De La Hoya Talks UFC vs. Mayweather
Jake Rossen Sep 16, 2009
Is there a better diplomat in boxing than Oscar De La Hoya? Days
after promoter Bob Arum stopped coughing up mold spores long enough
to weigh in on the UFC, the mostly-retired boxer gave the
OC Register a fair assessment of his event’s chances against
UFC 103 this Saturday. (De La Hoya is co-promoting the Floyd
Mayweather/Juan Manuel Marquez bout, which airs virtually opposite
the UFC offering.)
“We have no problem with that,” De La Hoya said. “Look, we have different audiences. We have our own marketing plan. They have their own marketing plan. We’re almost sold out. I don’t know about them, but … look, we have the ‘24/7’ thing (on HBO) and tremendous sponsors behind us. They have great sponsors behind them. We’re in our own worlds. Let them do great, we’re gonna do great and everybody wins.”
Are their audiences really so different? While boxing can often skew older, there’s undoubtedly an overlap -- and where those viewers lean will influence who earns bragging rights for the weekend. The last shows topped by Rich Franklin, UFCs 93 and 99, sold an estimated 320,000- 360,000 buys but were hampered by a notoriously fickle attitude from fans about tape-delayed UK events; Mayweather’s last fight, vs. UK star Ricky Hatton, sold 925,000 buys domestically. His De La Hoya bout scored 2.4 million, an industry record. But the last bout against a little-known fighter, Carlos Baldomir, netted only 325,000 homes.
It will be a very interesting weekend.
“We have no problem with that,” De La Hoya said. “Look, we have different audiences. We have our own marketing plan. They have their own marketing plan. We’re almost sold out. I don’t know about them, but … look, we have the ‘24/7’ thing (on HBO) and tremendous sponsors behind us. They have great sponsors behind them. We’re in our own worlds. Let them do great, we’re gonna do great and everybody wins.”
Are their audiences really so different? While boxing can often skew older, there’s undoubtedly an overlap -- and where those viewers lean will influence who earns bragging rights for the weekend. The last shows topped by Rich Franklin, UFCs 93 and 99, sold an estimated 320,000- 360,000 buys but were hampered by a notoriously fickle attitude from fans about tape-delayed UK events; Mayweather’s last fight, vs. UK star Ricky Hatton, sold 925,000 buys domestically. His De La Hoya bout scored 2.4 million, an industry record. But the last bout against a little-known fighter, Carlos Baldomir, netted only 325,000 homes.
It will be a very interesting weekend.
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