Ryan Garcia calls out Shakur Stevenson |
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Newly minted WBC welterweight champion Ryan Garcia just called out the world / WBO junior welterweight champion on social media, and seems to be saying he will go back down to the 140-pound division for the fight. Garcia tweeted: "Forget the catchweight sh*t. Let’s do it for real. I want to take your belt and snatch it right off you, Shakur Stevenson." In a subsequent Tweet, Garcia, exapnded: "To those that are worried about the 140-pound weight. I will tell you this, it was my plan to be able to also win at 140. As long as there’s no rehydration clause things will be going forward. Testing always included, I’ve never shy’d away from that. For Shakur to assume I’m on steroids, that is defamation. So I would advise you to refrain yourself, I know you are deep down scared and you should have fear. I’m coming for you."
Stevenson's response? About steroids, something that Garcia has suspended for in the past: "That’s my opinion. You can’t sue nobody for their opinion. You [are] a boxer champ, wassup with a the suing tactics anyway? About the fight? "140- Let’s do it chump."
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Ryan Garcia calls out Shakur Stevenson
Newly minted WBC welterweight champion Ryan Garcia just called out the world / WBO junior welterweight champion on social media, and seems to be saying he will go back down to the 140-pound division for the fight. Garcia tweeted: "Forget the catchweight sh*t. Let’s do it for real. I want to take your belt and snatch it right off you, Shakur Stevenson." In a subsequent Tweet, Garcia, exapnded: "To those that are worried about the 140-pound weight. I will tell you this, it was my plan to be able to also win at 140. As long as there’s no rehydration clause things will be going forward. Testing always included, I’ve never shy’d away from that. For Shakur to assume I’m on steroids, that is defamation. So I would advise you to refrain yourself, I know you are deep down scared and you should have fear. I’m coming for you."
Stevenson's response? About steroids, something that Garcia has suspended for in the past: "That’s my opinion. You can’t sue nobody for their opinion. You [are] a boxer champ, wassup with a the suing tactics anyway? About the fight? "140- Let’s do it chump."
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I Will Survive? |
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Boxing does not define survival the way other industries do. It defines it in counts: eight...
nine... That suspended second between collapse and choice. The bell does not ring at the first knockdown. It rings when the fighter does not rise before ten. And boxing has always reserved its deepest respect not for the undefeated — but for the unbreakable. In the 1978 disco anthem "I Will Survive," Gloria Gaynor sang about walking away from someone who expected collapse — a refusal to disappear when written off. But survival is not always confrontational.
When Dana White and Zuffa Boxing entered the conversation, WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman did not respond with hostility. He did not shut the door. He did not retreat behind it. He did not crumble. He welcomed him. In the face of pointed criticism, Sulaiman chose welcome over confrontation. Whether that was diplomacy, strategy, or confidence, it projected steadiness rather than strain. There is a difference between telling someone they are not welcome — and showing them you are not afraid.
Gaynor's song asks a simple question: did you think I would crumble? Boxing has heard that question before. It has been declared broken. Finished. On life support. Too divided to endure.
And yet it keeps rising before the count reaches ten. Because boxing understands something fundamental about survival.
A granite chin is not anatomy. It is psychology.
It is the mind overruling the moment. Unbreakable fighters do not deny pain. They expect it. They accept it. They redefine it. They reach into reserves their opponent hopes do not exist.
Legendary trainer Cus D’Amato once said, “Born round, don’t die square.” Some fighters bend. Some do not. The late Arturo Gatti was not flawless. But he was unforgettable. Every knockdown felt temporary. Every cut survivable. He did not win every fight. But he refused to surrender in any of them. That archetype now applies beyond the ropes.
Much of the public debate has centered on a visible number — three percent. Sanctioning fees are easy to criticize because they are concrete. But percentages exist within structures. If a centralized contract defines championship-fight compensation at a fixed figure — reportedly $750,000 within the Zuffa boxing framework — the absence of a sanctioning fee does not end the economic conversation. Zero percent of a defined ceiling behaves differently than three percent of an open negotiation.
The question is not whether a toll exists. It is how high the road can go. In boxing's present decentralized model, elite purses are negotiated event by event. In a centralized structure, compensation architecture is defined internally. Those are structural differences, not moral ones.
There is also the matter of statutory protection. Under the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act, professional boxing conducted in interstate commerce falls within a federal statutory framework. Jurisdiction is determined by nexus — where the alleged harm occurred and whether it intersects with United States commerce. For fighters evaluating long-term agreements, the distinction between statutory recourse and internal compliance language is not rhetorical. It is structural.
Meanwhile, rhetoric continues. White projects inevitability. Public exchanges escalate. But institutional behavior tells a quieter story. Eddie Hearn extends Matchroom's long-term broadcast backing through DAZN. Oscar De La Hoya asserts Golden Boy's contractual rights in court in a dispute involving Vergil Ortiz Jr. Different personalities.
Different styles. Same posture. None have walked out of the industry's door. That matters.
Because in boxing, survival is not declared. It is demonstrated. There is a moment in every fight when the corner watches closely. The fighter has absorbed punishment. The legs tremble. The breath shortens. There is a similar moment in institutions — when pressure mounts, when critics grow louder, when markets shift.
Some walk away... Some rise... Survival is not always a door slammed shut.. Sometimes it is the quiet refusal to lie down. The ten count does not define a warrior. The response to it does. And in boxing, the legends are not the ones who never touch the canvas. They are the ones who rise before ten.
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I Will Survive?
Boxing does not define survival the way other industries do. It defines it in counts: eight...
nine... That suspended second between collapse and choice. The bell does not ring at the first knockdown. It rings when the fighter does not rise before ten. And boxing has always reserved its deepest respect not for the undefeated — but for the unbreakable. In the 1978 disco anthem "I Will Survive," Gloria Gaynor sang about walking away from someone who expected collapse — a refusal to disappear when written off. But survival is not always confrontational.
When Dana White and Zuffa Boxing entered the conversation, WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman did not respond with hostility. He did not shut the door. He did not retreat behind it. He did not crumble. He welcomed him. In the face of pointed criticism, Sulaiman chose welcome over confrontation. Whether that was diplomacy, strategy, or confidence, it projected steadiness rather than strain. There is a difference between telling someone they are not welcome — and showing them you are not afraid.
Gaynor's song asks a simple question: did you think I would crumble? Boxing has heard that question before. It has been declared broken. Finished. On life support. Too divided to endure.
And yet it keeps rising before the count reaches ten. Because boxing understands something fundamental about survival.
A granite chin is not anatomy. It is psychology.
It is the mind overruling the moment. Unbreakable fighters do not deny pain. They expect it. They accept it. They redefine it. They reach into reserves their opponent hopes do not exist.
Legendary trainer Cus D’Amato once said, “Born round, don’t die square.” Some fighters bend. Some do not. The late Arturo Gatti was not flawless. But he was unforgettable. Every knockdown felt temporary. Every cut survivable. He did not win every fight. But he refused to surrender in any of them. That archetype now applies beyond the ropes.
Much of the public debate has centered on a visible number — three percent. Sanctioning fees are easy to criticize because they are concrete. But percentages exist within structures. If a centralized contract defines championship-fight compensation at a fixed figure — reportedly $750,000 within the Zuffa boxing framework — the absence of a sanctioning fee does not end the economic conversation. Zero percent of a defined ceiling behaves differently than three percent of an open negotiation.
The question is not whether a toll exists. It is how high the road can go. In boxing's present decentralized model, elite purses are negotiated event by event. In a centralized structure, compensation architecture is defined internally. Those are structural differences, not moral ones.
There is also the matter of statutory protection. Under the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act, professional boxing conducted in interstate commerce falls within a federal statutory framework. Jurisdiction is determined by nexus — where the alleged harm occurred and whether it intersects with United States commerce. For fighters evaluating long-term agreements, the distinction between statutory recourse and internal compliance language is not rhetorical. It is structural.
Meanwhile, rhetoric continues. White projects inevitability. Public exchanges escalate. But institutional behavior tells a quieter story. Eddie Hearn extends Matchroom's long-term broadcast backing through DAZN. Oscar De La Hoya asserts Golden Boy's contractual rights in court in a dispute involving Vergil Ortiz Jr. Different personalities.
Different styles. Same posture. None have walked out of the industry's door. That matters.
Because in boxing, survival is not declared. It is demonstrated. There is a moment in every fight when the corner watches closely. The fighter has absorbed punishment. The legs tremble. The breath shortens. There is a similar moment in institutions — when pressure mounts, when critics grow louder, when markets shift.
Some walk away... Some rise... Survival is not always a door slammed shut.. Sometimes it is the quiet refusal to lie down. The ten count does not define a warrior. The response to it does. And in boxing, the legends are not the ones who never touch the canvas. They are the ones who rise before ten.
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Crocker injury delays title shot for Paro |
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IBF welterweight champion Lewis Crocker has been forced to delay his first title defense through injury issues, postponing his bout against ex-junior welterweight champ Liam Paro. The pair were expected to meet in the latter's native Australia in early April, with the Belfast man making the first defense of belt. Instead, they are now likely to meet in May or June after Crocker sustained a hand ligament injury during training for his trip down under.
It marks the second cancellation Paro has faced this year, as Paro was previously set to face Paddy Donovan. The star's promoters No Limit Boxing received a medical certificate from Crocker's Matchroom Boxing team, confirming the nature of the injury.
The pair had been expected to fight on the same bill, either in Brisbane or the Gold Coast, as local favourite Tim Tszyu as he plots his own return. The latter is due to face Errol Spence Jr. in an intriguing clash later this year, and is widely thought to be eyeing an imminent tune-up on home soil. The wait goes on for Liam Paro then, as the Australian faces his second aborted bout in the space of four months, much to his irritation.
