apollo creed wrote: ↑06 Feb 2020, 09:55
Enlightened-One wrote: ↑06 Feb 2020, 06:32
Yes, you're probably right. However, DAZN won’t stage a fight between
Andrade and Saunders.
And it doesn’t seem likely that Canelo or
Jacobs will be matched against Andrade or Saunders either.
DAZN would have to match them or otherwise what's the point of spending money on them ? Callum, BJS, Jacobs and Andrade need to be matched each other, period.
Most people, including myself, assumed that the purpose of DAZN’s recruitment drive (managed by GBP and Matchroom), was to build an impressive stable of fighters, with a view to staging marquee events headlined by in-house fighters, but (in terms of fighters capable of competing at 160lbs or 168lbs) that clearly hasn’t happened.
Apart from the Canelo-Jacobs bout, I don’t understand the reason why DAZN cannot stage round-robin tournaments, similar to the WBSS, involving the likes of Canelo, Jaime Manguia, Daniel Jacobs, Gennady Golovkin, Callum Smith, Billy Joe Saunders, Dmitry Bivol etc.
Instead, DAZN’s big-name fighters are being matched against either second-tier anonymous B-level fighters or against stars from rival boxing content providers (i.e. those directly affiliated with Top Rank or the PBC).
Put it this way, people applauded Eddie Hearn when he mocked Chris Eubank Jr. (a PBC fighter) for choosing to face one of his Al Haymon stablemates, Matt Korobov, claiming that he should instead be facing DAZN fighters like Saunders or Smith on PPV.
People also approved of Eddie Hearn’s criticism of another Al Haymon fighter, Jermell Charlo, when the PBC camp didn’t respond to his offer for the twin to face Demetrius Andrade on DAZN.
People didn’t seem too bothered about Canelo facing a past-his-prime Top Rank affiliated fighter like Sergey Kovalev, instead of DAZN stablemate Gennady Golovkin.
Also, Oscar De La Hoya was generally expected to orchestrate a fight for Canelo that involved one of his DAZN stablemates, Callum Smith or Billy Joe Saunders, but instead GBP look likely to match the Mexican star against another Top Rank fighter like Ryota Murata.
And it seems that Eddie Hearn and Oscar De La Hoya are both utterly immune from criticism for their failure to orchestrate bouts involving DAZN’s big name in-house stablemates.