MT advises boxers on fight agreements, promotional terms, sponsorship opportunities, brand partnerships, and career decisions.
"In boxing, the agreement around the fight often outlives the fight itself."
Boxing agreements can affect compensation, promotion, scheduling, media obligations, sponsorships, rematch terms, and future flexibility. The details should be reviewed before a fighter commits.
Promotional language, exclusivity clauses, option terms, and rematch provisions can extend a fighter's obligations well beyond a single bout. Understanding what is being committed to, and for how long, matters as much as the purse itself.
MT helps boxers and their advisors understand those terms, evaluate opportunities, and make decisions with the full career picture in mind.
Fight agreements set the terms for a single bout. Promotional agreements set the terms for the relationship around it. Both should be reviewed together.
Compensation, weight, date, opponent terms, ring walks, media obligations, drug testing protocols, and rematch language. The agreement that defines a single bout, with terms that often determine value beyond the night of the fight.
Exclusivity, term length, fight frequency, option clauses, scheduling rights, and sponsorship terms. The agreement that defines how a fighter's career is managed across multiple bouts and what flexibility remains within it.
A boxing review is rarely about a single number. The structure of the fight agreement, the promotional relationship, and the sponsorships around them all interact, and the language in any one of them can affect the others.
Review of compensation, event terms, obligations, incentives, promotional requirements, and related provisions for a specific bout.
Assessment of promotional terms, exclusivity, scheduling, media obligations, and restrictions that may affect future opportunities.
Review of brand opportunities, sponsor fit, usage rights, compensation, and deliverables across the fighter's commercial agreements.
Guidance around fight timing, partnership opportunities, representation decisions, and the long view of future value.
Clear guidance for fighters, families, managers, and advisors during important negotiations and contract conversations.
Review of terms that may affect reputation, earning power, brand value, and the fighter's control over future career direction.
Boxing decisions often involve managers, family members, coaches, attorneys, and trusted advisors. The fight agreement, the promotional contract, and the sponsorships around them are usually evaluated by a small circle, and the people involved should share the same understanding of what is being signed.
MT helps organize the contract questions, explain the terms, and review the restrictions that may affect the fighter's next opportunity.
A boxing review may begin with a fight agreement, promotional agreement, sponsorship proposal, or career opportunity.
MT reviews the opportunity for compensation, obligations, promotional terms, usage rights, scheduling, exclusivity, and future flexibility.
MT reviews the fight, promotion, sponsorship, or representation opportunity in the context of the fighter's broader career picture.
Compensation, obligations, restrictions, and future impact are explained clearly so the fighter and trusted advisors share the same picture.
The fighter and trusted advisors can better understand the opportunity before a commitment is made or the fight is announced.
This is an illustration of how a review may proceed, not a real client engagement.
A fight agreement covers a single bout — compensation, weight, opponent terms, ring walks, media obligations, drug testing, rematch language. A promotional agreement defines the relationship around it — exclusivity, term length, fight frequency, option clauses, scheduling rights. Both should be reviewed together.
Promotional agreements vary widely. Some include multi-year exclusivity, option clauses extending past the original term, fight frequency requirements, and scheduling rights. The terms should be understood before signing, including how the agreement ends and what restrictions remain after.
Sponsorships, brand partnerships, and endorsement opportunities are reviewed alongside fight and promotional agreements. They're often interconnected — sponsorship rights may be affected by promotional exclusivity, and vice versa.
If you are evaluating a fight agreement, promotional relationship, sponsorship opportunity, or representation decision, MT can help clarify the terms before you move forward.