Deontay Wilder/Tyson Fury Official

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
$74.99 god damn



Fury vs Wilder piracy figures show how incredibly easy it is to find illegal streams

Nearly 10 million people watched Saturday night’s fight between Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder, according to piracy-tracking firm MUSO.

That’s a truly heavyweight figure, and it appears that the vast majority of pirate viewers were based in the US and the UK. It’s perhaps easy to see why.

BT Sport Box Office had the TV rights to Fury vs Wilder in the UK, meaning BT TV, Sky TV and Virgin Media customers would have to pay a hefty £19.95 to tune in. Across the pond, meanwhile, Showtime was broadcasting the fight on a pay-per-view basis for − deep breath − a whopping $74.99.

MUSO says a total of 9,982,144 people tuned in illegally − 1,908,592 of them were based in the US, while 1,094,315 were based in the UK − and that the fight was illegally available through 133 piracy streaming domains and 80 YouTube live links.

It isn’t clear how many people tuned in illegally, but we’ve asked BT for official viewing figures, and will update this article when the company responds.

“We saw a particularly high level of activity around the Tyson vs Wilder fight,” Andy Chatterley, the CEO and co-founder of MUSO, told Trusted Reviews. “A number of factors are likely to have contributed to this; not least being the level of hype preceding the fight − billed as the biggest fight to take place in the US since Mike Tyson fought Lennox Lewis in 2002.

“We also suspect that the expense of pay per view services will have put some fans off.

“And then there’s the AJ factor − we’d previously seen a lot of activity around the Anthony Joshua fight and he’s already been vocal on Twitter to express his eagerness to give one or the other ‘a fair one.’”

MUSO told Trusted Reviews that the most popular domains for users based in the UK, based on audience share, were:

  • Ripple − 20%
  • YouTube − 10.91%
  • VIPleague − 9.09%
  • Sportlemon − 7.27%
  • Stream2watch − 7.27%
  • VIPbox − 7.27%
  • FirstRowSportes − 5.45%
  • Myp2p − 5.45%
  • Livestream − 3.64%
  • Livetv − 1.82%
The five most popular domains overall, meanwhile, were:

  • YouTube − 18.31%
  • Ripple.is − 12.78%
  • VIPleague.lc − 9.36%
  • LiveTV.sx − 5.73%
  • Stream2watch.live − 4.12%
Anti-piracy organisations have been extremely vocal about some of their recent efforts to combat illegal streaming, but the figures above suggest there’s a hell of a lot more work to be done.

https://www.trustedreviews.com/news/fury-vs-wilder-pirate-streaming-figures-3633194
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
$74.99 god damn



Fury vs Wilder piracy figures show how incredibly easy it is to find illegal streams

Nearly 10 million people watched Saturday night’s fight between Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder, according to piracy-tracking firm MUSO.

That’s a truly heavyweight figure, and it appears that the vast majority of pirate viewers were based in the US and the UK. It’s perhaps easy to see why.

BT Sport Box Office had the TV rights to Fury vs Wilder in the UK, meaning BT TV, Sky TV and Virgin Media customers would have to pay a hefty £19.95 to tune in. Across the pond, meanwhile, Showtime was broadcasting the fight on a pay-per-view basis for − deep breath − a whopping $74.99.

MUSO says a total of 9,982,144 people tuned in illegally − 1,908,592 of them were based in the US, while 1,094,315 were based in the UK − and that the fight was illegally available through 133 piracy streaming domains and 80 YouTube live links.

It isn’t clear how many people tuned in illegally, but we’ve asked BT for official viewing figures, and will update this article when the company responds.

“We saw a particularly high level of activity around the Tyson vs Wilder fight,” Andy Chatterley, the CEO and co-founder of MUSO, told Trusted Reviews. “A number of factors are likely to have contributed to this; not least being the level of hype preceding the fight − billed as the biggest fight to take place in the US since Mike Tyson fought Lennox Lewis in 2002.

“We also suspect that the expense of pay per view services will have put some fans off.

