- Title: FORBES-RICHEST ATHLETES Mayweather and Pacquiao top Forbes list after megabout
- Date: 10th June 2015
- Summary: JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY, UNITED STATES (JUNE 10, 2015) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) KURT BADENHAUSEN, SENIOR EDITOR AT FORBES, SAYING: "I think it's pretty safe bet as soon as Pacquiao and Mayweather agreed to fight that Floyd Mayweather would be the highest paid athlete in the world this year. It's the third time in four years he's been on top of the list, but the money is just staggering. Once all the money has been tallied up -- they're still counting it up -- but at the end of the day, this is going to be the richest night in the history of sports. Six hundred million in revenue this fight is going to generate, that's bigger than the Super Bowl or any other one-day event we've ever had in sports, and Mayweather controlling the purse strings as co-promoter of the fight and getting 60% of the purse walked away with a payday of more than $240 million from just the fight alone."
- Embargoed: 25th June 2015 13:00
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- Topics: General
- Reuters ID: LVAAXU3ESPYTM2Z9NJ6RNUSJK90P
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Floyd "Money" Mayweather lived up to the hype of his own nickname topping the latest edition of Forbes list of the World's 100 Highest-Paid Athletes.
The magazine released the details of the their annual list on Wednesday (June 10) with the Las Vegas boxer earning $300 million last year (from June 1, 2014-June 1, 2015) almost doubling the number two on the list -- his defeated opponent Manny Pacquiao.
"I think it's pretty safe bet as soon as Pacquiao and Mayweather agreed to fight that Floyd Mayweather would be the highest paid athlete in the world this year. It's the third time in four years he's been on top of the list, but the money is just staggering," explained Kurt Badenhausen, senior editor at Forbes in charge of compiling the list.
"Nothing is on this scale. Nothing is even close. The biggest event every year in sports is the Super Bowl. Last year, though, the Super Bowl generated $500 million in revenue from tickets and tv and concessions and all that stuff. Pacquiao-Mayweather did $600 million and it's a 36-minute event. There's nothing ever like this in the history of sports."
For their payday Mayweather and Pacquiao joined Tigers Woods as the only athletes earn nine-figures in a single year. The purse for their megabout fueled much of the $460 million earnings increase on the list.
"The world's highest paid athletes are making more than ever. The top-100 earned $3.2 billion over the last 12 months -- that's up 17% from the prior year," said Badenhausen.
The world's former number one golfer and who topped the list for almost a decade has slumped since his heyday in 2008, but Woods still sits in the top ten with a $50.6 million last year. However, only $600,000 came from golf winnings and for the first time ever Phil Mickelson topped him by one spot on the list.
The list of the world's 100 highest-paid athletes consists of players from ten different sports. Half of the list comes from the American major leagues with baseball players leading the way with 27 names on the list. The NBA has 18 players with LeBron James in 6th spot with $64.8 million and newcomer James Harden in the 100th spot at $18.8 million. The NFL has 16 football players on the least while the global form of the game has 15 names, with Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi at the top behind Mayweather and Pacquiao in the third and fourth spots.
"I think one interesting component of the list is you got a lot of baseball players, you got a lot of NFL players, but they're not necessarily the people up at the top. So, of the top-100 you have 62 Americans, but you look at the top-25 alone, it's much more diverse. It's a much more international list. Fourteen of the top-25 are non-Americans. You have a bunch of soccer players. You have people playing global sports like tennis, like golf, and I think that's one of the more interesting things that comes out of putting together a list like this," finished Badenhausen.
Cricket and track and field both placed one athlete on the list. Other sports include tennis with 7 players, golf with 6 players, racing 6 drivers and boxing with 3. There are no hockey players on the list for a fourth straight year. The cutoff for the top 100 continues to rise and is now $18.8 million, up from $17.3 million last year and $16.4 million in 2013.
The only two women on the list were Maria Sharapova and Serena Williams. The two tennis stars were in the 26th and 47th spots, respectively. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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