logo
Why boxing chumps move the needle more than champs

Why boxing chumps move the needle more than champs

Tim Tszyu and Jai Opetaia, potentially both world champions by the end of the weekend, are Australia's best boxers.
Both have had to lean on Paul Gallen at various stages of their career for relevance locally. When Tszyu and Gallen fought on the same night, the stories about the former footballer generated more clicks. For the purists, it's an indictment of the fight game, that a footballer can attract more attention than genuine pugilists competing against the world's best.
However, that's the harsh reality in a celebrity-obsessed age, where punters would rather fork out $70 to watch two footbrawlers than a genuine championship bout.
Gallen's controversial split-decision win against Sonny Bill Williams at Qudos Bank Arena on Wednesday night lasted just 16 minutes, but lined their pockets with paydays of up to $1 million each. In their pomp as professional footballers on the field, it would take an entire season to earn as much.
The event was shown exclusively on Stan which, like this masthead, is owned by Nine Entertainment. The pay-per-view sales remain a heavily guarded secret, but the early indications suggest it was a success.
​'This was a massive moment,' said Stan's director of sport Ben Kimber. 'Two giants of Australian sport, a decade of talk, and it all exploded on Stan Pay-Per-View.'
Sport thrives on controversy and Williams and Gallen brought bucketloads into their grudge match. Nobody sells quite like the Cronulla captain, who has leant into his role as the pantomime villain in much the way Anthony Mundine did before him.
People love a circus and are prepared to pay for admission. Which is why the Mike Tyson-Jake Paul 'fight' became the most streamed event in sporting history, attracting 108 million viewers on Netflix.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘He's a psycho': Wallabies back debutant after injuries cause chaos for Lions opener
‘He's a psycho': Wallabies back debutant after injuries cause chaos for Lions opener

The Age

time33 minutes ago

  • The Age

‘He's a psycho': Wallabies back debutant after injuries cause chaos for Lions opener

The Wallabies have lost their most influential player for the opening Test of the British and Irish Lions series in Rob Valetini, but as far as teammates are concerned, the debutant replacing him is made of the right stuff to fill the considerable void. 'He's a psycho,' flanker Fraser McReight said. 'He loves contact.' The debutant in question is tough Force back-rower Nick Champion de Crespigny, who was a shock call-up to the Wallabies starting side after the Australian line-up was hit hard by injuries on the eve of the first Test in Brisbane on Saturday. After 18 months of preparation, Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt was forced to take several 11th-hour gambles after key forwards Valetini (calf), Will Skelton (calf) and Langi Gleeson (cork) were all ruled out of the Suncorp Stadium clash, along with main five-eighth Noah Lolesio. Tom Lynagh was confirmed in the No.10 jersey for his starting debut, and just his fourth Test. De Crespigny, 28, was also rushed into the starting side for a maiden Test appearance, and halfback Jake Gordon and hooker Matt Faessler were recalled after lengthy injury absences this season. There was no room for Taniela Tupou on the bench, with Tom Robertson preferred. Schmidt said Valetini and Skelton were 'right on the edge' of being available for selection, and may have played if it was a deciding Test. But a cautious approach was taken, and the pair would be ready to play next week. 'The risk you take if you put those guys out there and they're not quite ready … you might end up worse off,' Schmidt said. Schmidt said he admired Lynagh's calm demeanour, deceptively strong kicking game and the fact he is 'brave, almost to a fault'.

‘He's a psycho': Wallabies back debutant after injuries cause chaos for Lions opener
‘He's a psycho': Wallabies back debutant after injuries cause chaos for Lions opener

Sydney Morning Herald

timean hour ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

‘He's a psycho': Wallabies back debutant after injuries cause chaos for Lions opener