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Crocker injury delays title shot for Paro
IBF welterweight champion Lewis Crocker has been forced to delay his first title defense through injury issues, postponing his bout against ex-junior welterweight champ Liam Paro. The pair were expected to meet in the latter's native Australia in early April, with the Belfast man making the first defense of belt. Instead, they are now likely to meet in May or June after Crocker sustained a hand ligament injury during training for his trip down under.
It marks the second cancellation Paro has faced this year, as Paro was previously set to face Paddy Donovan. The star's promoters No Limit Boxing received a medical certificate from Crocker's Matchroom Boxing team, confirming the nature of the injury.
The pair had been expected to fight on the same bill, either in Brisbane or the Gold Coast, as local favourite Tim Tszyu as he plots his own return. The latter is due to face Errol Spence Jr. in an intriguing clash later this year, and is widely thought to be eyeing an imminent tune-up on home soil. The wait goes on for Liam Paro then, as the Australian faces his second aborted bout in the space of four months, much to his irritation.
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Australian update |
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At 1 AM Eastern time on February 26th, TrillerTV will stream boxing action directly from the Bella Vista Hotel in Sydney, Australia. The action is headlined by a battle for the Australian welterweight title, as Marco Romeo (8-1) squares off against Jason Mallia (10-0). In the chief support, Emiliano Tissera (3-1) takes on Alex Naman (9-0) at super bantamweight. Also on the card, are female super bantamweights as Shannel Dargan (10-2-2) and Shannon O'Connell (26-8-1) go toe-to-toe. |
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Australian update
At 1 AM Eastern time on February 26th, TrillerTV will stream boxing action directly from the Bella Vista Hotel in Sydney, Australia. The action is headlined by a battle for the Australian welterweight title, as Marco Romeo (8-1) squares off against Jason Mallia (10-0). In the chief support, Emiliano Tissera (3-1) takes on Alex Naman (9-0) at super bantamweight. Also on the card, are female super bantamweights as Shannel Dargan (10-2-2) and Shannon O'Connell (26-8-1) go toe-to-toe. |
Liddard to defend British title vs. Denny |
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George Liddard insists he is confident of victory over Tyler Denny to kickstart his long-term mission to become a future world champion. The ‘Billericay Bomber’ defends his British & Commonwealth middleweight championship for the first time at London’s Copper Box Arena on Saturday, March 21st – live on DAZN. And just a stone’s throw from his beloved West Ham United Football Club’s home of the London Stadium – where he dreams of headlining one day for a world title – Liddard (13-0, 8 KOs) is relishing the opportunity to put his skills to the test against the former European champion Denny (21-3-3, 1 KO) in less than four weeks time.
“Listen, I’m always ready. I don’t play games – I’m an old school fighter,” said Liddard, speaking to Matchroom Boxing. “I’m always ready for it and I’m looking forward to a good fight. Four weeks to go, and it can’t come soon enough. I’m ready to get the job done. This is a leap towards world titles now. I’m chasing everything. If I can get the European title after this, that would be great. Tyler Denny is a good opponent. He’s a former European champion. But I have no doubt I will get the job done – and I’ll do it in style on March 21st.”
Liddard also revealed he is aiming high with his ambitions of winning more titles, now that Matchroom Boxing has secured a new, long-term five-year deal with DAZN. “Either at 160, 168 or 175, I believe I will one day become an undisputed world champion,” Liddard added. “At some point it will happen. And I hope one day that I will sell out a fight at the London Stadium, live on DAZN.”
The undercard sees Liddard’s Tony Sims-trained stablemate Jimmy Sains (11-0, 10 KOs) put his English middleweight title on the line against Derrick Osaze (13-3-0, 3 KOs), who’s last fight was a defeat by Liddard in January 2025. Earlier in the night, Leli Buttigieg (11-0, 3 KOs) faces Jake Goodwin (8-2-1, 1 KO) in a final eliminator for Sains’ strap.
Elsewhere, Giorgio Visioli (10-0, 6 KOs) defends his English lightweight championship against Levi Giles (17-2-1, 4 KOs), and Taylor Bevan (7-0, 7 KOs), Adam Maca (4-0, 4 KOs) and Connor Mitchell (1-0, 1 KO) all look to catch the eye as young Louie Ward – trained by Tony Sims – makes his professional debut in the junior lightweight division.
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Liddard to defend British title vs. Denny
George Liddard insists he is confident of victory over Tyler Denny to kickstart his long-term mission to become a future world champion. The ‘Billericay Bomber’ defends his British & Commonwealth middleweight championship for the first time at London’s Copper Box Arena on Saturday, March 21st – live on DAZN. And just a stone’s throw from his beloved West Ham United Football Club’s home of the London Stadium – where he dreams of headlining one day for a world title – Liddard (13-0, 8 KOs) is relishing the opportunity to put his skills to the test against the former European champion Denny (21-3-3, 1 KO) in less than four weeks time.
“Listen, I’m always ready. I don’t play games – I’m an old school fighter,” said Liddard, speaking to Matchroom Boxing. “I’m always ready for it and I’m looking forward to a good fight. Four weeks to go, and it can’t come soon enough. I’m ready to get the job done. This is a leap towards world titles now. I’m chasing everything. If I can get the European title after this, that would be great. Tyler Denny is a good opponent. He’s a former European champion. But I have no doubt I will get the job done – and I’ll do it in style on March 21st.”
Liddard also revealed he is aiming high with his ambitions of winning more titles, now that Matchroom Boxing has secured a new, long-term five-year deal with DAZN. “Either at 160, 168 or 175, I believe I will one day become an undisputed world champion,” Liddard added. “At some point it will happen. And I hope one day that I will sell out a fight at the London Stadium, live on DAZN.”
The undercard sees Liddard’s Tony Sims-trained stablemate Jimmy Sains (11-0, 10 KOs) put his English middleweight title on the line against Derrick Osaze (13-3-0, 3 KOs), who’s last fight was a defeat by Liddard in January 2025. Earlier in the night, Leli Buttigieg (11-0, 3 KOs) faces Jake Goodwin (8-2-1, 1 KO) in a final eliminator for Sains’ strap.
Elsewhere, Giorgio Visioli (10-0, 6 KOs) defends his English lightweight championship against Levi Giles (17-2-1, 4 KOs), and Taylor Bevan (7-0, 7 KOs), Adam Maca (4-0, 4 KOs) and Connor Mitchell (1-0, 1 KO) all look to catch the eye as young Louie Ward – trained by Tony Sims – makes his professional debut in the junior lightweight division.
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Sampson Boxing coming to Atlantic City on April 11th |
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Power-punching Dominican junior welterweight Heidan Martinez Morillo, a/k/a “Sugar Martinez” (17-0, 17 KOs), will make his United States ring debut against Philadelphia's Daiyaan “Badshah” Butt (20-3, 10 KOs) on the ProBoxTV-televised “Homecoming” event, Saturday, April 11th at Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The show will be broadcast live on ProBoxTV (7:00 pm ET). In the ten-round main event, middleweight Vito “White Magic” Mielnicki Jr. (22-1, 13 KOs) of Roseland, New Jersey, will face Omar Ulises “La Bala” Huerta (15-0-1, 13 KOs) of San Ysidro, California, originally from Tijuana. In the 10-round co-featured, Cuban junior middleweight Yan Marcos (14-0, 10 KOs) of Miami via Havana takes on fellow undefeated local favorite Dwyke Flemmings Jr. (11-0, 10 KOs) Paterson.
The show will be presented by Sampson Boxing, in partnership with Paco Presents. The ten-round rumble between Martinez, age 21 and the rugged Philly veteran Butt, will serve as the toughest test of young Martinez’s career and help gauge his talent on the international stage. From a neighborhood called La Isabelita in Santo Domingo, Martinez grew up near WBC middleweight champion Carlos “Caballo Bronco” Adames, junior middlleweight Elvis Rodriguez and former Olympian Rohan Polanco.
Originally from Los Angeles, the 6-foot-tall, 28 year-old Butt has won 10 of his last 11 bouts dating back to 2022 and will be looking to spring the upset against the unproven Dominican slugger.
Also on the show, Mexico City light flyweight Erick Badillo (19-0, 8 KOs) is scheduled to appear against an opponent that is TBA. Several more bouts featuring local and international talent will be announced shortly.
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Sampson Boxing coming to Atlantic City on April 11th
Power-punching Dominican junior welterweight Heidan Martinez Morillo, a/k/a “Sugar Martinez” (17-0, 17 KOs), will make his United States ring debut against Philadelphia's Daiyaan “Badshah” Butt (20-3, 10 KOs) on the ProBoxTV-televised “Homecoming” event, Saturday, April 11th at Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The show will be broadcast live on ProBoxTV (7:00 pm ET). In the ten-round main event, middleweight Vito “White Magic” Mielnicki Jr. (22-1, 13 KOs) of Roseland, New Jersey, will face Omar Ulises “La Bala” Huerta (15-0-1, 13 KOs) of San Ysidro, California, originally from Tijuana. In the 10-round co-featured, Cuban junior middleweight Yan Marcos (14-0, 10 KOs) of Miami via Havana takes on fellow undefeated local favorite Dwyke Flemmings Jr. (11-0, 10 KOs) Paterson.
The show will be presented by Sampson Boxing, in partnership with Paco Presents. The ten-round rumble between Martinez, age 21 and the rugged Philly veteran Butt, will serve as the toughest test of young Martinez’s career and help gauge his talent on the international stage. From a neighborhood called La Isabelita in Santo Domingo, Martinez grew up near WBC middleweight champion Carlos “Caballo Bronco” Adames, junior middlleweight Elvis Rodriguez and former Olympian Rohan Polanco.
Originally from Los Angeles, the 6-foot-tall, 28 year-old Butt has won 10 of his last 11 bouts dating back to 2022 and will be looking to spring the upset against the unproven Dominican slugger.
