'Showtime and Strikeforce own Bradley and HBO'

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  • Liquidrob
    Izzy is a bum
    • Feb 2009
    • 11785

    'Showtime and Strikeforce own Bradley and HBO'

    Interesting article on last nights Showtime and HBO cards

    At Examiner.com™ we help you excel personal finance, boost income, invest wisely, travel smart, reach financial freedom faster, and enjoy life on a budget.


    Fight Night Trends - Showtime and Strikeforce own Bradley and HBO
    January 29th, 2011 9:51 pm

    The fighting pride of Palm Springs, California, Timothy Bradley might has won a unification bout against Devon Alexander Saturday night, but the World Boxing Organization and World Boxing Council junior welterweight champion went straight Rodney Dangerfield by getting no respect on the Internet.

    At 5:30 P.M. Pacific Time, I fired up the computer 90 minutes prior to the HBO World Championship Boxing telecast featuring Bradley and Alexander. A look at Google’s hottest searches revealed that the 140 pound fight was not registering any major heat on the world’s most popular search engine.


    Interestingly, HBO’s rival premium broadcaster Showtime was running a Strikeforce mixed martial arts card on the same night and same time featuring future boxing hopeful Nick Diaz in a bout with Evangelista “Cyborg” Santos. The term “Strikeforce” was already ranked at the 17th hottest search term on Google.

    When you consider that HBO spent much more money on the Alexander - Bradley event than Showtime pumped into Strikeforce, and that HBO has more subscribers, the mere fact that Strikeforce was registering as a hot topic on Google is a big victory for Showtime.

    Take into account that Strikeforce is UFC’s ugly little mixed martial arts sister, and you start to seriously wonder about the overall health of boxing as a form of entertainment in the United States.

    Over at Twitter, there was no trending representation for the HBO boxing card in the United States, or in Detroit (where the card was being hosted), or Los Angeles (a few hours away from Bradley’s hometown).

    At Yahoo, neither the boxing card, or Strikeforce had broken their ten hottest topics and they would not crack it the entire night.

    Half an hour later, at 6:00 P.M. Pacific Time, “Strikeforce” had moved up to #14 on Google’s trending topics.

    At 7:20, as the ring entrances had ended for Bradley and Alexander - nice red rug at the Silverdome by the way - “Devon Alexander” was trending within the United States on Twitter. There was no trending for the event iin Los Angeles or Detroit.

    Timothy Bradley’s name was no where to be seen as a trend on Twitter, a dynamic that would not change all night.

    At the end of the 3rd round, Don King had joined Devon Alexander as a trending topic within the United States on Twitter. Interesting that a fading promoter with an incredible self-brand and history within the sport can get moving on Twitter, while a young, respectful, and world-class fighter could not stir the hearts of the World Wide Web.

    After six round of action, and fight fans realizing that Bradley - Alexander was not exactly the barnburner some expected, Devon Alexander had dropped as trending topic in the United States - though Don King remained and was trending in Detroit.

    Things on Twitter remained the same at the end of the 9th round, but over at Google “HBO Boxing” was now the 17th hottest search term while “Strikeforce” had moved into the 13th spot.

    Meanwhile, former National Football League star and mixed martial arts hopeful Herschel Walker was riding a first round knock-out victory on Showtime and trending on Twitter in the United States, Los Angeles, Detroit, and several other markets.

    At 8:10 when the decision had been rendered in favor of Timothy Bradley - following an early stoppage due to Alexander’s inability to keep his eyes open after one of many head-butts during the course of battle - all references to the HBO Boxing event that had been trending on Twitter were gone. No Don King, no Devon Alexander, nothing, but Herschel Walker remained strong; and over on Google, “HBO BOXING” had disappeared from their top 20 hot searches.

    It is a shame that Timothy Bradley is not more popular. He is a hard working fighter, who takes his craft seriously and respects the sport by staying in tip-top shape between fights. His lack of a big punch undermines his in the ring determination and perfect record.

    After his victory over Alexander, Bradley stands at 27 wins, no losses, but at least on the Internet, nobody seems to care.

