Pac/Marquez PPV buys vs Last 5 UFC's buys

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  • Liquidrob
    Izzy is a bum
    • Feb 2009
    • 11785

    Pac/Marquez PPV buys vs Last 5 UFC's buys

    1.5 Million for Pacquiao vs. Marquez 3

    =

    UFC 133 - 310,000
    UFC 134 - 335,000
    UFC 135 - 450,000
    UFC 136 - 225,000
    UFC 137 - 280,000
    Liquidrob's Top 10 Fighters Rankings


    The 10 Fighters Who Changed The Game

  • Liquidrob
    Izzy is a bum
    • Feb 2009
    • 11785

    #2
    From the UG

    Statistically speaking, UFC 133-137 featured Anderson Silva, BJ Penn, Frankie Edgar, Ortiz, Belfort, Rashad, Shogun, Griffin, Minotauro, Rampage, Bones Jones, Matt Hughes, Koscheck, Sonnen, Jose Aldo, Kongo, Cro Cop Dennis Hallman's ball sack and Nick Diaz.

    Also, of those 5 ppvs, they featured FW, LW, MW, and LHW title fights (4 title fights)
    Liquidrob's Top 10 Fighters Rankings


    The 10 Fighters Who Changed The Game

    Comment

    • RosettaStoned
      Throbbing Tebowner
      • Oct 2008
      • 9951

      #3
      Over saturating.
      So, metaphorically speaking, our physiology basically has the universe mapped out and you're thinking it needs to be taught addition & subtraction.

      -Alan Aragon

      Comment

      • CrimsonGhost56
        True Blue
        • Feb 2009
        • 5981

        #4
        lesnar/overeem will beat it

        Comment

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

          #5
          The only two mega draws the UFC have are Lesnar and GSP.

          Everyone knows this.


          Comment

          • CrimsonGhost56
            True Blue
            • Feb 2009
            • 5981

            #6
            throw in some lesnar and overeem door breaking montages and it will break records

            Comment

            • Kuzzy Powers
              Beautiful Like Moses
              • Oct 2008
              • 12542

              #7
              Originally posted by Liquidrob
              From the UG

              Statistically speaking, UFC 133-137 featured Anderson Silva, BJ Penn, Frankie Edgar, Ortiz, Belfort, Rashad, Shogun, Griffin, Minotauro, Rampage, Bones Jones, Matt Hughes, Koscheck, Sonnen, Jose Aldo, Kongo, Cro Cop Dennis Hallman's ball sack and Nick Diaz.

              Also, of those 5 ppvs, they featured FW, LW, MW, and LHW title fights (4 title fights)
              Notice which titles werent defended.

              Comment

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

                #8
                -UFC will still beat HBO Boxing. Again. Like they have every year since Bonnar/Griffin.

                -UFC is pretty much a lock for it's first year of negative PPV growth since Bonnar/Griffin.

                Boxing has exactly two draws. UFC also only has two real draws who significantly move numbers (throw in Silva vs. certain opponents if you like), but the difference is UFC has a baseline to where the brand name still brings in an acceptable number of buys. Nobody gives a single fuck about boxing aside from Pac & PBF.

                PPV numbers across the board are slipping across all three major PPV businesses (boxing, UFC, wrestling). While all three have content/star power issues, it's also because PPV is slowly dying as a medium. Slowly. Big stars will still draw. Pac/PBF will break all records.

                But the medium is eventually going to be replaced. Internet is the future. Cheap promotional controlled streams with no middle man (cable/sat providers). People balk at a $60 PPV and will watch a choppy illegal stream instead. Ask that person to pay $20 for a crystal clear legal stream that they can watch on a computer or hook up to their TV with a $10 wire and they will pay. Eventually all TV's will be internet ready (and that will be sooner than you think). The promoter wins under this scenario because he keeps 100% of the revenue without the middle man.

                Closed circuit died at the hand of PPV, PPV will die at the hand of the internet. People are slowly moving towards doing everything via their computer, the TV is evolving into an expensive monitor. Even the DVR will go away, because the internet is like a giant global DVR, and eventually alll content will be "on demand" via the internet. Live TV will die, aside from sports. Tune in at 9 for Two and a Half Men will become "Two and a Half Men will be made available for click and play at 9 on Wed".

                Comment

                • Kuzzy Powers
                  Beautiful Like Moses
                  • Oct 2008
                  • 12542

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Warner2BruceTD
                  -UFC will still beat HBO Boxing. Again. Like they have every year since Bonnar/Griffin.

                  -UFC is pretty much a lock for it's first year of negative PPV growth since Bonnar/Griffin.

                  Boxing has exactly two draws. UFC also only has two real draws who significantly move numbers (throw in Silva vs. certain opponents if you like), but the difference is UFC has a baseline to where the brand name still brings in an acceptable number of buys. Nobody gives a single fuck about boxing aside from Pac & PBF.

                  PPV numbers across the board are slipping across all three major PPV businesses (boxing, UFC, wrestling). While all three have content/star power issues, it's also because PPV is slowly dying as a medium. Slowly. Big stars will still draw. Pac/PBF will break all records.

                  But the medium is eventually going to be replaced. Internet is the future. Cheap promotional controlled streams with no middle man (cable/sat providers). People balk at a $60 PPV and will watch a choppy illegal stream instead. Ask that person to pay $20 for a crystal clear legal stream that they can watch on a computer or hook up to their TV with a $10 wire and they will pay. Eventually all TV's will be internet ready (and that will be sooner than you think). The promoter wins under this scenario because he keeps 100% of the revenue without the middle man.

