Boxing rocked by $513 million Canelo Alvarez bombshell
The boxing world has been left stunned after one of the sport's biggest stars tore upon his world-record contract.
Canelo Alvarez sen t shockwaves through the sport in 2018 when he signed a staggering $513 million deal with streaming service DAZN.
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The 11-fight deal was the richest in the history of boxing - announcing the Mexican fighter as one of the world's biggest drawcards.
However, on a momentous day for boxing, the 30-year-old has decided to part ways with both DAZN and legend Oscar De La Hoya's Golden Boy Promotions.
In many ways, Golden Boy’s decision to release Alvarez from his contract would be like the Lakers waiving LeBron James. On the surface, it’s incomprehensible.
Alvarez is the biggest star in boxing and generates pay-per-view numbers that no one else can.
But dig beyond the surface a bit and the move makes sense for all sides.
#OnThisDay - In 2019, Canelo Álvarez beat Sergey Kovalev by KO in round 11 of 12 to win the WBO light heavyweight title. pic.twitter.com/SEyRRsIYy9
— b0xingfan (@b0xingfan) November 2, 2020
In two years, the deal to fight exclusively on DAZN - which was hailed upon its signing in October 2018 as the richest in sports - became untenable.
There weren’t enough quality opponents for it to make sense for DAZN to pony up $40 million a fight - $35 million a fight to Alvarez and $5 million per fight to Golden Boy.
And Golden Boy was finding it increasingly difficult to work with Alvarez.
When the pandemic hit in the spring, it only made it that much more difficult to pay the freight. DAZN asked Alvarez to take roughly half of what he was owed, and Alvarez agreed if it were paid to him at the end of the deal. But nobody wanted to be on the hook for that kind of money because of the economy and the uncertain state of boxing.
Furthermore, the relationship between Alvarez and Golden Boy CEO Oscar De La Hoya had soured to the point where when they sat next to each other last year at a news conference, not only did they not speak, they did not even look at each other.
Alvarez filed suit against Golden Boy and DAZN in September. On Friday, the suit was settled and ended up, sources said, with Golden Boy getting no money to walk away from the eight figures remaining on Alvarez’s contract.
The bombshell move has left the boxing world stunned.
Canelo is reportedly out of BOTH his DAZN and GOLDEN BOY deals, via @ESPNDeportes.
That is just massive, massive news.— Luke Thomas (@lthomasnews) November 6, 2020
Its just a massive news day
— Antonio M. (@Antonio_M84) November 6, 2020
Unreal. Massive free agent.
— Boom (@Timotimotoom) November 6, 2020
One thing that should not be lost in the Canelo situation: Bottom line for our wallets as fans is his fights will be back on PPV ($80-$100 apiece, close to $200 a year for 2 events) instead of $100 for a year of DAZN that includes his 2 fights plus the rest of the #boxing cards.
— Dan Rafael (@DanRafael1) November 6, 2020
Damnit Canelo free and I just bought 5 years of DAZN for his fights
— Jevan (@jevan_bay) November 6, 2020
ALREADY HEARING GGG FANS SAYING CANELO LEFT DAZN TO DUCK GGG 😳
— EL CHICANO (@2nd2NoneN13) November 6, 2020
DAZN is cooked out here. So is golden on. I'm happy for Canelo, an all time great, he deserves better
— 🏁Jadon🏁 (@JakeCAR28304063) November 6, 2020
R.I.P Golden Boy
— j.miles (@jakesurfseast) November 6, 2020
Without Canelo DAZN isn’t the powerhouse they wanted to become in boxing. They wanted to end PPV, without Canelo that will be impossible.
— Aztlán (@SouthLosAngeles) November 6, 2020
Golden Boy executives weren’t speaking publicly, but De La Hoya released a statement that read, “The lawsuit was resolved to everyone’s satisfaction, and we wish Canelo the best going forward.”
Golden Boy noted in its statement that it has fighters like Ryan Garcia, Jaime Munguia and Vergil Ortiz, and said it would continue to promote its fights on DAZN.
But Garcia is managed and trained by Eddy Reynoso, who serves in those roles for Alvarez, and Garcia has openly feuded with De La Hoya.
It’s hard to imagine Golden Boy coming out of this settlement looking good.
Oscar De La Hoya issued a statement on @Canelo’s departure from Golden Boy Promotions and DAZN. pic.twitter.com/Ng6IaY89UY
— ESPN Ringside (@ESPNRingside) November 6, 2020
Canelo exit leaves big hole for DAZN
It’s a body blow for DAZN, too, even though it removes a financial obligation that had quickly become a millstone.
DAZN has done precious few boxing cards since the pandemic, and while it is slowly beginning to be more active, it doesn’t have a guy like Alvarez who will be able to drive subscriptions.
It is also stuck with the bloated contract of Gennadiy Golovkin, who earns $7.5 million in cash and $7.5 million in equity for each fight. Without Alvarez and with both Charlo brothers fighting for the Premier Boxing Champions, there are no notable opponents for Golovkin at DAZN.
But it’s going to pay him an astronomical amount to fight second-tier opposition. That isn’t going to end well.
DAZN will have a big event whenever unified heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua fights, but Joshua’s star in the U.S. dimmed after his stunning 2019 loss to Andy Ruiz. Even though he won the rematch decisively, it was hardly dynamic and didn’t endear him to the American fan base.
So DAZN is going to find rough sledding persuading customers to subscribe, or keeping existing subscriptions.
It has a fight featuring promising lightweight Devin Haney, who on Saturday meets 2004 Olympic gold medalist Yuriorkis Gamboa. But it’s little more than a showcase bout for Haney, who holds the WBC title but still hasn’t fought a highly regarded, prime opponent.
DAZN could have a Haney-Garcia fight down the line and that could be attractive, but the other key players at lightweight — Teofimo Lopez, Vasiliy Lomachenko and Gervonta Davis — are with either Top Rank or the PBC.
DAZN isn’t doomed, but it hasn’t masterfully made its way through the landscape in the first two-plus years of its U.S. existence. It recently expanded worldwide and it would shock no one if DAZN turned its attention toward other countries and away from the U.S.
With Kevin Iole - Yahoo Sports combat columnist
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