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Mini Dragon Group (ages 6-7)

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Mayweather Judah Ppv Buys UPDATED



Mayweather went out on his own and started calling the shots. His first fight was against Carlos Baldomir and the fight drew only 325,000 PPV buys, but Mayweather banked a career high $8 million payday, more than double what he was earning over his last fights with Top Rank. Baldomir was a warm-up for what was to come.




mayweather judah ppv buys



Floyd Mayweather's showdown with Manny Pacquiao in 2015 was one of the biggest boxing events in history. It generated more than 4.4 million pay-per-view buys and over $72 million in ticket sales. On Saturday night on ESPN, boxing fans will have an opportunity to relive this event.


I assume Richard is cherrypicking just this fight, Mayweather-Hatton and Floyd's fight with Oscar, because if you take into account prior pay-per-views like Baldomir-Mayweather and Mayweather-Judah, the average is nowhere near a million, even if this show topped out at the 1.6 million buys rumor.


The fight reportedly did 2.5 million pay-per-view buys, nearly seven times his previous PPV fight. A new, polarizing character was born. For the rest of his career, he was known as "Money" Mayweather.


Rebranding himself as "Money", Mayweather went on to become one of the most polarising figures in the whole sport. He sold 24 million PPV buys over the course of his career. These figures have managed to surpass the likes of Tyson, Lewis, De La Hoya and Pacquiao.


One of the most successful stories was Arum's role in helping stage the "Fight of the Century'' between Pacquaio and Mayweather. It had been a fight in the works for the best part of five years with negotiations stalling several times in the process.Despite an underwhelming finish, it sold 4.6 million PPV buys in America.


One of the most lucrative events Arum promoted was the 1991 clash between colossal heavyweights Holyfield and Foreman. The fight is hailed as one of the best of its time, and in earning around 1.45 million buys, it brought in $80million in revenue.


In May 2010, favorite Floyd Mayweather - who held a 40-0 record at the time - took on Shane Mosley at welterweight with the WBA title on the line. After selling a reported 1.4 million PPV buys, the fight lived up to its promise of entertainment.


A success? Mayweather yet again, by winning so effortlessly, had failed to appear in a fight of the year contender. Floyd was brilliant, but it was largely viewed as a disappointment from those that paid to watch, but commercially, it was a roaring success as it notched 2.2m buys in the US, and generated $150m in revenue.


Indeed, prior to the Mayweather bout, De La Hoya had already amassed a total of 10.45 million PPV buys, according to BoxRec.com. This included his mega-fight with Felix Trinidad which did 1.4 million, at the time the most watched non-heavyweight pay-per-view event in the history of boxing. De La Hoya also surpassed 1 million buys against Bernard Hopkins and almost hit a million in his fights versus Ricardo Mayorga, Shane Mosley II, and Fernando Vargas.


Mayweather, on the other hand, only had a total of 1.07 million pay-per-view buys in three fights prior to facing De La Hoya, according to numbers released by HBO. He did 365,000 buys for the Arturo Gatti fight, 374,000 in the Zab Judah bout, and 325,000 in the Carlos Baldomir snoozefest.


According to Forbes.com, Floyd has earned a total of $420 million in his career, Pacquiao has earned $335 million. Floyd has 14.2 million career PPV buys, Pacquiao has 13.6 million career PPV buys. Floyd has broken 1 million PPV buys seven times in his career, Pacquiao has done over 1 million PPV six times. Floyd has generated $860 million in his career in PPV revenue, Pacquiao has generated $755 million.


Mayweather-Canelo was also arguably the biggest letdown for the sport in recent years. Though a lot of these "big fights" have turned out to not be competitive or exciting fights, this one was really big. This is the fight that broke the Mayweather-De La Hoya PPV revenue record, set a Nevada gate record, and came close in PPV buys (2.2 million, compared to 2.48 million for the De La Hoya fight). And it wound up not just a little boring, but a fight where the young fan favorite flat-out blew it. His team's strategy didn't even give him a chance.


Also keep in mind that 700,000 PPV buys makes UFC 154 one of the largest UFC events in recent history. UFC 150 had just 190,000 buys. When we run the numbers using the same logic described above, the biggest PPV bonus for UFC 150 was just $250,000. Now, as for the claim that Georges St-Pierre makes $15 million from endorsements each year. The only source that confirms that amount is GSP himself, and as we have shown above he clearly likes to exaggerate. All we can say is that if GSP was bringing home $15 million a year from endorsements, he would be making more than Dale Earnhardt Jr, Dwight Howard and Peyton Manning, three of the highest earning celebrity endorsers in the world. 041b061a72


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