Think Whyte made the correct choice, based on the low-ball offer he received for April in Wembley.marvelous marv wrote: ↑27 Nov 2019, 23:41 Wilder definitely made the right decision. He wanted the Joshua fight straightaway. Dillion shouldn't have turned down the Joshua rematch, he would probably be champ today.
The Wilder-Fury draw was the perfect outcome for them two in regards to negotiating with Joshua.
Joshua had the date and venue set for April 2018. So it put his team over a barrel and allowed Fury and Wilder to claim they needed a 50/50 split.
When that obviously fell through (which AAA-side is going to give a 50-50 to guys with unproven earning power) they low-balled Whyte, as they preferred the idea of making an American debut against Miller in June.
Remember from Whyte's perspective he was working toward a mandatory against Wilder. He also had a potential future mandatory through the WBO. He was a PPV fighter in his own right, so why sign a disadvantageous contract which ties you into a rematch where you would again be at a disadvantage? Joshua's team needed to be able to save face by saying they made an offer to Whyte. But it wasn't an offer designed to get him to sign. Perhaps you could say it served the interests of both parties at the time, though. I'd give you that!
But for me, Whyte made the correct choice based on the landscape at the time.