Also on the show, Mexico City light flyweight Erick Badillo (19-0, 8 KOs) is scheduled to appear against an opponent that is TBA. Several more bouts featuring local and international talent will be announced shortly.
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Spotlight on Garcia vs. Newman |
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Opening up the PBC pay-per-view show on March 28th will be a super middleweight bout between 22 year-old Elijah Garcia and streaking veteran Kevin Newman II, who enters this ten-round fight on a seven-bout winning streak. The show takes place at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, headnied by a junior middleweight title fight between WBC champion Sebastian Fundora and former unified welterweight champion Keith Thurman. Fighting out of Phoenix, Arizona, García (17-1, 13 KOs) most recently rose from the canvas to take home a split-decision against Terrell Gausha last March, getting back in the win column after coming up short on the cards against Kyrone Davis in June 2024. Garcia had previously burst onto the scene as a teenager by earning three victories in 2023. He kicked off that memorable campaign in March with a knockout of the previously unbeaten Amilcar Vidal and followed that up with a pair of performances on the undercards of two of the biggest events of the year. He first defeated Kevin Salgado on the Gervonta Davis vs. Ryan Garcia pay-per-view in April before knocking out current super middleweight champion Armando Resendiz on the Canelo Alvarez vs. Jermell Charlo pay-per-view in September.
This will be Garcia's first fight as a full-fledged super middleweight. “I’m excited to kick off this pay-per-view on March 28,” said Garcia. “I’m working hard and can’t wait to show everything we’ve been working on in camp. This is a big opportunity to make a statement at super middleweight and I’m gonna make the most of it.”
Originally from Los Angeles and now fighting out of Las Vegas, Newman (18-3-1, 11 KOs) has put together seven consecutive victories dating back to 2021. This run includes two 2025 triumphs that saw him beat Alan Campa by unanimous decision last March before most recently defeating Malcolm Jones by seventh-round stoppage last July. The 34-year-old put together this run after a pair of close decision defeats to Genc Plllana and Manuel Gallegos. Newman’s first blemish came via a decision loss to Marcos Hernandez, which he later avenged in near shutout fashion. Newman turned pro in 2014, reeling off seven-straight wins after a split-draw in his pro debut.
“I want to thank everyone who made this opportunity possible,” said Newman. “I’m looking forward to getting into the ring on March 28 and showcasing my skills. I’m coming to put on a dominant performance from start to finish.”
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Spotlight on Garcia vs. Newman
Opening up the PBC pay-per-view show on March 28th will be a super middleweight bout between 22 year-old Elijah Garcia and streaking veteran Kevin Newman II, who enters this ten-round fight on a seven-bout winning streak. The show takes place at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, headnied by a junior middleweight title fight between WBC champion Sebastian Fundora and former unified welterweight champion Keith Thurman. Fighting out of Phoenix, Arizona, García (17-1, 13 KOs) most recently rose from the canvas to take home a split-decision against Terrell Gausha last March, getting back in the win column after coming up short on the cards against Kyrone Davis in June 2024. Garcia had previously burst onto the scene as a teenager by earning three victories in 2023. He kicked off that memorable campaign in March with a knockout of the previously unbeaten Amilcar Vidal and followed that up with a pair of performances on the undercards of two of the biggest events of the year. He first defeated Kevin Salgado on the Gervonta Davis vs. Ryan Garcia pay-per-view in April before knocking out current super middleweight champion Armando Resendiz on the Canelo Alvarez vs. Jermell Charlo pay-per-view in September.
This will be Garcia's first fight as a full-fledged super middleweight. “I’m excited to kick off this pay-per-view on March 28,” said Garcia. “I’m working hard and can’t wait to show everything we’ve been working on in camp. This is a big opportunity to make a statement at super middleweight and I’m gonna make the most of it.”
Originally from Los Angeles and now fighting out of Las Vegas, Newman (18-3-1, 11 KOs) has put together seven consecutive victories dating back to 2021. This run includes two 2025 triumphs that saw him beat Alan Campa by unanimous decision last March before most recently defeating Malcolm Jones by seventh-round stoppage last July. The 34-year-old put together this run after a pair of close decision defeats to Genc Plllana and Manuel Gallegos. Newman’s first blemish came via a decision loss to Marcos Hernandez, which he later avenged in near shutout fashion. Newman turned pro in 2014, reeling off seven-straight wins after a split-draw in his pro debut.
“I want to thank everyone who made this opportunity possible,” said Newman. “I’m looking forward to getting into the ring on March 28 and showcasing my skills. I’m coming to put on a dominant performance from start to finish.”
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BKB bare knuckle update |
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On Saturday, February 23rd, BKB Bare Knuckle Boxing returned to London when it hosted BKB 51. In the main event, fans saw another dominating performance by BKB bridgerweight champion Marko Martinjak of Zagreb, Croatia. Martinjak successfully defended his title against former BKB heavyweight champion and UFC veteran Ike Villanueva of Houston. Martinjak's speed overwhelmed Villanueva, knocking him down multiple times in the round, before scoring the first-round knockout... In the co-feature, a rematch from 2022, veteran Scott McHugh once again defeated Martin Reffell, this time by split decision... former Bellator MMA fighter Adel Altamimi kept his bare knuckle record perfect in his trigon debut with a highlight reel first-round knockout of Jay Eggleston... Joe Cokayne remained unbdefeated, besting fellow heavyweight Ant Scotford in the fight of the night with a fourth-round knockout.
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BKB bare knuckle update
On Saturday, February 23rd, BKB Bare Knuckle Boxing returned to London when it hosted BKB 51. In the main event, fans saw another dominating performance by BKB bridgerweight champion Marko Martinjak of Zagreb, Croatia. Martinjak successfully defended his title against former BKB heavyweight champion and UFC veteran Ike Villanueva of Houston. Martinjak's speed overwhelmed Villanueva, knocking him down multiple times in the round, before scoring the first-round knockout... In the co-feature, a rematch from 2022, veteran Scott McHugh once again defeated Martin Reffell, this time by split decision... former Bellator MMA fighter Adel Altamimi kept his bare knuckle record perfect in his trigon debut with a highlight reel first-round knockout of Jay Eggleston... Joe Cokayne remained unbdefeated, besting fellow heavyweight Ant Scotford in the fight of the night with a fourth-round knockout.
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IBF schedules purse bid for Garcia vs. Moloney |
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On January 21st, the IBF ordered it super flyweight champion Willibaldo Garcia and Australia's Andrew Maloney to begin negotiations for Garcia's mandatory defense of the title. An agreement was not reached within the timeframe set forth by the IBF, so the IBF has scheduled a purse bid for March 5th. Garcia, a 36 year-old Mexican with a 23-6-2 record, won the vacant title from Rene Calixto last may after a draw with Calixto in 2024. Moloney (28-4) is a former WBA regular champion who has won two straight since a 2024 loss to Pedro Guevara.
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IBF schedules purse bid for Garcia vs. Moloney
On January 21st, the IBF ordered it super flyweight champion Willibaldo Garcia and Australia's Andrew Maloney to begin negotiations for Garcia's mandatory defense of the title. An agreement was not reached within the timeframe set forth by the IBF, so the IBF has scheduled a purse bid for March 5th. Garcia, a 36 year-old Mexican with a 23-6-2 record, won the vacant title from Rene Calixto last may after a draw with Calixto in 2024. Moloney (28-4) is a former WBA regular champion who has won two straight since a 2024 loss to Pedro Guevara.
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Mayweather vs. Pacquiao II booked for Netflix on Sept. 19th |
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More than a decade after their record-breaking “Fight of the Century,” Floyd “Money” Mayweather Jr. (50-0, 27 KOs) and Manny “PacMan” Pacquiao (62-8-3, 39 KOs) are officially set to face off in a rematch. The longtime rivals will meet in a highly anticipated rematch on Saturday, Sept. 19th, streaming live on Netflix from Sphere in Las Vegas — marking the first boxing match ever held at the groundbreaking venue.
Their first bout in May 2015 became the highest-grossing fight in boxing history, shattering pay-per-view and live-gate records as Mayweather earned a unanimous decision to claim the world welterweight titles. Now, Mayweather Jr. and Pacquiao will meet again in a matchup that blends drama, controversy, and boxing history, this time on one of the world’s most technologically advanced stages. “Earlier in my career, I spent weeks in Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao’s training camps in Las Vegas and the Philippines,” shares Gabe Spitzer, Vice President of Sports at Netflix. “It was undeniable that they were the two hardest workers in boxing, and their wins and accolades were a product of that. Bringing this rematch to Netflix is a massive ‘full circle’ moment. We’re thrilled to combine their storied rivalry with the immersive technology of Sphere to deliver a landmark sporting event to our members worldwide.”
Known as “Money” Mayweather, the Grand Rapids, Michigan native retired in 2017 with a perfect 50-0 record after winning world titles across five weight classes, from junior lightweight to light middleweight.
“I already fought and beat Manny once,” Mayweather says. “This time will be the same result.”
Widely regarded as one of the greatest pound-for-pound boxers in history, Mayweather’s résumé includes victories over the likes of Pacquiao, Canelo Álvarez, Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton, Miguel Cotto and Conor McGregor, among others. Now at 48 years old and coming out of retirement, Mayweather looks to defeat Pacquiao for a second time, further cementing his legacy.
A global icon known as PacMan, Pacquiao remains one of the most accomplished fighters in boxing history. Hailing from the Philippines, he is the only eight-division world champion. Pacquiao was also the first boxer to become a recognized four-time welterweight champion, the only boxer to hold world championships in four different decades, and became the oldest welterweight world champion at age 40.
