If Floyd Mayweather stood in business with Top Rank...

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by jso416, Jan 27, 2012.


  1. FilipMNE

    FilipMNE Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Floyd and Arum would split 90% of fight income and give 10% to Pacquiao...
     
  2. jso416

    jso416 F U Nutthuggers!!! Full Member

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    *****'s I know you dislike Arum mostly cause Floyd does, but let's try to be objective here and view things from different perspectives.
     
  3. jso416

    jso416 F U Nutthuggers!!! Full Member

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    :lol:... :deal
     
  4. Heavy Handed

    Heavy Handed I keep planets in orbit Full Member

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    You mean, If Floyd stayed in business with Top Rank. Stood is past tense for stand.

    If he stayed in business with Top Rank, he would have already fought Cotto, Pacquiao and Margarito. He wouldn't have fought Oscar. He still be at the top, but with probably a thrid of his fortune in Arums pockets, if not more.
     
  5. PowerPuncher

    PowerPuncher Loyal Member Full Member

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    Arum offered Mayweather a 22million contract to face Cotto, Hatton, Margarito - this is on record and Arum announced this publicly. Arum said the Delahoya fight was impossible to make

    Instead Mayweather faced Baldomir (5-8m), Delahoya (25m), Hatton(20+) making aprox 50million
     
  6. larrysmith

    larrysmith Guest

    would have been a terrible career move,Arum is a piece of **** and robs his fighters,refuses to make the fights people wanna see
     
  7. jso416

    jso416 F U Nutthuggers!!! Full Member

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    K noticed that after, but thanks for bringing it up.

    I still think he would've gotten the Oscar fight. Oscar never ducks the best fighters, and I doubt he would've passed on such an enormous payday.
     
  8. PowerPuncher

    PowerPuncher Loyal Member Full Member

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    Many in the sport believe a De La Hoya-Mayweather fight is the biggest fight on the horizon and the only one capable of generating 1 million-plus buys on pay-per-view.

    The reason Mayweather opted for the buyout rather than waiting for the May 6 result was because the contract had a limited window for the buyout, one that expired before the De La Hoya fight. However, Arum said he would have extended the window if Mayweather had asked. What Arum wouldn't do, he said, was raise the guarantees for other fights outlined in the contract.

    Arum said while Mayweather would have taken the $8 million to fight Margarito, he asked for a $10 million guarantee to fight opponents such as Miguel Cotto and Ricky Hatton, when Arum was only willing to guarantee $7 million.

    Arum said Mayweather also asked for $20 million to fight De La Hoya, a fight Arum said he wasn't interested in participating in.

    "That's not in the cards," Arum said. "He wants $20 million for the De La Hoya fight?
    It's not there. Sometimes, my man, you gotta know when to hold 'em and when to fold 'em. We'll talk about things down the road."

    Ellerbe said Mayweather opted for the buyout so he could be "more in control of when and who he fights next. It's as simple as that. There is nothing bad between Floyd and Bob."

    Arum agreed that the split with Mayweather was not on bad terms like their brief breakup last year. In fact, Arum said, "We intend to be back together. Everything with this was honorable and good. I had offered him numbers [for a multi-fight contract extension] that were livable. His expectations are in the stratosphere. He was entitled to buy me out, and he did. We decided this was the best way to handle it. He is a free agent. We have agreed to work with each other [in the future]."

    The split frees Mayweather to make a potential deal with De La Hoya without Arum as part of the promotion. His involvement would have made making a deal almost impossible: The head of Top Rank has openly feuded with De La Hoya, his former superstar, and their companies rarely do business together as a result.

    Arum said he was simply not interested in participating in a De La Hoya-Mayweather fight, but not because of his distaste for De La Hoya.

    "I don't want to, because if I did that fight, I would be working for such a small percentage, it's not worth it," he said.
     
  9. jso416

    jso416 F U Nutthuggers!!! Full Member

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    He could have remained in business with TR without signing a contract. You don't have to like someone to do business with them.
     
  10. jso416

    jso416 F U Nutthuggers!!! Full Member

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    Thanks for the info and I understand all that, but I still think he could have made the De La Hoya fight without TR and then worked with them on other fights such as Cotto and Margo. I believe the stubbornness comes from both Arum and Floyd; Both men wanted to prove they didn't need the other and as a result the fans missed out on some huge fights.
     
  11. kpete14

    kpete14 Member Full Member

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    He'd be getting robbed blind, just like Pacquio!
     
  12. Big George

    Big George Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    One problem guys.... Floyd could never be with TR. He gave up his whole purse of JLCII just to get out. It was over 750,000k.....