                  Closed circuit died at the hand of PPV, PPV will die at the hand of the internet. People are slowly moving towards doing everything via their computer, the TV is evolving into an expensive monitor. Even the DVR will go away, because the internet is like a giant global DVR, and eventually alll content will be "on demand" via the internet. Live TV will die, aside from sports. Tune in at 9 for Two and a Half Men will become "Two and a Half Men will be made available for click and play at 9 on Wed".
                  Two and a Half Men is on Monday's.

                  Comment

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

                    #10
                    That's my point, it won't be that way anymore. Shows will eventually be "made available" at whatever day or time, instead of airing at a certain day or time. DVR ratings numbers raising exponentially each passing year supports the theory that people are getting away from appointment viewing. It won't be long (in the grand scheme) when he generations that watched TV this way die off, and people who grew up on DVR's are adults. These people will want things on demand, they no no other way.

                    Comment

                    • KINGOFOOTBALL
                      Junior Member
                      • Feb 2009
                      • 10343

                      #11
                      W2B is drastically underestimating the old guard and there desperation to cling to old ways.

                      UFC on XBOX Live is first step towards the first part though.

                      However didnt you once argue that making PPVs cheaper wont really make more money ?
                      (could be wrong).. I wonder what the breaking point is before they go into entirely new distribution methods.
                      Best reason to have a license.

                      Comment

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

                        #12
                        Originally posted by KINGOFOOTBALL
                        W2B is drastically underestimating the old guard and there desperation to cling to old ways.

                        UFC on XBOX Live is first step towards the first part though.

                        However didnt you once argue that making PPVs cheaper wont really make more money ?
                        (could be wrong).. I wonder what the breaking point is before they go into entirely new distribution methods.

                        Making PPV's cheaper with the current model will not make more money. For example, if you price the PPV's at half the current cost, you would need to double the buys just to break even, and that isn't happening.

                        However, if you stream the PPV's via the internet on UFC.tv, you can charge a lower price (let's say, for example, whatever your current take is after the cable/sat split...let's assume half even though its closer to 40-45%, so $30), increase buys 10-20% based on that lower price point, and make MORE money because you are keeping the entire rake because there is no middle man.

                        This is why PPV will eventually will go away. As internet speeds constantly improve, old generations die off, and people who grew up with and embrace internet viewing become the target market (and pretty much are already), that perfect storm will allow UFC/HBO/McMahon to cut out the middle man, slash prices, and make more money.

                        Comment

                        • nflman2033
                          George Brett of VSN
                          • Apr 2009
                          • 2393

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Warner2BruceTD
                          -UFC will still beat HBO Boxing. Again. Like they have every year since Bonnar/Griffin.

                          -UFC is pretty much a lock for it's first year of negative PPV growth since Bonnar/Griffin.

                          Boxing has exactly two draws. UFC also only has two real draws who significantly move numbers (throw in Silva vs. certain opponents if you like), but the difference is UFC has a baseline to where the brand name still brings in an acceptable number of buys. Nobody gives a single fuck about boxing aside from Pac & PBF.

                          PPV numbers across the board are slipping across all three major PPV businesses (boxing, UFC, wrestling). While all three have content/star power issues, it's also because PPV is slowly dying as a medium. Slowly. Big stars will still draw. Pac/PBF will break all records.

                          But the medium is eventually going to be replaced. Internet is the future. Cheap promotional controlled streams with no middle man (cable/sat providers). People balk at a $60 PPV and will watch a choppy illegal stream instead. Ask that person to pay $20 for a crystal clear legal stream that they can watch on a computer or hook up to their TV with a $10 wire and they will pay. Eventually all TV's will be internet ready (and that will be sooner than you think). The promoter wins under this scenario because he keeps 100% of the revenue without the middle man.

                          Closed circuit died at the hand of PPV, PPV will die at the hand of the internet. People are slowly moving towards doing everything via their computer, the TV is evolving into an expensive monitor. Even the DVR will go away, because the internet is like a giant global DVR, and eventually alll content will be "on demand" via the internet. Live TV will die, aside from sports. Tune in at 9 for Two and a Half Men will become "Two and a Half Men will be made available for click and play at 9 on Wed".
                          I will still watch the choppy free stream vs paying for a clear one.

                          and honestly even with my 10 year old computer, I can find streams that are not all that bad.

                          Comment

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

                            #14
                            Originally posted by nflman2033
                            I will still watch the choppy free stream vs paying for a clear one.

                            and honestly even with my 10 year old computer, I can find streams that are not all that bad.
                            You sir, support my theory that most people who illegally stream would not buy the PPV's anyway.

                            This is why I think cutting prices under the current model would not result in enough increased buys to mitigate the losses.

                            Comment

                            • nflman2033
                              George Brett of VSN
                              • Apr 2009
                              • 2393

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Warner2BruceTD
                              You sir, support my theory that most people who illegally stream would not buy the PPV's anyway.

                              This is why I think cutting prices under the current model would not result in enough increased buys to mitigate the losses.
                              well, I will buy Pacquiao vs Mayweather, but that's it. Then again the odds that fight happening...

                              Comment

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