Mike Tyson

From Mike Tyson to Canelo Alvarez and Floyd Mayweather – boxing has had some box office draws and these are the biggest ever pay-per-view stars

Ranking boxing’s biggest ever pay-per-view stars, box office draws and highest-paid fighters – from heavyweight champions to pound-for-pound kings – is not as simple as you think.

Totalling up PPV numbers or career earnings might seem the best way. But inflation means financial figures inevitably rise – while modern pay-per-view figures ignore closed-circuit TV (fans paying to fill cinemas and watch fights live; the precursor to PPV). So we’ve crunched the numbers, adjusted for era, and selected the 10 biggest A-side draws the fight game has ever seen.

Canelo is the undisputed WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO super-middleweight world champion
Canelo is the undisputed WBA, WBC, IBF and WBO super-middleweight world champion
Mayweather beat Pacquiao in 2015, though they both were winners financially
Mayweather beat Pacquiao in 2015, though they both were winners financially

10. Canelo Alvarez

Has earned $225million at age 31 and is at the peak of his stardom, helped by his constantly improving boxing skills and new ability to swear hilariously in English. Canelo was able to draw more than a million US pay-per-view buys against a top opponent (Golovkin, Mayweather) and just under for others (800,000 for Caleb Plant). He is not a crossover household name outside parts of the USA and Mexico, but an increasing willingness to share more of his personality may change that.

9. Manny Pacquiao

Stunning that the ‘Pan Man’ began his career as a 16-year-old, weighing 98lb, fighting for 100 Philippine pesos (about $2) and ended it with more than $500million in career earnings and as one half of the biggest PPV card ever. His sizzling in-ring style, modest charm and awful karaoke made him an unlikely US star – and even if his drawing power waned a bit after his athletic peak, he was still pulling in fans and TV audiences most boxers could only dream of until he retired last year.

8. Oscar De La Hoya

Mayweather and Pacquiao are seen as the big stars of modern boxing, but who did both men have to beat to gain genuine fame? Yes, ‘The Golden Boy’ – who never needed a crossover pro fight, because he came out of the 1992 Olympics with a gold medal, a lethal combo of looks and left hook, and was a megastar from day one. De La Hoya generated around $700million in PPV income (only Floyd and Manny have made more), was a guaranteed ticket-seller and losses never really hurt his dazzling drawing power.

7. Sugar Ray Robinson

They invented the term ‘pound-for-pound’ for the original Sugar Ray in the 1940s – a way of telling fans that this was the most skilled fighter on the planet – and he had the personality to match. Owned the first boxing entourage, travelling with a ​​pink Cadillac and a dwarf called Arabian Knight (it was a different time). Broke attendance records with 147lb and 160lb title fights in the US, but was also exalted when he toured Europe. Earned more than $4million in purses when that was unheard of money, but spent lavishly.

The term ‘pound for pound’ was invented for Robinson, who people still hold in awe
The term ‘pound for pound’ was invented for Robinson, who people still hold in awe
In his prime, Foreman was a dominant champion who possessed one of the hardest punches in boxing
In his prime, Foreman was a dominant champion who possessed one of the hardest punches in boxing

6. George Foreman

Uniquely, ‘Big George’ had two entirely separate runs – and was a box-office smash in both. The huge-punching heavyweight was part of ‘The Rumble in the Jungle’, watched by an estimated billion people worldwide (though his opponent helped there). Then came back in his 40s, balder, rounder, happier and was generating 1.45 million in PPV buys for fights with Evander Holyfield. Genuinely world famous, they stuck his name on a grill and sold over 100 million of them, earning Foreman more than he even made as a boxer.

5. Sugar Ray Leonard

In the post-Ali era, the second ‘Sugar Ray’ filled the void as the world’s biggest boxing star. Not only did his mega fights with Roberto Duran and Tommy Hearns make millions, Leonard was also an endorsement juggernaut, glugging down Coca-Cola in TV adverts. Showdown with Marvin Hagler set the template for modern super fights: it sold out Caesars Palace and was a hit on new-look PPV and old-school closed-circuit, grossing $78million in 1987 (almost $200million in today’s money).

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