Celebrity Biographies
Al Haymon Bio, Age, Height, Net Worth, Wife, Son, Boxers
BIOGRAPHY OF AL HAYMON
Alan Haymon is an American boxing manager and promoter. He is the manager of Floyd Mayweather, Jr. and has won the Boxing Writers of America Manager of the Year award a total of five times.
AGE AL HAYMON
Alan Haymon was born in 1956 in Cleveland, OH, USA. He turns 63 in 2019.
AL HAYMON NET WORTH
Boxing advisor and manager, Haymon has a net worth of US$15 million as of 2019. In 1999, Haymon sold 50% of AH Enterprises to SFX Entertainment
WIFE OF AL HAYMON
Haymon is a married man but the manager and boxing promoter as his low-key life has disclosed no information about his wife or children. Moreover, he is rarely seen in public and does not hold any interviews.
SON AL HAYMON
Longtime friend and business associate Sam Watson and his two sons are the public face of Haymon’s boxing business. After each fighter, many successful boxers thank Haymon who is not known to many. His influence in the sport of boxing Al Haymon is not just THE MAN, he is the ONLY MAN!
EDUCATION AL HAYMON
Born and raised in Cleveland, Ohio, Haymon studied economics at Harvard. He also holds an MBA from Harvard.
AL HAYMONMUSIQUECARRIÈRE
Haymon’s main early career was in music promotion, where he promoted artists such as MC Hammer, New Edition, Janet Jackson, Whitney Houston and Mary J. Blige and he branched out into other entertainment fields, such as when he worked with Eddie Murphy. In 1999, Haymon sold 50% of AH businesses to SFX Entertainment.
AL HAYMON BOXING CAREER
Haymon ventured into boxing in 2000, when he managed Vernon Forrest. Over the next decade, he gained considerable influence in boxing, largely due to his connection to Floyd Mayweather Jr. He won the Al Buck Award (Manager of the Year) in 2005 and 2013 from the Boxing Writers Association of America. Haymon founded Premier Boxing Champions, which held its first event in 2015.
AL HAYMON CRITICISM AND CONTROVERSY
Haymon is rarely seen and never interviewed. Greg Bishop, formerly of The New York Times and now Sports Illustrated, suggests that Haymon operates as both promoter and manager, against the principles of the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act, which was designed to separate boxing promoters from managers boxing. Haymon was also criticized by fans and writers for the inactivity of several of his fighters.