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Faster, Higher, Stronger | Hong Kong broadcast rights for Tokyo 2020 and 2022 World Cup up in the air

  • Costs to show sporting events proving too high as they are often priced the same as for China
  • Hongkongers have to pay for more channels with no guarantee of seeing events

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Spain fans watch the Russia 2018 World Cup match between Spain and Iran in a bar in Madrid. Photo: AP

At a little after 1pm last Sunday, Tyson Fury and Deontay Wilder touched gloves ahead of the biggest fight in heavyweight boxing in two decades.

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Hong Kong’s fight fans were watching, with bars in Wan Chai busier than they have been in months despite the coronavirus battle gripping the city.

Those who stayed away were watching from the sofa but they were not watching on Hong Kong’s television channels.

None of them picked up the rights for the fight, forcing fight fans to the pub or to illegal streams to see the bout that the world was watching.

Fireworks ignite over the Olympic Stadium during the opening ceremony for the 2012 London Olympics. Photo: AFP
Fireworks ignite over the Olympic Stadium during the opening ceremony for the 2012 London Olympics. Photo: AFP
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The closest you could get to seeing either Fury or Wilder on the 40 sports channels on Now TV was a replay of one of the “Bronze Bomber’s” old fights on KNOCKOUTS! on Fight TV.

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