“And then there’s the AJ factor − we’d previously seen a lot of activity around the Anthony Joshua fight and he’s already been vocal on Twitter to express his eagerness to give one or the other ‘a fair one.’”

MUSO told Trusted Reviews that the most popular domains for users based in the UK, based on audience share, were:

  • Ripple − 20%
  • YouTube − 10.91%
  • VIPleague − 9.09%
  • Sportlemon − 7.27%
  • Stream2watch − 7.27%
  • VIPbox − 7.27%
  • FirstRowSportes − 5.45%
  • Myp2p − 5.45%
  • Livestream − 3.64%
  • Livetv − 1.82%
The five most popular domains overall, meanwhile, were:

  • YouTube − 18.31%
  • Ripple.is − 12.78%
  • VIPleague.lc − 9.36%
  • LiveTV.sx − 5.73%
  • Stream2watch.live − 4.12%
Anti-piracy organisations have been extremely vocal about some of their recent efforts to combat illegal streaming, but the figures above suggest there’s a hell of a lot more work to be done.

https://www.trustedreviews.com/news/fury-vs-wilder-pirate-streaming-figures-3633194

thats crazy in uk they were payin just twenty dollars but in the u.s they wanted seventy five dollars..

did I read that shit right?? if so we are being fuckin pimped in this country...

and there is a sport streaming site called ripple...??

the average fight should be ten dollars with the super fights with really dope cards being twenty five...

to many criminal organizations in the u.s want a piece of the pie...

its ttime they get their hands out our pockets and get a piece of prison
 

tpotda

Rising Star
Registered
Sky Sports sells the ppv for UK and they cap it at 19.99 GBP no matter what fight/event it is, comes out to a lil voer $25 USD with conversion


thats crazy in uk they were payin just twenty dollars but in the u.s they wanted seventy five dollars..

did I read that shit right?? if so we are being fuckin pimped in this country...

and there is a sport streaming site called ripple...??

the average fight should be ten dollars with the super fights with really dope cards being twenty five...

to many criminal organizations in the u.s want a piece of the pie...

its ttime they get their hands out our pockets and get a piece of prison
 

trick20

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
i was actually gonna buy it until i saw the price...if thats the going rate. i'll continue to be here on fight night
 

slewdem100

Rising Star
OG Investor
Sounds like Tyson against Douglas...long counts are pretty common in boxing...remember that Fury was following the refs count so he did beat the count he was supposed to beat....I know why Deontay is pointing this out but I wouldn't spend too much time on it...he did good to drop him in the 12th in a fight that he was losing (and did lose IMO)
 

World B Free

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
$74.99 god damn



Fury vs Wilder piracy figures show how incredibly easy it is to find illegal streams

Nearly 10 million people watched Saturday night’s fight between Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder, according to piracy-tracking firm MUSO.

That’s a truly heavyweight figure, and it appears that the vast majority of pirate viewers were based in the US and the UK. It’s perhaps easy to see why.

BT Sport Box Office had the TV rights to Fury vs Wilder in the UK, meaning BT TV, Sky TV and Virgin Media customers would have to pay a hefty £19.95 to tune in. Across the pond, meanwhile, Showtime was broadcasting the fight on a pay-per-view basis for − deep breath − a whopping $74.99.

MUSO says a total of 9,982,144 people tuned in illegally − 1,908,592 of them were based in the US, while 1,094,315 were based in the UK − and that the fight was illegally available through 133 piracy streaming domains and 80 YouTube live links.

It isn’t clear how many people tuned in illegally, but we’ve asked BT for official viewing figures, and will update this article when the company responds.

“We saw a particularly high level of activity around the Tyson vs Wilder fight,” Andy Chatterley, the CEO and co-founder of MUSO, told Trusted Reviews. “A number of factors are likely to have contributed to this; not least being the level of hype preceding the fight − billed as the biggest fight to take place in the US since Mike Tyson fought Lennox Lewis in 2002.

“We also suspect that the expense of pay per view services will have put some fans off.

“And then there’s the AJ factor − we’d previously seen a lot of activity around the Anthony Joshua fight and he’s already been vocal on Twitter to express his eagerness to give one or the other ‘a fair one.’”

