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DON KING 'HOMELESS PROMOTER' |
Don
King, 'a Homeless Promoter,'
Looking for New Broadcast Partner
DEERFIELD
BEACH, Fla.- Don King states that prior
to the electrifying comeback fight of Felix
"Tito" Trinidad against Ricardo "El
Matador" Mayorga on 2 October in Madison
Square Garden, he complained to executives at
HBO Sports that the event was not receiving
the marketing and promotional effort it deserved.
King stated, "They gave
Bob Arum six months to promote Oscar De La Hoya
vs. Bernard Hopkins, and they gave me six days
to promote Trinidad vs. Mayorga - the fight
of the year."
"HBO Pay-Per-View was
short-sighted in giving De La Hoya vs. Hopkins
the big push, and subsequently short changed
their subscribers by not adequately promoting
Trinidad vs. Mayorga. I think they took this
action because I was involved in the fight.
I feel like a homeless promoter."
HBO Sports announced yesterday
that Trinidad vs. Mayorga generated 420,000
pay-per-view buys. Senior Vice President HBO
Pay-Per-View, Mark Taffet said, "the fight
performed within our expectations."
"It certainly did not
perform up to my expectations," King said.
"That fight would have done double had
it been promoted properly."
King gave HBO, then known
as Home Box Office, its first heavyweight world
title match when he passed up an $800,000 bid
from ABC, and accepted HBO's $125,000 offer
to show the Larry Holmes vs. Mike Weaver bout
at Madison Square Garden on June 22, 1979.
"I turned out to be crazy
like a fox on that one," King said, "and
I can and will do it again switch] [if we don't
receive the respect my fighters and I deserve."
King is rarely interviewed
on HBO telecasts, unless something controversial
occurs at a King-promoted event. HBO gives the
same [freeze] treatment to the sanctioning bodies
that award world titles to champions in the
various
weight divisions in boxing.
"I have remained silent
about my lack of air time, and about the way
they ignore the World Boxing Association, World
Boxing Council, International Boxing Federation
and other organizations - hiding behind the
veil of
journalistic integrity," King said.
"What they are doing is diminishing the
sport of boxing to serve their own selfish interests
to control the fight game."
"HBO is misguided if
they think they are better at promoting than
Don King.
They should leave the promotion to the promoters
and focus their energies on providing the best
telecast for their viewers, period."
King contends boxing fans
around the world like to know which fighters
hold titles from the sanctioning organizations
and to hear from the colorful promoters, like
himself - the man who has done more than anyone
to promote the sport of boxing. Don King staged
the Rumble in the Jungle and the Thrilla in
Manila. He promoted Mike Tyson, Larry Holmes,
Roberto Duran and Julio Cesar Chavez at the
peak of their careers.
"Look at wrestling,"
King says, seriously. "The whole endeavor
is based on myths, and their fans can't get
enough of it. Then there's HBO, who will not
even tell you that a fighter is a WBA, WBC or
IBF champion.
"They denigrate these
world champion boxers by referring to them only
as "belt-holders," and they treat
me like I'm not even there.
"Don't they understand
they're killing the goose that laid the golden
egg."
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