“It’s been 11 years since Floyd and I gave the world what is still the biggest fight in boxing history,” Pacquiao, age 47, says. “The fans have waited long enough. They deserve this rematch, which will be even bigger since it will be streamed live globally on Netflix. I want Floyd to be forever haunted by the one loss on his professional record and always remember who gave it to him. As always, I dedicate this fight to my fellow Filipinos around the world, and to bring glory to the Philippines.”
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Mayweather vs. Pacquiao II booked for Netflix on Sept. 19th
More than a decade after their record-breaking “Fight of the Century,” Floyd “Money” Mayweather Jr. (50-0, 27 KOs) and Manny “PacMan” Pacquiao (62-8-3, 39 KOs) are officially set to face off in a rematch. The longtime rivals will meet in a highly anticipated rematch on Saturday, Sept. 19th, streaming live on Netflix from Sphere in Las Vegas — marking the first boxing match ever held at the groundbreaking venue.
Their first bout in May 2015 became the highest-grossing fight in boxing history, shattering pay-per-view and live-gate records as Mayweather earned a unanimous decision to claim the world welterweight titles. Now, Mayweather Jr. and Pacquiao will meet again in a matchup that blends drama, controversy, and boxing history, this time on one of the world’s most technologically advanced stages. “Earlier in my career, I spent weeks in Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao’s training camps in Las Vegas and the Philippines,” shares Gabe Spitzer, Vice President of Sports at Netflix. “It was undeniable that they were the two hardest workers in boxing, and their wins and accolades were a product of that. Bringing this rematch to Netflix is a massive ‘full circle’ moment. We’re thrilled to combine their storied rivalry with the immersive technology of Sphere to deliver a landmark sporting event to our members worldwide.”
Known as “Money” Mayweather, the Grand Rapids, Michigan native retired in 2017 with a perfect 50-0 record after winning world titles across five weight classes, from junior lightweight to light middleweight.
“I already fought and beat Manny once,” Mayweather says. “This time will be the same result.”
Widely regarded as one of the greatest pound-for-pound boxers in history, Mayweather’s résumé includes victories over the likes of Pacquiao, Canelo Álvarez, Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton, Miguel Cotto and Conor McGregor, among others. Now at 48 years old and coming out of retirement, Mayweather looks to defeat Pacquiao for a second time, further cementing his legacy.
A global icon known as PacMan, Pacquiao remains one of the most accomplished fighters in boxing history. Hailing from the Philippines, he is the only eight-division world champion. Pacquiao was also the first boxer to become a recognized four-time welterweight champion, the only boxer to hold world championships in four different decades, and became the oldest welterweight world champion at age 40.
“It’s been 11 years since Floyd and I gave the world what is still the biggest fight in boxing history,” Pacquiao, age 47, says. “The fans have waited long enough. They deserve this rematch, which will be even bigger since it will be streamed live globally on Netflix. I want Floyd to be forever haunted by the one loss on his professional record and always remember who gave it to him. As always, I dedicate this fight to my fellow Filipinos around the world, and to bring glory to the Philippines.”
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Adames vs. Williams rescheduled for March 21st in Orlando |
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Carlos Adames will defend his WBC middleweight title against Austin ‘Ammo’ Williams at Caribe Royale Resort in Orlando, Florida on Saturday March 21st, exclusively live worldwide on DAZN. Adames and Williams were due to clash for the crown at Madison Square Garden in New York on the undercard of Shakur Stevenson’s battle with Teofimo Lopez, but Adames pulled out just ahead of the weigh-in with an illness. Williams still boxed on the bill, and claimed a ten-round win over Wendy Toussaint. Adames (24-1-1 18 KOs) will make the third defense of his title against Ammo, having been elevated to full champion in May 2024, making his first defense a month later in Las Vegas with a comprehensive points win over Terrell Gausha and then facing Hamzah Sheeraz in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia last February, with their clash ending in a split draw.
Williams (20-1 13 KOs) will get the world title fight he was robbed of due to the unfortunate illness for the champion and will look to build upon his momentum to gain victory in the biggest fight of his career to date. The 29 year old has won four on the bounce over a 14-month stretch.
“Life doesn’t repeat opportunities – if you escaped once, consider it a miracle,” said Adames. “Destiny forgives once. After that, it collects. Not everyone gets two warnings. He already used one. Danger is coming to Orlando on March 21st!”
“The second Ammo Show will be electric,” said Williams. “This is the moment I become WBC champion of the world and begin my reign. Ten years of dedication all boiling down to one night, don’t miss it!”
“I am delighted to be able to deliver Ammo this fight so quickly,” said promoter Eddie Hearn. “Ammo was obviously devastated in New York, but he held it together and got ten more rounds in, and now he gets the chance to become world champion as a headliner. I’m delighted for him and while it’s a tough champion to beat in Carlos, I know Ammo will give everything he has to achieve his dream and capture the famous green and gold belt.”
UNDERCARD DETAILS ARE SCARCE
Full undercard announcements will come in due course, along with ticket on sale details, but one hometown favorite is confirmed for the card alongside a heavyweight.
Orlando native and Olympic bronze medal man Omari Jones (5-0 4 KOs) steps through the ropes for the sixth time in the paid ranks and just over one year since he made his hotly anticipated debut in the same venue and faces his first eight round bout on the night. “I’m happy to be fighting in my hometown again,” said Jones, whose opponent will be announced soon. “The Banger Show returns to Orlando.”
Fearsome Australian Heavyweight Teremoana Teremoana (9-0 9 KOs) fights for the first time in 2026, and fans will be hoping to see him extend his devastating KO streak to ten out of ten in the paid ranks, with an opponent to be named soon.
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Adames vs. Williams rescheduled for March 21st in Orlando
Carlos Adames will defend his WBC middleweight title against Austin ‘Ammo’ Williams at Caribe Royale Resort in Orlando, Florida on Saturday March 21st, exclusively live worldwide on DAZN. Adames and Williams were due to clash for the crown at Madison Square Garden in New York on the undercard of Shakur Stevenson’s battle with Teofimo Lopez, but Adames pulled out just ahead of the weigh-in with an illness. Williams still boxed on the bill, and claimed a ten-round win over Wendy Toussaint. Adames (24-1-1 18 KOs) will make the third defense of his title against Ammo, having been elevated to full champion in May 2024, making his first defense a month later in Las Vegas with a comprehensive points win over Terrell Gausha and then facing Hamzah Sheeraz in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia last February, with their clash ending in a split draw.
Williams (20-1 13 KOs) will get the world title fight he was robbed of due to the unfortunate illness for the champion and will look to build upon his momentum to gain victory in the biggest fight of his career to date. The 29 year old has won four on the bounce over a 14-month stretch.
“Life doesn’t repeat opportunities – if you escaped once, consider it a miracle,” said Adames. “Destiny forgives once. After that, it collects. Not everyone gets two warnings. He already used one. Danger is coming to Orlando on March 21st!”
“The second Ammo Show will be electric,” said Williams. “This is the moment I become WBC champion of the world and begin my reign. Ten years of dedication all boiling down to one night, don’t miss it!”
“I am delighted to be able to deliver Ammo this fight so quickly,” said promoter Eddie Hearn. “Ammo was obviously devastated in New York, but he held it together and got ten more rounds in, and now he gets the chance to become world champion as a headliner. I’m delighted for him and while it’s a tough champion to beat in Carlos, I know Ammo will give everything he has to achieve his dream and capture the famous green and gold belt.”
UNDERCARD DETAILS ARE SCARCE
Full undercard announcements will come in due course, along with ticket on sale details, but one hometown favorite is confirmed for the card alongside a heavyweight.
Orlando native and Olympic bronze medal man Omari Jones (5-0 4 KOs) steps through the ropes for the sixth time in the paid ranks and just over one year since he made his hotly anticipated debut in the same venue and faces his first eight round bout on the night. “I’m happy to be fighting in my hometown again,” said Jones, whose opponent will be announced soon. “The Banger Show returns to Orlando.”
Fearsome Australian Heavyweight Teremoana Teremoana (9-0 9 KOs) fights for the first time in 2026, and fans will be hoping to see him extend his devastating KO streak to ten out of ten in the paid ranks, with an opponent to be named soon.
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Victor Santillan wins interim belt in D.R. |
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Víctor Santillán TKO3 Noel Reyes Cepeda... Dominican super bantamweight Víctor Santillán delivered a swift win on Saturday night, stopping his countryman, Noel Reyes Cepeda, in the third round to capture the interim WBA title. Naoya Inoue remains the unchallenged world champion of the weight class, including the WBA title holder. Headlining at the Coliseo Carlos Teo Cruz in Santo Domingo, Santillán ended matters at 1:13 of Round 3. From the outset, his superior footwork and sharp accuracy dictated the pace. Reyes Cepeda, known for his punching power, struggled to close distance against the Puerto Rico-based fighter. The finish came after a sustained offensive burst left Reyes defenseless, prompting the referee’s intervention despite the fallen fighter’s protests. With the victory, Santillán improves to 16-2, notching his second consecutive knockout and positioning himself as a player in the 122-pound division. Reyes Cepeda sees a winning streak dating back to 2018 snapped, his record now standing at 19-5. |
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Victor Santillan wins interim belt in D.R.