    And for the record, by 9:00 P.M. Pacific Time, in the midst of Nick Diaz’s victory over Cyborg, both men’s names were trending on Twitter in the United States.
    Liquidrob's Top 10 Fighters Rankings


    The 10 Fighters Who Changed The Game

  • Liquidrob
    Izzy is a bum
    • Feb 2009
    • 11785

    #2
    Don't know why he stuck this is the article 'Take into account that Strikeforce is UFC’s ugly little mixed martial arts sister', god damn shill
    Liquidrob's Top 10 Fighters Rankings


    The 10 Fighters Who Changed The Game

    Comment

    • EmpireWF
      Giants in the Super Bowl
      • Mar 2009
      • 24082

      #3
      Examiner is no better than bleacher report, it's nobodies posting like us.

      As for Twitter, trending there means absolutely nothing.


      Comment

      • Liquidrob
        Izzy is a bum
        • Feb 2009
        • 11785

        #4
        wonder what the ratings will be between the 2 shows, HBO in more homes, but Showtime had the Herschel Walker factor
        Liquidrob's Top 10 Fighters Rankings


        The 10 Fighters Who Changed The Game

        Comment

        • Warner2BruceTD
          2011 Poster Of The Year
          • Mar 2009
          • 26142

          #5
          Originally posted by EmpireWF
          Examiner is no better than bleacher report, it's nobodies posting like us.

          As for Twitter, trending there means absolutely nothing.
          I sent my Strikeforce article to Bleacher Report, and they rejected me because it was 1700+ words. They said 1700 words will not hold the attention of their readeship, and to limit all features to 100-500 words.

          Yes, they really said this.

          As for Twitter trends, I wouldnt say it means nothing. It does give an indication of what people are interested in.

          Comment

          • Warner2BruceTD
            2011 Poster Of The Year
            • Mar 2009
            • 26142

            #6
            Originally posted by Liquidrob
            wonder what the ratings will be between the 2 shows, HBO in more homes, but Showtime had the Herschel Walker factor
            I think Showtime will win the percentage numbers, and possibly win in total viewers. That fight on HBO had less than zero buzz, featured guys with no mainstream name value, and the fight sucked.

            Comment

            • EmpireWF
              Giants in the Super Bowl
              • Mar 2009
              • 24082

              #7
              Originally posted by Warner2BruceTD
              As for Twitter trends, I wouldnt say it means nothing. It does give an indication of what people are interested in.
              Anything can trend though. TNA trends occasionally and obviously that means dick.


              Comment

              • Warner2BruceTD
                2011 Poster Of The Year
                • Mar 2009
                • 26142

                #8
                Originally posted by EmpireWF
                Anything can trend though. TNA trends occasionally and obviously that means dick.
                In what context?

                TNA sucks and is barely a blip compared to WWE, but millions of people watch every week.

                If you are telling me google trends mean nothing in terms of drawing money, then ok, I can buy that. But it absolutely means something in terms of what people are interested in.

                Comment

                • EmpireWF
                  Giants in the Super Bowl
                  • Mar 2009
                  • 24082

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Warner2BruceTD
                  In what context?

                  TNA sucks and is barely a blip compared to WWE, but millions of people watch every week.

                  If you are telling me google trends mean nothing in terms of drawing money, then ok, I can buy that. But it absolutely means something in terms of what people are interested in.
                  People typing hash tags or whatever the fuck on any given night means nothing in the grand scheme. It does not mean that if joe blow shows up on TNA TV and trends that night, that x amoung of people will order their PPV.

                  Unless it's fucking Kanye West or some uberceleb, it's not trending however many hours later.


                  Comment

                  • Liquidrob
                    Izzy is a bum
                    • Feb 2009
                    • 11785

                    #10
                    empire just argues to argue now, and thats means a lot coming from me
                    Liquidrob's Top 10 Fighters Rankings


                    The 10 Fighters Who Changed The Game

                    Comment

                    • EmpireWF
                      Giants in the Super Bowl
                      • Mar 2009
                      • 24082

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Liquidrob
                      empire just argues to argue now, and thats means a lot coming from me
                      lol

                      just sayin, trending on twitter means nothing more than for that moment, people are talking about the subject.

                      So for example, if there's a big MMA show, I'd hope it's trending the night of.


                      Comment

                      • Warner2BruceTD
                        2011 Poster Of The Year
                        • Mar 2009
                        • 26142

                        #12
                        Originally posted by EmpireWF
                        lol

                        just sayin, trending on twitter means nothing more than for that moment, people are talking about the subject.

                        So for example, if there's a big MMA show, I'd hope it's trending the night of.
                        And for another example, there was a big boxing show on at the same time, and nobody was talking about or cared.

                        Who would you rather be?

                        Comment

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