The Wallabies have lost their most influential player for the opening Test of the British and Irish Lions series in Rob Valetini, but as far as teammates are concerned, the debutant replacing him is made of the right stuff to fill the considerable void. 'He's a psycho,' flanker Fraser McReight said. 'He loves contact.' The debutant in question is tough Force back-rower Nick Champion de Crespigny, who was a shock call-up to the Wallabies starting side after the Australian line-up was hit hard by injuries on the eve of the first Test in Brisbane on Saturday. After 18 months of preparation, Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt was forced to take several 11th-hour gambles after key forwards Valetini (calf), Will Skelton (calf) and Langi Gleeson (cork) were all ruled out of the Suncorp Stadium clash, along with main five-eighth Noah Lolesio. Tom Lynagh was confirmed in the No.10 jersey for his starting debut, and just his fourth Test. De Crespigny, 28, was also rushed into the starting side for a maiden Test appearance, and halfback Jake Gordon and hooker Matt Faessler were recalled after lengthy injury absences this season. There was no room for Taniela Tupou on the bench, with Tom Robertson preferred. Schmidt said Valetini and Skelton were 'right on the edge' of being available for selection, and may have played if it was a deciding Test. But a cautious approach was taken, and the pair would be ready to play next week. 'The risk you take if you put those guys out there and they're not quite ready … you might end up worse off,' Schmidt said. Schmidt said he admired Lynagh's calm demeanour, deceptively strong kicking game and the fact he is 'brave, almost to a fault'.

'If not now, when?': Lynagh ready for Lions hot seat
'If not now, when?': Lynagh ready for Lions hot seat

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

'If not now, when?': Lynagh ready for Lions hot seat

Joe Schmidt thinks Tom Lynagh is a chip off the old block, but the Wallabies coach won't know for sure until the first British and Irish Lions Test is run and won in Brisbane. The 22-year-old Lynagh boasts just three appearances off the bench for Australia. The Queensland Reds playmaker will wear the Wallabies' No.10 for the first time on Saturday. Schmidt revealed that twice last year niggling injuries had thwarted attempts to start the son of World Cup-winning flyhalf Michael. And a broken hand meant he didn't feature against Fiji this month. Noah Lolesio's neck injury in that game then created an opening for a starting debut on the grandest of stages. "Not ideal, to be starting your first Test match against the Lions," a wry Schmidt said ahead of the Suncorp Stadium opener. "You have to start somewhere, and if not now, when? So now's good." The blockbuster, once-in-12-year Australian tour returns with the Wallabies intent on regaining respect after a historically poor 2023 World Cup. The Lions have won five lead-in games since arriving late last month and have ambitions to notch a rare 3-0 sweep of a series that's been neck-and-neck in their three previous visits. Schmidt knows he's put Lynagh on the spot, but reckons the composure required is in his blood. "When you haven't seen someone at the level, haven't been put under the pressure that's going to come, you're not quite sure how things are going to work out," he said. "Whatever does get thrown at Tom, I'm confident he'll cope and learn from the occasion, and it may be that he has to learn quickly." The selection is a historic one, with the Lynaghs set to become the first father and son to play for the Wallabies against the Lions. Michael pulled the strings in 1989 and won a World Cup in a decorated 72-Test career that included 15 as captain. "You wouldn't think he's necessarily designed to run a game and dictate what's happening," Schmidt said of his understated puppet master. "He does have a quiet confidence that gives us a quiet confidence. "(Good) kicking game ... good acceleration, and he's incredibly brave, to a fault. "I always felt Michael had a quiet control of games and calmness about the way he ran the game, and I do think there's a bit of that in Tom." Adding to the intrigue is that Jake Gordon, not his Reds teammate Tate McDermott, will wear the No.9. Schmidt said it was a tight call to start the Waratahs scrumhalf ahead of the Reds captain. He reasoned that Gordon offered a veteran presence around set pieces, and returning from a hamstring niggle would be easier if he started, rather than warmed the bench. "Limited, but we've spent a lot of time together training," Gordon said of their rookie partnership. "The luxury is he has such a good skill set, is really calm under pressure." Reds teammate and back-row star Fraser McReight has seen Lynagh develop rapidly since he arrived at Ballymore, fresh out of high school from the UK, in 2021. "Very calm, the quiet confidence, and you know he's going to do the hard yakka, put his head in dark places," McReight said of the Italian-born talent. "First start, at home, a few decades after his old man ... it shows how far he's come."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store