Víctor Santillán TKO3 Noel Reyes Cepeda... Dominican super bantamweight Víctor Santillán delivered a swift win on Saturday night, stopping his countryman, Noel Reyes Cepeda, in the third round to capture the interim WBA title. Naoya Inoue remains the unchallenged world champion of the weight class, including the WBA title holder. Headlining at the Coliseo Carlos Teo Cruz in Santo Domingo, Santillán ended matters at 1:13 of Round 3. From the outset, his superior footwork and sharp accuracy dictated the pace. Reyes Cepeda, known for his punching power, struggled to close distance against the Puerto Rico-based fighter. The finish came after a sustained offensive burst left Reyes defenseless, prompting the referee’s intervention despite the fallen fighter’s protests. With the victory, Santillán improves to 16-2, notching his second consecutive knockout and positioning himself as a player in the 122-pound division. Reyes Cepeda sees a winning streak dating back to 2018 snapped, his record now standing at 19-5. |
Undefeated Lamont Powell to give boxing another shot after three-year absence |
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After more than three years away from the ring, middleweight Lamont Powell (6-0, 2 KOs) is ready to restart his rise up the rankings. Powell headlines CES Boxing’s show on Saturday, February 28th at The Historic Park Theater, where he faces Colombian puncher Rodolfo Puentes (21-13-2, 16 KOs) in the main event. Tickets can be purchased now at CESfights.com. "Training has been intense, but I feel great," said Powell. "I’ve been locked in mentally and physically. This isn’t just another fight for me. I’ve been waiting a long time to get back in that ring, so I’m going all out in every training session to be in the best condition possible."
Powell’s journey is defined by resilience. In 2018, he narrowly survived an ambush just outside his Providence home. Lamont was sitting in a parked car with his uncle when a vehicle pulled up and two men stepped out. The next thing he knew, the men opened fire, unloading 36 shots into the car. While his uncle was struck in the leg, Powell miraculously escaped unscathed. "I truly believe my mother was watching over me that night," reflects Powell. "She passed away when I was only three years old, and my grandparents raised me. I feel like she protected me."
That incident reshaped his life and gave him a new purpose. "When you’re that close to losing your life, you see the world differently," Powell says. "I don’t take my days for granted anymore. That experience gave me a bigger reason to fight - not just for myself, but for my community and for kids who need direction in their lives."
Motivated by that experience, Powell launched Gloves Up, Guns Down, a Providence-based initiative dedicated to giving at-risk youth structure through boxing and mentorship. "The mission is simple," Powell explained. "Give kids an alternative to the streets. Boxing teaches discipline and gives them confidence, but it’s about much more than that. If they come here and want to read, they can do that. If they want to work on their art, they can. It’s a safe space where they can express themselves."
Powell first laced up gloves at just eight years old under the tutelage of his grandfather, Phillip Copper, who became his first coach and mentor. Lamont went on to compile an impressive amateur record of 45–4, capturing three Silver Mittens championships along the way.
Powell turned professional in 2018, but his professional career has been a series of stops and starts due to the coronavirus pandemic and his responsibilities outside the ring. However, while Powell hasn’t competed since January 2023, his boxing program ensured that he never left the gym. "I definitely stayed in the gym," agrees Powell. "When I'm not training, I'm teaching kids how to box, so I'm always sharp and in shape."
That will matter on February 28th, when Lamont faces the upset-minded Puentes, an experienced fighter known for his aggressive style and knockout power. "I know he’s tough and comes to fight," Powell said. "But at this level, it’s about preparation – and I’ve been preparing for whoever will be in front of me."
CES Boxing Founder and President Jimmy Burchfield Sr. believes Powell’s return signifies that Lamont will finally fulfill the championship-caliber potential the promoter saw in him when he first signed him. "We’re thrilled to have Lamont back," said Burchfield. "This is a young man who turned what could have been a tragedy into purpose. Lamont isn’t just a fighter – he’s a leader in his community, and he’s positively influencing the lives of countless kids."
Looking ahead, Powell’s goals are clear: stay active, climb the rankings, and eventually compete for championships – all while continuing his work outside the ring. "First, I want to stay healthy and fight consistently," said Powell. "I want to build my record and start moving toward bigger opportunities. But I also want to keep growing Gloves Up, Guns Down and be a positive role model for my city."
As for the fans who will pack the Historic Park Theater on February 28th? "Your support means everything to me," said Powell. "Come ready for an explosive night – I promise I’ll still be unbeaten when that final bell rings. This is just the beginning."
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Undefeated Lamont Powell to give boxing another shot after three-year absence
After more than three years away from the ring, middleweight Lamont Powell (6-0, 2 KOs) is ready to restart his rise up the rankings. Powell headlines CES Boxing’s show on Saturday, February 28th at The Historic Park Theater, where he faces Colombian puncher Rodolfo Puentes (21-13-2, 16 KOs) in the main event. Tickets can be purchased now at CESfights.com. "Training has been intense, but I feel great," said Powell. "I’ve been locked in mentally and physically. This isn’t just another fight for me. I’ve been waiting a long time to get back in that ring, so I’m going all out in every training session to be in the best condition possible."
Powell’s journey is defined by resilience. In 2018, he narrowly survived an ambush just outside his Providence home. Lamont was sitting in a parked car with his uncle when a vehicle pulled up and two men stepped out. The next thing he knew, the men opened fire, unloading 36 shots into the car. While his uncle was struck in the leg, Powell miraculously escaped unscathed. "I truly believe my mother was watching over me that night," reflects Powell. "She passed away when I was only three years old, and my grandparents raised me. I feel like she protected me."
That incident reshaped his life and gave him a new purpose. "When you’re that close to losing your life, you see the world differently," Powell says. "I don’t take my days for granted anymore. That experience gave me a bigger reason to fight - not just for myself, but for my community and for kids who need direction in their lives."
Motivated by that experience, Powell launched Gloves Up, Guns Down, a Providence-based initiative dedicated to giving at-risk youth structure through boxing and mentorship. "The mission is simple," Powell explained. "Give kids an alternative to the streets. Boxing teaches discipline and gives them confidence, but it’s about much more than that. If they come here and want to read, they can do that. If they want to work on their art, they can. It’s a safe space where they can express themselves."
Powell first laced up gloves at just eight years old under the tutelage of his grandfather, Phillip Copper, who became his first coach and mentor. Lamont went on to compile an impressive amateur record of 45–4, capturing three Silver Mittens championships along the way.
Powell turned professional in 2018, but his professional career has been a series of stops and starts due to the coronavirus pandemic and his responsibilities outside the ring. However, while Powell hasn’t competed since January 2023, his boxing program ensured that he never left the gym. "I definitely stayed in the gym," agrees Powell. "When I'm not training, I'm teaching kids how to box, so I'm always sharp and in shape."
That will matter on February 28th, when Lamont faces the upset-minded Puentes, an experienced fighter known for his aggressive style and knockout power. "I know he’s tough and comes to fight," Powell said. "But at this level, it’s about preparation – and I’ve been preparing for whoever will be in front of me."
CES Boxing Founder and President Jimmy Burchfield Sr. believes Powell’s return signifies that Lamont will finally fulfill the championship-caliber potential the promoter saw in him when he first signed him. "We’re thrilled to have Lamont back," said Burchfield. "This is a young man who turned what could have been a tragedy into purpose. Lamont isn’t just a fighter – he’s a leader in his community, and he’s positively influencing the lives of countless kids."
Looking ahead, Powell’s goals are clear: stay active, climb the rankings, and eventually compete for championships – all while continuing his work outside the ring. "First, I want to stay healthy and fight consistently," said Powell. "I want to build my record and start moving toward bigger opportunities. But I also want to keep growing Gloves Up, Guns Down and be a positive role model for my city."
As for the fans who will pack the Historic Park Theater on February 28th? "Your support means everything to me," said Powell. "Come ready for an explosive night – I promise I’ll still be unbeaten when that final bell rings. This is just the beginning."
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Gausha still chasing championship dream |
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In a ten-round middleweight attraction, fast-rising Cuban Yoenli Hernandez will put his unbeaten record on the line against his toughest opponent to date, former U.S. Olympian Terrell Gausha (pictured), with the winner in prime position to challenge for middleweight gold. The fight is scheduled for March 28th in Las Vegas as part of a PBC event headlined by Sebastian Fundora defending his WBC 154-pound title against former welterweight champion Keith Thurman.
A member of the 2012 U.S. Olympic team, Gausha (24-5-1, 12 KOs) was born in Cleveland, Ohio but now fights out of Encino, California and is trained by the respected Manny Robles. Gausha bounced back from an unsuccessful title challenge of WBC middleweight champion Carlos Adames in 2024 to drop Elijah Garcia in their 2025 showdown, eventually coming up on the short end of a narrow split decision. Prior to facing Adames, Gausha had won back-to-back bouts as he knocked out Brandyn Lynch in March 2023 before winning a decision over KeAndrae Leatherwood in September of that year. Gausha has faced top competition throughout his career, having fought former champion Austin Trout to a draw in 2019 in addition to decision losses against WBA Middleweight World Champion Erislandy Lara, former world champion Tim Tszyu and top contender Erickson Lubin.
“I’m a true professional who’s always training, because boxing is what I do,” said Gausha. “I’ve seen Yoenli fight and he’s a young, strong, skilled fighter. If you’ve watched my fights in the past, you’ll know that’s what I like. I want to test myself against the best. Beating him will get me close to my goal of becoming world champion. That’s what I’m here for.”
Hernandez (9-0, 8 KOs) is the latest in a long line of talented amateur fighters to come from the Cuban program. His long resume before turning pro features a 2021 gold medal at AIBA World Boxing Championships. Originally from Camaguey, Cuba and now fighting out of Providence, Rhode Island, Hernandez turned pro in May 2022 with a pair of stoppage victories and continued to dominate his competition. The 28 year-old returned in 2024 with four U.S. fights, including a stoppage of Alejandro Barrera in June and a TKO over the previously unbeaten Bryce Henry in October. Hernandez added three more victories in 2025, including a shutout unanimous decision over fringe contender Kyrone Davis Video last May.
“I’m extremely grateful for another opportunity to showcase my talents,” said Hernandez. “But let’s be real, not everyone has the heart to step in there with me. Respect to the one who will on March 28th. I’m locked in, staying sharp and I’m coming to make a statement. No shortcuts, no excuses, just pressure. Stay tuned.”
