Several interesting issues in that piece. I agree wholeheartedly with White's take on making the fight. Regardless of the split, this would be a huge purse and win or lose, no one's going to come away from that fight hurting in the wallet. It's a fight any true boxing fan wants to see. Love to hear AU1 weigh in on that because I believe he's a big fan of teh boxes.
On Jeremy Lin, while there may be just a bit of truth to what Mayweather said, he does come off as racist for even bringing it up. Why is the hype Lin is getting an issue for him? Lin is tearing it up in some areas. He's had some great scoring nights and made some highlite reel plays. But his story, his race and where he plays all factor equally in to the hype in my opinion. Yes, he's American/White/Taiwanese...whatever...don't particularly care.....but he's the first person of his descent to do what he's doing in this sport. Is that significant? Not really. No more significant than every time they announce this is the first African American coach or player or President. It's a footnote. Doesn't matter. Move on.
His story to me is far more intriguing because he was the last guy on the bench with no guaranteed contract...not very physically imposing...who came in to light it up with Kobe Bryant type numbers every night...in New York. If he was doing this in Sacramento, would anyone really give a damn?
As for White and the UFC, I'm a huge fan and have followed the sport since it's inception and have been to a couple of events. I admire White for what he's done but I would be interested in the money generated and how it's distributed. I saw the payouts for the last event and while a couple of the headliners were taking home just over $100K, some of the undercard guys made as little as $8,000.00. In this day and age, those do seem like extremely low numbers for a sport that has skyrocketed in popularity in the last few years.