" He will never drop the weight"
" The lure of the Kebab is strong"

We will see at weighin where he is at, but looking good right now

If the guy can loose 10 stone or what ever it is, I'm sure he can get rid of another 1 or 2, I think he's serious about Wilder now, at first I wasn't sure but I think he means business. If he gets that WBC belt Hearn will have to give him 50% to fight AJ. If he loses he just came back too quick and can start all over, it makes sense.
Always does in open workouts recently
The rumour mill is suggesting that it's a 50-50 purse split with both fighters expecting to receive in the region of $15m.
It worries me that giving the finger to AJ and Hearn seems to have assumed a far greater importance to Fury and Fwank than it should do. The focus - to the exclusion of everything else - should be on what is best for Tyson Fury.
forbes says CANELO got $42mil & GGG got $18mil for their 1st fight(70-30 split). the fight did 1.3mil north american PPVs---so for FURY vs WILDER to split a $30mil fighters' pot the fight would probably have to do at least 650k PPVs.Enlightened-One wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 08:31The rumour mill is suggesting that it's a 50-50 purse split with both fighters expecting to receive in the region of $15m.
I've read this from multiple "sources" (from so-called "insiders), so I don't know how accurate this assessment is, but the numbers being quoted do appear to be realistically achievable (based on the expectations of the PPV figures from both UK and US viewing audiences).
Coincidentally, Deontay Wilder stated that he rejected a $15m flat fee offer to face Anthony Joshua, so make of that what you will.
We're talking about the combined PPV revenue that will be generated from both the UK and the US territories.dickbelden wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 12:06forbes says CANELO got $42mil & GGG got $18mil for their 1st fight(70-30 split). the fight did 1.3mil north american PPVs---so for FURY vs WILDER to split a $30mil fighters' pot the fight would probably have to do at least 650k PPVs.Enlightened-One wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 08:31The rumour mill is suggesting that it's a 50-50 purse split with both fighters expecting to receive in the region of $15m.
I've read this from multiple "sources" (from so-called "insiders), so I don't know how accurate this assessment is, but the numbers being quoted do appear to be realistically achievable (based on the expectations of the PPV figures from both UK and US viewing audiences).
Coincidentally, Deontay Wilder stated that he rejected a $15m flat fee offer to face Anthony Joshua, so make of that what you will.
So in other words you have absolutely no idea.Enlightened-One wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 16:39We're talking about the combined PPV revenue that will be generated from both the UK and the US territories.dickbelden wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 12:06forbes says CANELO got $42mil & GGG got $18mil for their 1st fight(70-30 split). the fight did 1.3mil north american PPVs---so for FURY vs WILDER to split a $30mil fighters' pot the fight would probably have to do at least 650k PPVs.Enlightened-One wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 08:31
The rumour mill is suggesting that it's a 50-50 purse split with both fighters expecting to receive in the region of $15m.
I've read this from multiple "sources" (from so-called "insiders), so I don't know how accurate this assessment is, but the numbers being quoted do appear to be realistically achievable (based on the expectations of the PPV figures from both UK and US viewing audiences).
Coincidentally, Deontay Wilder stated that he rejected a $15m flat fee offer to face Anthony Joshua, so make of that what you will.
The first GGG-Canelo bout wasn't a PPV in the UK.
The PPV buys for the GGG-Canelo bout were also cannibalised by the MayMac freak show, so the numbers were lower than they would have been under typical conditions.
Finally, unlike Canelo and GGG, Fury and Wilder actually speak good English and are big characters, which means they'll do a far better job at generating hype aimed at selling the event than their middleweight counterparts.
It's taken you three days to respond to this post. Strange.ewenhay wrote: ↑23 Aug 2018, 20:08So in other words you have absolutely no idea.Enlightened-One wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 16:39We're talking about the combined PPV revenue that will be generated from both the UK and the US territories.dickbelden wrote: ↑21 Aug 2018, 12:06
forbes says CANELO got $42mil & GGG got $18mil for their 1st fight(70-30 split). the fight did 1.3mil north american PPVs---so for FURY vs WILDER to split a $30mil fighters' pot the fight would probably have to do at least 650k PPVs.
The first GGG-Canelo bout wasn't a PPV in the UK.
The PPV buys for the GGG-Canelo bout were also cannibalised by the MayMac freak show, so the numbers were lower than they would have been under typical conditions.
Finally, unlike Canelo and GGG, Fury and Wilder actually speak good English and are big characters, which means they'll do a far better job at generating hype aimed at selling the event than their middleweight counterparts.
A bit like when you used "facts" to try to persuade everyone in over 10000 words that Golovkin would get no more than 35% in the Alvarez rematch.
Or when you used "facts" to blame Golovkin and his promoter for not having an equitable opponent once Alvarez failed his drug test.
Or when you used "facts" to tell us that Wilder will get an extra 10 million dollars to fight Joshua if he beats Fury.
This is going to be really difficult for you to accept but not everything people say in the media is fact.
Today (in quick succession), ewenhay challenged me twice by quoting two posts of mine that were 3 days old and 28 days old respectively.
If Warren doesn't announce an official signing by the end of the weekend, then it's unlikely to happen.astradamus wrote: ↑25 Aug 2018, 08:13 I just heard a rumor that Wilder his team is planning to schedule the fight for 3 november!
3 november? That early? Yup, and for some odd reason Dan Rafael now claims that Tyson Fury is now suddenly the one causing problems with the contract.