Bob Arum explodes when he hears the prediction of his rampage-Chisora 3 PPV
Via Scott Gilfoid: Bob Arum blew up his stack on Thursday when it was announced that Matchroom boss Eddie Hearn was predicting low pay-per-view buys for the three-part showdown between Tyson Fury and Derek Chisora. this Saturday on BT Box Office at Tottenham Hotspurs Stadium in London.
When informed of Hearn’s PPV prediction for the Fury-Chisora 3 battle, Arum went from 1 to 10 on the anger scale and looks suitable gray code button is pressed if he is in a hospital unit.
Hearn was just blunt with his prediction for the Fury vs. Chisora because it was not of interest to the boxing public.
WBC Heavyweight Champion Fury (32-0-1, 23 KOs) is doing all the promotion on his own. Chisora kept quiet, it seemed he was happy to receive the golden umbrella given to him by his friend on payday.
Fans will scoff at Hearn if he predicts a high buyout for the Fury vs Chisora III battle because almost no one wants to see this horrible excuse for a fight.
Fury must have lost the plot when he decided to push the third fight against Chisora down the throats of his loyal UK fanbase because it was so wrong.
“Eddie Hear doesn’t know crap. Eddie Hearn is like a joke in America,” Bob Arum told Professional boxing fanreacted when it was announced that Hearn was predicting between 200 and 300,000 pay-per-view buys for the three-part 3 between Tyson Fury and Derek Chisora on BT Sport Box Office this Saturday night .
“He sticks his nose into people’s business, and he doesn’t know what he’s talking about,” Arum continued with his complaint about Hearn. “He should spend time promoting his fighters in the US and UK instead of worrying about everyone else.
“Terrible because he is NOT a real promoter,” Arum said when asked how Hearn was doing this year during his PPV events on DAZN. “He arrived a few days before the game, and no one noticed. He got this huge budget from DAZN, and all he did was self-harm.
“Oh, come on, no [only] me but any decent advertiser in the US can do better than Eddie Hearn,” Arum said when asked what Hearn could do to improve as an advertiser.