MUSO told Trusted Reviews that the most popular domains for users based in the UK, based on audience share, were:

  • Ripple − 20%
  • YouTube − 10.91%
  • VIPleague − 9.09%
  • Sportlemon − 7.27%
  • Stream2watch − 7.27%
  • VIPbox − 7.27%
  • FirstRowSportes − 5.45%
  • Myp2p − 5.45%
  • Livestream − 3.64%
  • Livetv − 1.82%
The five most popular domains overall, meanwhile, were:

  • YouTube − 18.31%
  • Ripple.is − 12.78%
  • VIPleague.lc − 9.36%
  • LiveTV.sx − 5.73%
  • Stream2watch.live − 4.12%
Anti-piracy organisations have been extremely vocal about some of their recent efforts to combat illegal streaming, but the figures above suggest there’s a hell of a lot more work to be done.

https://www.trustedreviews.com/news/fury-vs-wilder-pirate-streaming-figures-3633194
Why they snitchin?
 

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
More talk about the clock then that fucked up score card :smh:



stillsheff 1 day ago
Two people do the count. Ref inside the ring and a timekeeper outside the ring who doesn’t wait for the standing boxer to get in a neutral corner. The timekeeper outside the ring starts the count soon as a boxer hits the floor and once the standing boxer is in a neutral corner the ref inside the ring looks to the timekeeper and continues the count. People who watch boxing regularly should know this, everyone should. If you didn’t already know. Now you do.
 

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor





Dtg_jntXcAEwmRP.jpg:large
 
Last edited:

HeathCliff

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Good interview by 78SportsTV.

I'm glad Wilder addressed Floyd and Ward's hating asses :cool:

 
Last edited:

Ballatician

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
$74.99 god damn



Fury vs Wilder piracy figures show how incredibly easy it is to find illegal streams

Nearly 10 million people watched Saturday night’s fight between Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder, according to piracy-tracking firm MUSO.

That’s a truly heavyweight figure, and it appears that the vast majority of pirate viewers were based in the US and the UK. It’s perhaps easy to see why.

BT Sport Box Office had the TV rights to Fury vs Wilder in the UK, meaning BT TV, Sky TV and Virgin Media customers would have to pay a hefty £19.95 to tune in. Across the pond, meanwhile, Showtime was broadcasting the fight on a pay-per-view basis for − deep breath − a whopping $74.99.

MUSO says a total of 9,982,144 people tuned in illegally − 1,908,592 of them were based in the US, while 1,094,315 were based in the UK − and that the fight was illegally available through 133 piracy streaming domains and 80 YouTube live links.

It isn’t clear how many people tuned in illegally, but we’ve asked BT for official viewing figures, and will update this article when the company responds.

“We saw a particularly high level of activity around the Tyson vs Wilder fight,” Andy Chatterley, the CEO and co-founder of MUSO, told Trusted Reviews. “A number of factors are likely to have contributed to this; not least being the level of hype preceding the fight − billed as the biggest fight to take place in the US since Mike Tyson fought Lennox Lewis in 2002.

“We also suspect that the expense of pay per view services will have put some fans off.

“And then there’s the AJ factor − we’d previously seen a lot of activity around the Anthony Joshua fight and he’s already been vocal on Twitter to express his eagerness to give one or the other ‘a fair one.’”

MUSO told Trusted Reviews that the most popular domains for users based in the UK, based on audience share, were:

  • Ripple − 20%
  • YouTube − 10.91%
  • VIPleague − 9.09%
  • Sportlemon − 7.27%
  • Stream2watch − 7.27%
  • VIPbox − 7.27%
  • FirstRowSportes − 5.45%
  • Myp2p − 5.45%
  • Livestream − 3.64%
  • Livetv − 1.82%
The five most popular domains overall, meanwhile, were:

  • YouTube − 18.31%
  • Ripple.is − 12.78%
  • VIPleague.lc − 9.36%
  • LiveTV.sx − 5.73%
  • Stream2watch.live − 4.12%
Anti-piracy organisations have been extremely vocal about some of their recent efforts to combat illegal streaming, but the figures above suggest there’s a hell of a lot more work to be done.

https://www.trustedreviews.com/news/fury-vs-wilder-pirate-streaming-figures-3633194

They’ve got to find a better price point to minimize the pirating.
 

gene cisco

Not A BGOL Eunuch
BGOL Investor
$74.99 god damn



Fury vs Wilder piracy figures show how incredibly easy it is to find illegal streams

Nearly 10 million people watched Saturday night’s fight between Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder, according to piracy-tracking firm MUSO.

