Canelo Alvarez inks $365 million deal with streaming service

Saul "Canelo" Alvarez celebrates after defeating WBC and WBA middleweight champion Gennady Golovkin in September. Photo: Steve Marcus/Las Vegas Sun via AP

Saul "Canelo" Alvarez celebrates after defeating WBC and WBA middleweight champion Gennady Golovkin in September. Photo: Steve Marcus/Las Vegas Sun via AP

Published Oct 17, 2018

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LOS ANGELES - World middleweight champion Saul "Canelo" Alvarez has signed a lucrative long-term deal with sports streaming service DAZN that will see him earn at least $365 million over five years, it was reported Wednesday.

Mexican star Alvarez, who dethroned Gennady Golovkin in their gruelling rematch in Las Vegas last month, will fight 11 times as part of the deal, starting with December's super-middleweight bout in New York against Rocky Fielding.

ESPN reported that Alvarez's deal with DAZN, which runs through 2023, is the most lucrative long-term athlete contract in history, shattering the 13-year $325 million deal signed by baseball's Giancarlo Stanton in 2014.

Alvarez's handlers at Golden Boy Promotions, run by former world champion Oscar De La Hoya, brokered the deal with DAZN, an online streaming service that only launched in September. DAZN charges its subscribers $9.99 per month for a range of combat sports content.

"Canelo is the highest-paid athlete in the world. He's extremely happy," De La Hoya told ESPN. Alvarez's switch to DAZN is a direct consequence of HBO television's decision to pull the plug on 45 years of broadcasting boxing earlier this month.

Alvarez previously had a deal with HBO to broadcast his fights on a pay-per-view basis. ESPN reported that Alvarez's fights on DAZN would not be shown on pay-per-view.  However Alvarez's baseline earnings could increase sharply over the course of the deal if DAZN reaches a series of specific subscription benchmarks during the next five years.

Cerrando un capítulo con orgullo y abriendo uno nuevo 👊🏻proudly closing a chapter and beginning a new one #MiEra#teamcanelo pic.twitter.com/aDZiDTLpm2

— Canelo Alvarez (@Canelo) October 16, 2018

AFP

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