander Holyfield, boxing, 1991

$100m: Tiger Woods, golf, 2003

$100m: Michael Schumacher, Formula 1, 2004

$100m: Tiger Woods, golf, 2004

http://www.businessinsider.com.au/floyd-mayweather-earnings-manny-pacquiao-fight-2015-5
 
Dizzamn, props to that mofo...

Just really shows you who was really capitalizing way back in the era of Don King and the likes...
 
Damn so the real winners is May at $336 and Bob Arum at $180 Million :lol:
 
Good god almighty close to 6 million buys???:eek::eek::eek::eek:


Mayweather will collect $300 million when this is all done.
 
..... and Bob Arum at $180 Million :lol:
This angers me,... and Floyd. When Floyd graciously granted the possibility of a
rematch with Pacquiao, the greedy Jew, Bob Arum, that Mayweather has said
robbed him of millions for the Arturo Gatti fight, came in declared that Mayweather
should not fight in September, but wait for Pacquiao to be ready. That is when
Mayweather said "Fuck you".... And I seriously doubt that the fight would have
happened. Mayweather so dominated Pacquiao that all the haters who watched
the fight only because they wanted to see Mayweather lose would not tune in
again. And without the big contract from Showtime, the fight would have to sell
on its own merits. I doubt that at this time, Mayweather wants the bother to
promote a fight whose financial numbers might be a fraction of what he gets
regularly
 
Good god almighty close to 6 million buys???:eek::eek::eek::eek:


Mayweather will collect $300 million when this is all done.

Don't forget MANY people were unable to order the fight the same night.

Wait till THOSE numbers come out of the money LOST!

Pay-per-view problems pop up prior to Mayweather-Pacquiao fight

Reports of fans having trouble ordering the fight through their pay-per-view providers filled social media in the hours leading up to the fight between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao on Saturday night in Las Vegas.

HBO Sports spokesman Ray Stallone confirmed that the beginning of the fight was delayed by about 45 minutes to help fix the pay-per-view issues, pushing the start time to approximately 11:45 p.m. ET.

Fans reported issues with some of the biggest providers, including Optimum, DirecTV, Charter, Comcast, Time Warner and AT&T. Problems ranged from issues with ordering, to pixilated screens, to screens going to black after the broadcast had started.

"We are aware of the issue impacting the Mayweather vs. Pacquiao feed," the Charter Communications account tweeted. "We are working to resolve as soon as possible."

With 90 percent of pay-per-view orders coming within hours of the fight, HBO and Showtime engaged in an intense marketing campaign in cooperation with providers to encourage early ordering. Mark Taffet, who runs HBO Sports' pay-per-view operation, told ESPN.com earlier in the week that the campaign was indeed working and more pay-per-view telecasts were ordered ahead of time than any of the company's previous 187 PPV boxing events.

Fight logos were put on billing statements and sent to customer emails. Verizon even sent out an email Saturday afternoon showing customers how to use the remote to order so as to eliminate call volume.

But as the fight neared, the problems perhaps associated with a system overload persisted. One screen tweeted by a DirecTV customer stated that the fight wasn't available for two weeks.

Despite the issues and despite the $99.95 price being charged by most providers for the HD feed, the fight is expected to blow away the record of 2.48 million pay-per-view buys for the Mayweather-Oscar De La Hoya fight in 2007. The question however remains: Will the issues associated with the ordering leave money on the table for HBO, Showtime, the providers and the fighters?

Between the two fighters, they had sold 29.9 million PPV buys and made $1.55 billion in PPV revenue.

Taffet said that Pacquiao's support in the Southwest, West and Pacific Northwest, and Mayweather's support in the Northeast and in the South helped create the perfect PPV storm.

http://7online.com/sports/pay-per-view-problems-pop-up-prior-to-mayweather-pacquiao-fight/693585/
 
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For Shizzle done made 765 fucking Ms swingin that club just by the graph.

i'd have lost my damn mind too lol
 
And folks wonder why old baby mothers are filing lawsuits.

The problem is how can he get these cacs to purchase the next fight?
 
Damn so the real winners is May at $336 and Bob Arum at $180 Million :lol:

And the IRS in two countries gets the rest. :smh:

This dumb ass was out of his contract before he fought the 4th Marquez fight and could have gotten all of that Mayweather money for himself, but he reupped with Arum and went back to getting raped on some Stockholm Syndrome shit.

This is the saddest thing about Manny. With everything that he does more people eat off his brand than he does. Why is there no Pacquiao Promotions?

Haters will pull out memes knocking Floyds inability to read well.

Manny is the illiterate one. He can't figure out a fucking medical form.
 
Haters will pull out memes knocking Floyds inability to read well.

That sumbitch can count though.

I wouldn't give Pac a fucking rematch either. Pac pretty showed up and stole some money and I wouldn't give him another dime. Floyd gave him a chance to do all that shit he was talking be damned if you get 2 chances.
 
The Mayweather-Pacquiao fight shattered expectations, and Mayweather could end up making $250 million

Some of the pay-per-view (PPV) sales figures for the Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather Jr. fight are starting trickle out, and they are blowing away even the most bullish expectations. As a result, the fighters are going to end up making more money than anyone expected.

Most estimates before the fight set expectations at 3 million pay-per-view buys, which would have easily broken the record of 2.48 million, set by the Mayweather-Oscar De La Hoya fight in 2007. As the fight drew closer, however, at least one sportsbook put the over/under betting line at 3.8 million.

Kevin Iole of Yahoo Sports now reports that based on some of the early figures coming in, the number of pay-per-view buys for Mayweather-Pacquiao will be closer to 5.63 million and could go even higher.

We already know DirecTV sold 1.15 million PPVs, Dish Network sold 500,000, and AT&T's uVerse and Verizon's Fios combined to sell 600,000. That means the satellite and phone companies combined to sell 2.25 million.

Those numbers alone make Mayweather-Pacquiao the second-biggest PPV draw ever. But we are not even close to being finished. We don't know the numbers for the cable companies yet, and according to Iole they typically account for 55% to 65% of total buys.

Iole estimated that if cable companies made up 60% of the sales, the final number of PPV buys would be about 5.625 million. Even if we take the low end of the percentage estimate, the minimum number of PPV sales would be 5 million, with the high end at 6.43 million.

The implications for the bank accounts of Mayweather and Pacquiao are staggering.

PPV sales account for the bulk of fight revenue.

According to John Branch of The New York Times, 30% to 40% of the PPV revenue goes to the cable/satellite/phone companies and 7.5% of what is left is split by HBO and Showtime, which broadcast the event. Most of what is left over is split 60-40 for the fighters in favor of Mayweather.

With a PPV buys estimate of 5.625 million, Mayweather will make $167 million to $195 million from the PPV sales alone, with Pacquiao taking home $114 million to $133 million.

Again, that is just from the PPV sales. According to Branch, other revenue streams will generate close to $140 million for the fighters to split.

At the end of the day, Mayweather is going to take home $250 million to $275 million, with Pacquiao clearing $170 million to $190 million.

Not bad for a fight that took less than an hour.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/mayw...estimates-5-million-buys-2015-5#ixzz3ZZ2v6k8B
 
peace

Nice!

Knew it was close to a 1/2$B when it's all piled up & accounted for not to mention the losses like someone else pointed out.

& mofuckas were wondering why Manny told Money "ThankYou" @ the weigh-in
 
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