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Gausha still chasing championship dream
In a ten-round middleweight attraction, fast-rising Cuban Yoenli Hernandez will put his unbeaten record on the line against his toughest opponent to date, former U.S. Olympian Terrell Gausha (pictured), with the winner in prime position to challenge for middleweight gold. The fight is scheduled for March 28th in Las Vegas as part of a PBC event headlined by Sebastian Fundora defending his WBC 154-pound title against former welterweight champion Keith Thurman.
A member of the 2012 U.S. Olympic team, Gausha (24-5-1, 12 KOs) was born in Cleveland, Ohio but now fights out of Encino, California and is trained by the respected Manny Robles. Gausha bounced back from an unsuccessful title challenge of WBC middleweight champion Carlos Adames in 2024 to drop Elijah Garcia in their 2025 showdown, eventually coming up on the short end of a narrow split decision. Prior to facing Adames, Gausha had won back-to-back bouts as he knocked out Brandyn Lynch in March 2023 before winning a decision over KeAndrae Leatherwood in September of that year. Gausha has faced top competition throughout his career, having fought former champion Austin Trout to a draw in 2019 in addition to decision losses against WBA Middleweight World Champion Erislandy Lara, former world champion Tim Tszyu and top contender Erickson Lubin.
“I’m a true professional who’s always training, because boxing is what I do,” said Gausha. “I’ve seen Yoenli fight and he’s a young, strong, skilled fighter. If you’ve watched my fights in the past, you’ll know that’s what I like. I want to test myself against the best. Beating him will get me close to my goal of becoming world champion. That’s what I’m here for.”
Hernandez (9-0, 8 KOs) is the latest in a long line of talented amateur fighters to come from the Cuban program. His long resume before turning pro features a 2021 gold medal at AIBA World Boxing Championships. Originally from Camaguey, Cuba and now fighting out of Providence, Rhode Island, Hernandez turned pro in May 2022 with a pair of stoppage victories and continued to dominate his competition. The 28 year-old returned in 2024 with four U.S. fights, including a stoppage of Alejandro Barrera in June and a TKO over the previously unbeaten Bryce Henry in October. Hernandez added three more victories in 2025, including a shutout unanimous decision over fringe contender Kyrone Davis Video last May.
“I’m extremely grateful for another opportunity to showcase my talents,” said Hernandez. “But let’s be real, not everyone has the heart to step in there with me. Respect to the one who will on March 28th. I’m locked in, staying sharp and I’m coming to make a statement. No shortcuts, no excuses, just pressure. Stay tuned.”
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Zamorano retains atomweight title |
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Camila Zamorano W10 Claudia Ruiz... Camila Zamorano successfully defended her WBC atomweight world championship by defeating Claudia Ruiz via unanimous decision in a ten-round fight last Saturday in Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico. Zamorano worked in an organized manner from the outset, using her jab as the primary tool and avoiding prolonged exchanges. Ruiz attempted to apply pressure at different points, looking to alter the rhythm, but the champion maintained her tactical structure. The difference lay in consistency and the clarity of the punches landed rather than dramatic moments. It was a defense built on control and execution. |
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Zamorano retains atomweight title
Camila Zamorano W10 Claudia Ruiz... Camila Zamorano successfully defended her WBC atomweight world championship by defeating Claudia Ruiz via unanimous decision in a ten-round fight last Saturday in Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico. Zamorano worked in an organized manner from the outset, using her jab as the primary tool and avoiding prolonged exchanges. Ruiz attempted to apply pressure at different points, looking to alter the rhythm, but the champion maintained her tactical structure. The difference lay in consistency and the clarity of the punches landed rather than dramatic moments. It was a defense built on control and execution. |
Edward Vazquez headlines this week's ProBox show |
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On Friday, February 27th, ProBoxTV will present its Contender Series, featuring hometown hero Edward Vazquez (18-3, 5 KOs) making a homecoming against Grimardi Machuca (17-3, 14 KOs), a Venezuelan fighting out of Camden, New Jersey in the ten-round main event. Vazquez has had two prior wirld title bids, vs. Joe Cordina and Raphael Espinoza. The show will be broadcast live (7:00 pm) on ProBoxTV from College Park Center at the University of Texas in Arlington. Also on the show, welterweight Ruben Eduardo “El Pollito” Aguilar (23-0-1, 20 KOs) from Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico, against road warrior and upset specialist Luis Lopez (16-2-4, 5 KOs) from Corona, California in the 10-round co-featured bout.
Tickets to attend ProBoxTV’s “The Contender Series” in person at the University of Texas in Arlington are available from UTATickets.com.
Several other supporting bouts are scheduled, featuring Xavier and Ray Bocanegra in separate matchups, plus Emilio Garcia (3-0, 3 KOs) facing Ociel Vazquez (2-2, 2 KOs) of Dallas and Amador Mendez taking on Christian Anibal Luna (6-4) of Montevideo, Uruguay. Local favorites Figo Ramirez (9-0-1, 4 KOs), Alex Holley (10-1, 6 KOs), Javier Guerrero Cruz (5-0, 4 KOs) and Damylo Scott (pro debut) will also make exciting appearances.
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Edward Vazquez headlines this week's ProBox show
On Friday, February 27th, ProBoxTV will present its Contender Series, featuring hometown hero Edward Vazquez (18-3, 5 KOs) making a homecoming against Grimardi Machuca (17-3, 14 KOs), a Venezuelan fighting out of Camden, New Jersey in the ten-round main event. Vazquez has had two prior wirld title bids, vs. Joe Cordina and Raphael Espinoza. The show will be broadcast live (7:00 pm) on ProBoxTV from College Park Center at the University of Texas in Arlington. Also on the show, welterweight Ruben Eduardo “El Pollito” Aguilar (23-0-1, 20 KOs) from Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico, against road warrior and upset specialist Luis Lopez (16-2-4, 5 KOs) from Corona, California in the 10-round co-featured bout.
Tickets to attend ProBoxTV’s “The Contender Series” in person at the University of Texas in Arlington are available from UTATickets.com.
Several other supporting bouts are scheduled, featuring Xavier and Ray Bocanegra in separate matchups, plus Emilio Garcia (3-0, 3 KOs) facing Ociel Vazquez (2-2, 2 KOs) of Dallas and Amador Mendez taking on Christian Anibal Luna (6-4) of Montevideo, Uruguay. Local favorites Figo Ramirez (9-0-1, 4 KOs), Alex Holley (10-1, 6 KOs), Javier Guerrero Cruz (5-0, 4 KOs) and Damylo Scott (pro debut) will also make exciting appearances.
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IBF again delays purse bid for Bivol vs. Eifert |
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UPDATE: The Bivol vs. Eifert purse bid has been postponed again by the IBF, this time until Tuesday, March 3rd. Original story (Feb. 12, 2026): The IBF announced that a purse bid for world light heavyweight champion Dimitrii Bivol's mandatory defense against Michael Eifert of Germany has been rescheduled from February 13th to February 20th. Bivol (pictured) is the true world champion of the 175-pound division based on his winning the second of two undisputed championship bouts against fellow Russian Artur Beterbiev. But he has not fought since February of 2025. Eifert is very lightly credentialed at 13-1, with his best win coming in March 2023 in an IBF eliminator vs. former world champion Jean Pascal. Eifert has only fought once since then against a nondescript opponent, instead choosing to wait for this IBF title shot to come his way. Bivol is also recognized as champion by the WBA and WBO and actually is the true world 175-pound monarch, so there is little pressure on him to actually fight Eifert if he is not inclined to do so. |
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IBF again delays purse bid for Bivol vs. Eifert
UPDATE: The Bivol vs. Eifert purse bid has been postponed again by the IBF, this time until Tuesday, March 3rd. Original story (Feb. 12, 2026): The IBF announced that a purse bid for world light heavyweight champion Dimitrii Bivol's mandatory defense against Michael Eifert of Germany has been rescheduled from February 13th to February 20th. Bivol (pictured) is the true world champion of the 175-pound division based on his winning the second of two undisputed championship bouts against fellow Russian Artur Beterbiev. But he has not fought since February of 2025. Eifert is very lightly credentialed at 13-1, with his best win coming in March 2023 in an IBF eliminator vs. former world champion Jean Pascal. Eifert has only fought once since then against a nondescript opponent, instead choosing to wait for this IBF title shot to come his way. Bivol is also recognized as champion by the WBA and WBO and actually is the true world 175-pound monarch, so there is little pressure on him to actually fight Eifert if he is not inclined to do so. |
Shields retains heavyweight titles via shutout |
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Claressa Shields W10 Franchon Dezurn-Crews... A weigh-in scuffle had the challenger threatening to pull out, but the show went on in Detroit, with the same result as usual: a win for Claressa "GWOAT" Shields. The hone-state favorite defended her world women's heavyweight championship by dominating super middleweight champion Franchon Crews-Dezurn. Shields showed better power, speed, and precision to defeat Crews-Dezurn by a shutout unanimous decision (100-90 on all three official scorecards). This was a rematch of both women's pro debut in 2016, which Shields also won. |
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Shields retains heavyweight titles via shutout
Claressa Shields W10 Franchon Dezurn-Crews... A weigh-in scuffle had the challenger threatening to pull out, but the show went on in Detroit, with the same result as usual: a win for Claressa "GWOAT" Shields. The hone-state favorite defended her world women's heavyweight championship by dominating super middleweight champion Franchon Crews-Dezurn. Shields showed better power, speed, and precision to defeat Crews-Dezurn by a shutout unanimous decision (100-90 on all three official scorecards). This was a rematch of both women's pro debut in 2016, which Shields also won. |
Dana White gloats over Conor Benn signing |
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Perhaps the biggest news of the week in a very busy week for boxing involved the signing of UK star Conor Benn, who departed his longtime promoters at Matchroom Boxing to team up with Dana White at Zuffa Boxing. It was a move that sent shockwaves through the sport of boxing, particularly in the UK, and one that White said showed just how easily he is dealing with his promotional rivals in the boxing space. “Well, I think you saw this week. I am really beating up babies,” said White, echoing the comments he made at the Zuffa Boxing 03 post-fight press conference.
