Boxing was once the biggest sport in America. It is now an afterthought for most sports fans. The numbers tell the story.
The decline (Source: Nielsen, various boxing media):
- Boxing PPV buys have declined dramatically from the Tyson era. The Tyson vs. Holyfield era drew 2M+ buys consistently. Modern non-Canelo, non-Crawford cards struggle to hit 200K.
- The last fight to generate mainstream cultural conversation was Fury vs. Usyk in 2024.
- MMA (UFC specifically) has overtaken boxing in the 18-34 demographic. Source: Nielsen viewership data.
Why boxing is declining:
- Too many belts. WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO, and now the WBA "regular" champion. Casual fans cannot follow who the real champion is.
- Best avoiding the best. Unlike the UFC, boxing has no central promoter forcing top fights. Fighters from different promotions (Top Rank vs. Matchroom vs. PBC) rarely fight each other.
- No centralized platform. Boxing is spread across ESPN+, DAZN, Showtime (now defunct for boxing), Amazon Prime, and various PPV. Fans need 4 subscriptions to follow the sport.
- Corruption perception. Judging controversies (Canelo-GGG 1, Fury-Usyk debates) reinforce the perception that boxing is rigged.
What can save it:
- A single organizing body (like the UFC model) that controls matchmaking and forces the best to fight the best.
- Consolidation of media rights onto one platform.
- A new American superstar. Boxing thrives when America has a fighter to rally behind.
The counterargument: Boxing is not dying globally. In the UK, Mexico, Japan, and parts of Eastern Europe, boxing is thriving. The decline is primarily American.
Sources:
- Nielsen — PPV and viewership data
- BoxRec — fight frequency and belt holder data
- ESPN — boxing business analysis
- DAZN — subscriber data
Am I wrong here?
Terence Crawford was supposed to be the American star that revived boxing. He is arguably the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world and nobody outside of hardcore boxing fans can name him.