That’s a truly heavyweight figure, and it appears that the vast majority of pirate viewers were based in the US and the UK. It’s perhaps easy to see why.

BT Sport Box Office had the TV rights to Fury vs Wilder in the UK, meaning BT TV, Sky TV and Virgin Media customers would have to pay a hefty £19.95 to tune in. Across the pond, meanwhile, Showtime was broadcasting the fight on a pay-per-view basis for − deep breath − a whopping $74.99.

MUSO says a total of 9,982,144 people tuned in illegally − 1,908,592 of them were based in the US, while 1,094,315 were based in the UK − and that the fight was illegally available through 133 piracy streaming domains and 80 YouTube live links.

It isn’t clear how many people tuned in illegally, but we’ve asked BT for official viewing figures, and will update this article when the company responds.

“We saw a particularly high level of activity around the Tyson vs Wilder fight,” Andy Chatterley, the CEO and co-founder of MUSO, told Trusted Reviews. “A number of factors are likely to have contributed to this; not least being the level of hype preceding the fight − billed as the biggest fight to take place in the US since Mike Tyson fought Lennox Lewis in 2002.

“We also suspect that the expense of pay per view services will have put some fans off.

“And then there’s the AJ factor − we’d previously seen a lot of activity around the Anthony Joshua fight and he’s already been vocal on Twitter to express his eagerness to give one or the other ‘a fair one.’”

MUSO told Trusted Reviews that the most popular domains for users based in the UK, based on audience share, were:

  • Ripple − 20%
  • YouTube − 10.91%
  • VIPleague − 9.09%
  • Sportlemon − 7.27%
  • Stream2watch − 7.27%
  • VIPbox − 7.27%
  • FirstRowSportes − 5.45%
  • Myp2p − 5.45%
  • Livestream − 3.64%
  • Livetv − 1.82%
The five most popular domains overall, meanwhile, were:

  • YouTube − 18.31%
  • Ripple.is − 12.78%
  • VIPleague.lc − 9.36%
  • LiveTV.sx − 5.73%
  • Stream2watch.live − 4.12%
Anti-piracy organisations have been extremely vocal about some of their recent efforts to combat illegal streaming, but the figures above suggest there’s a hell of a lot more work to be done.

https://www.trustedreviews.com/news/fury-vs-wilder-pirate-streaming-figures-3633194
What kills me is those greedy ass fucks will count people who tuned in via piracy as lost sales. Probably like 1 percent would have really paid for that shit.
 

fles

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
lol at cats saying people are hating on wilder. Aside of the two knockouts, Wilder was outboxed. Be real about it.
 

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
It's hard for them to admit that Wilder was out boxed. That's why they keep bringing up the 10 count, and now the hating. None of his fans want to talk about the 115 -111 score card.
 

durham

Rising Star
Platinum Member

Anytime a fighter hits his head on the canvas, falls flays, lays on his back motionless, eyes rolled back, most refs would have called that done. Fury was lucky that ref was trying to give him a shot. But yeah Fury outboxed, a very unskilled fighter in Wilder. Who the hell is training this guy, letting him look so poor after 10 years
 

Rollie_Fingaz

Rising Star
OG Investor
Anytime a fighter hits his head on the canvas, falls flays, lays on his back motionless, eyes rolled back, most refs would have called that done. Fury was lucky that ref was trying to give him a shot.


Hatton of all people should know that:

 

Gemini

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Lennox Lewis and now Teddy Atlas. I didn't say shit... :zipit:

Deontay Wilder 'got exposed' in Tyson Fury draw - Teddy Atlas | First Take
 
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