“Is there a bigger p***y than (Matchroom Boxing Chairman) Eddie Hearn? This guy (Benn) is supposed to be your friend. You're f***ing crying. He made more money. He's going to make more money, and (Hearn) had the right to match it. He could have matched it.”
And when White was asked whether he’d look to sign more big names on short-term deals, he made the same request he’s made to the media a few times already since the launch of the Zuffa Boxing brand. “Like I said at the last press conference there, judge us at the end of the year by the work that we do this year,” he said.
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Dana White gloats over Conor Benn signing
Perhaps the biggest news of the week in a very busy week for boxing involved the signing of UK star Conor Benn, who departed his longtime promoters at Matchroom Boxing to team up with Dana White at Zuffa Boxing. It was a move that sent shockwaves through the sport of boxing, particularly in the UK, and one that White said showed just how easily he is dealing with his promotional rivals in the boxing space. “Well, I think you saw this week. I am really beating up babies,” said White, echoing the comments he made at the Zuffa Boxing 03 post-fight press conference.
“Is there a bigger p***y than (Matchroom Boxing Chairman) Eddie Hearn? This guy (Benn) is supposed to be your friend. You're f***ing crying. He made more money. He's going to make more money, and (Hearn) had the right to match it. He could have matched it.”
And when White was asked whether he’d look to sign more big names on short-term deals, he made the same request he’s made to the media a few times already since the launch of the Zuffa Boxing brand. “Like I said at the last press conference there, judge us at the end of the year by the work that we do this year,” he said.
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Danielle Perkins becomes a champ at age 43 |
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Danielle Perkins TKO6 Che Kenneally... On the Detroit undercard, Danielle Perkins defeated Che Kenneally by technical knockout in the sixth round to win the WBA light heavyweight title. Thee women were exchanging blows when Perkins landed a sharp right hook to bend Kenneally backwards and leave blood pouring out of her mouth. Now 6-1 for her career, Perkins became a champion at age 43, one year after losing to Claressa Shields in a heavyweight title challenge. The Australian Keneally falls to 5-2. |
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Danielle Perkins becomes a champ at age 43
Danielle Perkins TKO6 Che Kenneally... On the Detroit undercard, Danielle Perkins defeated Che Kenneally by technical knockout in the sixth round to win the WBA light heavyweight title. Thee women were exchanging blows when Perkins landed a sharp right hook to bend Kenneally backwards and leave blood pouring out of her mouth. Now 6-1 for her career, Perkins became a champion at age 43, one year after losing to Claressa Shields in a heavyweight title challenge. The Australian Keneally falls to 5-2. |
WBO, IBF keep drug cheat Alimkhanuly as champion |
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In a very disappointing ruling for those who want to punish drug cheats in boxing, the WBO has ruled that its middleweight champion, Zhanibek Alimkhanuly, can keep his title despite testing positive for the banned substance meldonium. Instead of striping the boxer, as was expected, the WBO imposed a one-year suspension and a series of conditions that stop short of stripping Alimkhnauly of the championship. The decision follows positive “A” and “B” sample tests collected by the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) in November 2025, which forced Alimkhanuly out of a scheduled unification bout against Erislandy Lara in December. Although not a party to this ruling, the IBF is just as culpable, as it also continues to recognize Alimhanuly as its world middleweight champion. A WBO interim title fight between Denzel Bentley and Endry Saavedra was ordered to keep the division active during his suspension.
In a lengthy written decision issued by its World Championship Committee, the WBO confirmed that the tests were conducted by recognized anti-doping authorities and verified by a WADA-accredited laboratory, leaving no dispute about the presence of the prohibited substance. Under the organization’s rules, the case fell under a “strict liability” standard, meaning intent or explanation was irrelevant once a positive test was confirmed. Despite that framework, the WBO declined to impose its most severe sanction — vacating Alimkhanuly's title — and instead opted for what it described as a “proportionate” response.
The ruling suspends Alimkhanuly for one year, retroactive to December 2nd, the date of official notification of the adverse test. He is also required to submit to year-round random drug testing under a WADA-certified program at his own expense, complete an anti-doping education course, and provide certified test results directly to the WBO. When the suspension ends, he will not be allowed a tune-up fight; his first bout must be against either the WBO interim champion or the organization’s mandatory challenger.
The WBO framed the outcome as balanced and fair. Others will see it differently — as a decision that does not meaningfully penalize a fighter who failed a drug test, and does little to deter future violations at the highest level of the sport.
So what is the end result? Alimkhanuly remains recognized as a two-belt champion, retains his title status, and faces no financial penalty. The suspension is time-limited, a year in name but effectively only ten months, and the conditions imposed largely amount to monitoring and compliance requirements rather than punitive measures. For a confirmed doping violation that canceled a major unification bout and disrupted the middleweight division, the consequences are relatively light.
The committee justified its approach by citing Alimkhanuly’s status as a first-time offender and the absence of prior anti-doping violations. It emphasized proportionality and the legal and commercial interests tied to championship recognition. In effect, the WBO treated the case as a regulatory issue to be managed rather than a breach warranting the strongest available punishment. For critics, that distinction matters. A positive test for a banned substance typically carries the expectation of severe sporting consequences, especially for a reigning world champion. By allowing Alimkhanuly to keep his title and return after a defined suspension, the ruling sends a message that a confirmed drug violation does not necessarily lead to the loss of a championship. It should be noted that Alimkhanuly tested positive for meldonium, which is clearly banned in international competitions but is legally available for purchase in Kazakhstan, Russia and a few other countries.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
DEC. 5, 2025: After a positive test for the banned substance meldonium, the WBO World Championship Committee has issued a “show cause notice” to WBO / IBF middleweight champion Zhanibek Alimkhanuly. The notice stated, "It has been formally reported that on December 2nd, the WBO received an official communication from the Voluntary Anti-Doping Agency (VADA) concerning an alleged anti-doping violation arising from the testing protocol enforced by said agency in preparation for the scheduled WBO/IBF unified middleweight championships contest against [WBA champion] Erislandy Lara to be held in San Antonio, Texas on December 6th.According to the notice, the “A” Sample of [Alimkhanuly's] urine specimen, collected on November 15th, in Porter Ranch, California, allegedly returned an adverse analytical finding for a banned substance at an estimated concentration greater than the minimum reported threshold.
Unlike the WBC, which lately has been giving virtually no penalties to boxers who test positive for banned substances [Conor Benn and Subriel Matias come to mind], WBO policy is that "in the event any WBO champion tests positive for any banned substances, the WBO doesn’t need to demonstrate intent, fault, negligence, or knowing use on the fighter’s part. It is the fighter’s duty to ensure that no prohibited substances enter their body. Fighters are fully responsible for any prohibited substances found to be present in their body."
Alimkhanuly was directed by the WBO to show cause within ten days of issuance of this notice, stating why disciplinary action should not be imposed pursuant to the applicable sections in the governing WBO Regulations of World Championship Contests and all relevant WBO policies; including but not limited to: a) declaring the WBO middleweight championship “vacant”; b) withdrawing WBO world champion status from Alimkhanuly; c) banning him from all WBO world and/or regional championship contests; d) suspending him sion from al WBO world and/or regional championship contests; and e) issuing any other rulings necessary, helpful or convenient to accomplish the purposes, policies and intent of the WBO.
Alimkhanuly's response may include supporting documentation, statements, legal submissions, or any other relevant materials he wishes the WBO to consider. Failure to respond within the prescribed period may result in disciplinary action being taken without further notice and/or hearing, including but not limited to the vacating of your WBO Championship title, effective immediately.
DEC. 3, 2025: WBA middleweight champion Erislandy “The American Dream” Lara will defend his title against hard-hitting challenger Johan Gonzalez as part of a four-fight PBC pay-per-view event on Prime Video this Saturday, December 6th from Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. Lara was originally scheduled to face unified champion Janibek Alimkhanuly, who was pulled from the fight after failing a VADA anti-doping test. The Lara vs. Gonzalez fight will follow the pay-per-view opener between Jesus “Mono” Ramos Jr. and Shane Mosley Jr. for the WBC interim middleweight title beginning at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT. The pay-per-view is headlined by former 140-pound title holder Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz taking on reigning WBA 130-pound champion Lamont Roach for the WBC interim title at 140 pounds. The showdown between two-division champion Stephen Fulton Jr. and WBC 130-pound champion O’Shaquie Foster will now serve as the co-feature. Tickets for the live event are on sale now through Ticketmaster.com.
DEC. 2, 2025: Janibek Alimkhanuly, the two-belt middleweight champion, has tested positive for a banned performance-enhancing substance just days before a scheduled unification fight against WBA middleweight champion Erislandy Lara. Journalist Dan Rafael reported that the substance was meldonium, which is commonly used in Russia. Alimkhanuly, from Kazakhstan, holds the WBO and IBF titles. He reacted to this development by tweeting, "I have always supported clean sport you know this well. I was surprised when I read the news. VADA took the first test and said everything was clean. I have not made any changes to my vitamins. I don’t know what happened with the second test, so I requested a retest." Alimkhanuly vs. Lara, which was scheduled for this Saturday, December 6th in San Antonio, Texas. The WBO acknowledged the positive test as follows: "The WBO has confirmed an adverse analytical finding for WBO middleweight champion Zhanibek Alimkhanuly from VADA testing ahead of his scheduled bout vs. Erislandy Lara. An internal investigation is now underway, and a show cause notice will be issued. No further comments will be made until the process is complete.
