phillykid wrote: ↑09 Feb 2018, 04:35
Enlightened-One wrote: ↑08 Feb 2018, 05:22
phillykid wrote: ↑07 Feb 2018, 22:01
alot of unification fights on the horizon for light heavy, cruiserweight and heavyweight.
by the end of the year all 3 divisions will probly end up with just a single undisputed unified champion
What light heavyweight unification fights are you referring to?
I mean, it's possible that the winner of Stevenson-Jack faces Artur Beterbiev later on in the year, but I don't expect to see Sergey Kovalev against any of the PBC guys on Showtime or vice versa. We may see Krusher face Dmitry Bivol though.
There’s one thing we know for sure, by the end of 2018, there won’t be a single fighter holding all four main versions of the 175lbs titles.
Both the winner of Stevenson/Jack vs. Beterbiev and Kovalev vs. Bivol sound great to me
But yea i didn't hear of any specific light heavy unifications, just optimism on my part
I am however already starting to hear rumors of Kovalev vs Beterbiev but don't know how realistic that would be this year, but the other two matches sound great for now
The only way we’ll get to see Artur Beterbiev share the ring with Sergey Kovalev, to unify both the IBF & WBO championships, is for the Canadian resident to break ties with GYM and Al Haymon… and employ the services of a promoter that works with HBO.
I know he’s trying to end his contract with his promoter, but he appears to want to retain the services of the PBC chief, especially considering his promise to guarantee him a minimum $250K payday every time he steps foot inside the ring, regardless the calibre of opposition.
If Beterbiev does end his business relationship with Yvon Michel, he’ll likely go to Top Rank, which won’t improve his chances of facing Kovalev, since that would result in an almost insurmountable ESPN vs. HBO obstacle, which is no better than his current Showtime vs. HBO situation.
I do appreciate that Artur Beterbiev actually fought on ESPN for his most recent outing though, but this was because GYM currently refuses to promote him due to the ongoing lawsuit, so they allowed him to compete on a Top Rank fight card.
The ideal situation is for Sergey Kovalev to allow his contract with HBO to expire, as he’ll be technically free to fight anyone, but his promoter, Main Events appears to work exclusively with that network… and HBO won’t allow Krusher to appear on Showtime or ESPN. So I don’t know how this could happen either.
I appreciate that all this stuff is incredibly boring, but this is the unfortunate current reality of our sport. It seems incredibly challenging, nigh on impossible in some circumstances, for certain promoters and TV networks to work with each other… and this is the main reason why some of the sports’ biggest fights either don’t happen at all or if they do, they take place far beyond their expiry date.