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Michael Cohen

Barnett Says He Didn't Turn Down CBS Fight; Affliction and Elite XC Now Blood Brothers

Despite rumors to the contrary, Josh Barnett says he did not turn down a fight with Andrei Arlovski at 'Elite XC: Heat' on Oct. 4. Though talk centered on the possibility that Barnett bristled at the idea of taking a pay cut to help Affliction get their co-promotion on with Elite XC on CBS, "The Baby-Faced Assassin" declared in a MySpace blog post that he was not asked to take any such pay cut and did not turn down the fight:

I read somewhere that I had declined the fight because I would have had to take a pay cut. I suppose others may also formulate some story about me declining the fight for other reasons.

I never decelned to take this fight. I was never told that I would have any part of my pay reduced since working with Affliction. To my knowledge, no one has been asked to take a pay cut that fights for Affliction.

I did not turn down this fight.

Josh

Whether Barnett knows it or not, some Affliction fighters were asked to take pay cuts for the second show. Barnett already committed to fight at Sengoku 6 in November after news of the Affliction postponement, so he may never have been a realistic option for Elite XC. Now Roy Nelson gets Arlovski, and Barnett gets to go back to Japan and entertain all the loyal Josh-a-maniacs there.

In other Affliction/Elite XC news, Affliction COO Michael Cohen indicated that there will be an ongoing arrangement between the two organizations. Affliction's postponed second event, now apparently scheduled for Jan. 24 (or maybe there's no set date yet, depending on who you ask), will also be a co-promotional effort between Affliction and Elite XC, and will either air on CBS or Showtime:

Golden Boy Hopes Affliction Will Be Its Key to MMA Fans, HBO "Respectfully Declines" Arlovski-Barnett


('How's taste my co-promotion clusterfuck?')

The more we hear about the Affliction/Golden Boy partnership, the stranger it begins to sound. First there was the official press release, which seemed to put more emphasis on "signature shirts" and apparel than on fights. It's almost as if Affliction is looking for a way to retreat with dignity from the money-sucking void of fight promotion and get back to what they do best: selling overpriced, hyper-stylized clothing.

But aside from their own line of skull-themed t-shirts, what does Golden Boy get out of it? According to CEO Richard Schaefer, they hope to siphon off some of MMA's young fan base and bring them back into the boxing fold:

"We believe Affliction and the relationships they have with that demographic, the identification they have within that demographic group I think will help bring boxing to these people," said the Golden Boy CEO. "We think as well, many of the mixed martial arts fans are fans of combat sports, and what they've seen of boxing is a very exciting sport as well that maybe they will discover their love for the sport of boxing."

Naturally, Affliction VP Tom Atencio hopes for the same thing in the other direction, which should tell Golden Boy something (as should those Vegas ticket sales) about just how much of an MMA fan base they may have to draw from. But in theory, at least, it sounds like an idea that can work. That is, if you get the right fights in front of the right audiences. Already things are off to a slow start.

ESPN.com reports that Golden Boy tried to sell HBO on the idea of adding the original "Day of Reckoning" main event -- Andrei Arlovski vs. Josh Barnett -- to the Oct. 18 pay-per-view boxing bout between Kelly Pavlik and Bernard Hopkins. HBO "respectfully declined."

Affliction's Contract Talks With Tito Ortiz Sound Downright Painful


(Tito and Jenna, still trying to solve that age-old argument about which is the more lucrative industry: fighting or screwing?)

Here's what you know going into contract negotiations with Tito Ortiz: he is going to insist that you pay him waaaay more than he's actually worth, and he will genuinely believe that it's justified. That's what Affliction is finding out. After claiming he had a "ground-breaking record" contract in the works only to have his statement directly contradicted by Affliction COO Michael Cohen, Ortiz is now actually said to be in negotiations with Affliction, though it isn't going well.

Affliction VP Tom Atencio told MMA Weekly, "We’ve got a contract, and it’s just not feasible."

I think we can untangle that odd syntax enough to infer that what he means is Ortiz has told them how much money he wants and it's absolutely ridiculous. Color me surprised. The problem is that Ortiz has an inflated sense of what he can bring to an MMA organization at this point. For example, he claims that he'll do a guaranteed 500,000 pay-per-view buys for Affliction. This is what's known as "crazy talk."

Ortiz isn't that big a star anymore. He only thinks he is. MMA fans have seen him limp along the last few years with victories over an over-the-hill Ken Shamrock and his more recent loss to Lyoto Machida, so it isn't likely that too many of the hardcore faithful are dying to see "The Huntington Beach Bad Boy" back in action.

If his reasoning is that fans of "The Apprentice" are going to plop down forty bucks to see him fight "Babalu" Sobral (who most of them have probably never heard of) in Affliction (an organization they may or may not be aware of), then he's overestimating the reality TV crowd's attention span. They've forgotten him in favor of Brooke Hogan and Mr. Boston by now.

When the people who paid Matt Lindland $300,000 and Tim Sylvia $800,000 think your expectations are "not feasible," you must really be off the mark.