The World Boxing Organization has ruled that WBO middleweight champion Zhanibek Alimkhanuly will keep his title despite twice testing positive for the banned substance meldonium, imposing a one-year suspension and a series of conditions that stop short of stripping him of the championship. The decision follows positive “A” and “B” samples collected under the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) program in November 2025, which forced Alimkhanuly out of a scheduled WBA/WBO unification bout against Erislandy Lara in December.
In a lengthy resolution issued by its World Championship Committee, the WBO confirmed that the tests were conducted by recognized anti-doping authorities and verified by a WADA-accredited laboratory, leaving no dispute about the presence of the prohibited substance. Under the organization’s rules, the case fell under a “strict liability” standard, meaning intent or explanation was irrelevant once a positive test was confirmed. Despite that framework, the WBO declined to impose its most severe sanction — vacating the WBO Middleweight Championship — and instead opted for what it described as a “proportionate” response.
The ruling suspends Alimkhanuly for one year, retroactive to December 2, 2025, the date of official notification of the adverse test. He is also required to submit to year-round random drug testing under a WADA-certified program at his own expense, complete an anti-doping education course, and provide certified test results directly to the WBO. When the suspension ends, he will not be allowed a tune-up fight; his first bout must be against either the WBO interim champion or the organization’s mandatory challenger. An interim title fight between Denzel Bentley and Endry Saavedra was ordered to keep the division active during his suspension.
While the ruling is detailed and procedural, the practical impact is limited. Alimkhanuly remains recognized as champion, retains his title status, and faces no financial penalty, fine, or vacating of the belt. The suspension is time-limited, and the conditions imposed largely amount to monitoring and compliance requirements rather than punitive measures. For a confirmed doping violation that canceled a major unification bout and disrupted the middleweight division, the consequences are relatively light.
The committee justified its approach by citing Alimkhanuly’s status as a first-time offender and the absence of prior anti-doping violations. It emphasized proportionality and the legal and commercial interests tied to championship recognition. In effect, the WBO treated the case as a regulatory issue to be managed rather than a breach warranting the strongest available punishment.
For critics, that distinction matters. A positive test for a banned substance typically carries the expectation of severe sporting consequences, especially for a reigning world champion. By allowing Alimkhanuly to keep his title and return after a defined suspension, the ruling sends a message that a confirmed drug violation does not necessarily lead to the loss of a championship.
The WBO framed the outcome as balanced and fair. Others will see it differently — as a decision that, while procedurally careful, does not meaningfully penalize a fighter who failed a drug test, and does little to deter future violations at the highest level of the sport.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
DEC. 5, 2025: After a positive test for the banned substance meldonium, the WBO World Championship Committee has issued a “show cause notice” to WBO / IBF middleweight champion Zhanibek Alimkhanuly. The notice stated, "It has been formally reported that on December 2nd, the WBO received an official communication from the Voluntary Anti-Doping Agency (VADA) concerning an alleged anti-doping violation arising from the testing protocol enforced by said agency in preparation for the scheduled WBO/IBF unified middleweight championships contest against [WBA champion] Erislandy Lara to be held in San Antonio, Texas on December 6th.According to the notice, the “A” Sample of [Alimkhanuly's] urine specimen, collected on November 15th, in Porter Ranch, California, allegedly returned an adverse analytical finding for a banned substance at an estimated concentration greater than the minimum reported threshold.
Unlike the WBC, which lately has been giving virtually no penalties to boxers who test positive for banned substances [Conor Benn and Subriel Matias come to mind], WBO policy is that "in the event any WBO champion tests positive for any banned substances, the WBO doesn’t need to demonstrate intent, fault, negligence, or knowing use on the fighter’s part. It is the fighter’s duty to ensure that no prohibited substances enter their body. Fighters are fully responsible for any prohibited substances found to be present in their body."
Alimkhanuly was directed by the WBO to show cause within ten days of issuance of this notice, stating why disciplinary action should not be imposed pursuant to the applicable sections in the governing WBO Regulations of World Championship Contests and all relevant WBO policies; including but not limited to: a) declaring the WBO middleweight championship “vacant”; b) withdrawing WBO world champion status from Alimkhanuly; c) banning him from all WBO world and/or regional championship contests; d) suspending him sion from al WBO world and/or regional championship contests; and e) issuing any other rulings necessary, helpful or convenient to accomplish the purposes, policies and intent of the WBO.
Alimkhanuly's response may include supporting documentation, statements, legal submissions, or any other relevant materials he wishes the WBO to consider. Failure to respond within the prescribed period may result in disciplinary action being taken without further notice and/or hearing, including but not limited to the vacating of your WBO Championship title, effective immediately.
DEC. 3, 2025: WBA middleweight champion Erislandy “The American Dream” Lara will defend his title against hard-hitting challenger Johan Gonzalez as part of a four-fight PBC pay-per-view event on Prime Video this Saturday, December 6th from Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. Lara was originally scheduled to face unified champion Janibek Alimkhanuly, who was pulled from the fight after failing a VADA anti-doping test. The Lara vs. Gonzalez fight will follow the pay-per-view opener between Jesus “Mono” Ramos Jr. and Shane Mosley Jr. for the WBC interim middleweight title beginning at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT. The pay-per-view is headlined by former 140-pound title holder Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz taking on reigning WBA 130-pound champion Lamont Roach for the WBC interim title at 140 pounds. The showdown between two-division champion Stephen Fulton Jr. and WBC 130-pound champion O’Shaquie Foster will now serve as the co-feature. Tickets for the live event are on sale now through Ticketmaster.com.
DEC. 2, 2025: Janibek Alimkhanuly, the two-belt middleweight champion, has tested positive for a banned performance-enhancing substance just days before a scheduled unification fight against WBA middleweight champion Erislandy Lara. Journalist Dan Rafael reported that the substance was meldonium, which is commonly used in Russia. Alimkhanuly, from Kazakhstan, holds the WBO and IBF titles. He reacted to this development by tweeting, "I have always supported clean sport you know this well. I was surprised when I read the news. VADA took the first test and said everything was clean. I have not made any changes to my vitamins. I don’t know what happened with the second test, so I requested a retest." Alimkhanuly vs. Lara, which was scheduled for this Saturday, December 6th in San Antonio, Texas. The WBO acknowledged the positive test as follows: "The WBO has confirmed an adverse analytical finding for WBO middleweight champion Zhanibek Alimkhanuly from VADA testing ahead of his scheduled bout vs. Erislandy Lara. An internal investigation is now underway, and a show cause notice will be issued. No further comments will be made until the process is complete.
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WBO, IBF keep drug cheat Alimkhanuly as champion
In a very disappointing ruling for those who want to punish drug cheats in boxing, the WBO has ruled that its middleweight champion, Zhanibek Alimkhanuly, can keep his title despite testing positive for the banned substance meldonium. Instead of striping the boxer, as was expected, the WBO imposed a one-year suspension and a series of conditions that stop short of stripping Alimkhnauly of the championship. The decision follows positive “A” and “B” sample tests collected by the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) in November 2025, which forced Alimkhanuly out of a scheduled unification bout against Erislandy Lara in December. Although not a party to this ruling, the IBF is just as culpable, as it also continues to recognize Alimhanuly as its world middleweight champion. A WBO interim title fight between Denzel Bentley and Endry Saavedra was ordered to keep the division active during his suspension.
In a lengthy written decision issued by its World Championship Committee, the WBO confirmed that the tests were conducted by recognized anti-doping authorities and verified by a WADA-accredited laboratory, leaving no dispute about the presence of the prohibited substance. Under the organization’s rules, the case fell under a “strict liability” standard, meaning intent or explanation was irrelevant once a positive test was confirmed. Despite that framework, the WBO declined to impose its most severe sanction — vacating Alimkhanuly's title — and instead opted for what it described as a “proportionate” response.
The ruling suspends Alimkhanuly for one year, retroactive to December 2nd, the date of official notification of the adverse test. He is also required to submit to year-round random drug testing under a WADA-certified program at his own expense, complete an anti-doping education course, and provide certified test results directly to the WBO. When the suspension ends, he will not be allowed a tune-up fight; his first bout must be against either the WBO interim champion or the organization’s mandatory challenger.
The WBO framed the outcome as balanced and fair. Others will see it differently — as a decision that does not meaningfully penalize a fighter who failed a drug test, and does little to deter future violations at the highest level of the sport.
So what is the end result? Alimkhanuly remains recognized as a two-belt champion, retains his title status, and faces no financial penalty. The suspension is time-limited, a year in name but effectively only ten months, and the conditions imposed largely amount to monitoring and compliance requirements rather than punitive measures. For a confirmed doping violation that canceled a major unification bout and disrupted the middleweight division, the consequences are relatively light.
The committee justified its approach by citing Alimkhanuly’s status as a first-time offender and the absence of prior anti-doping violations. It emphasized proportionality and the legal and commercial interests tied to championship recognition. In effect, the WBO treated the case as a regulatory issue to be managed rather than a breach warranting the strongest available punishment. For critics, that distinction matters. A positive test for a banned substance typically carries the expectation of severe sporting consequences, especially for a reigning world champion. By allowing Alimkhanuly to keep his title and return after a defined suspension, the ruling sends a message that a confirmed drug violation does not necessarily lead to the loss of a championship. It should be noted that Alimkhanuly tested positive for meldonium, which is clearly banned in international competitions but is legally available for purchase in Kazakhstan, Russia and a few other countries.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
DEC. 5, 2025: After a positive test for the banned substance meldonium, the WBO World Championship Committee has issued a “show cause notice” to WBO / IBF middleweight champion Zhanibek Alimkhanuly. The notice stated, "It has been formally reported that on December 2nd, the WBO received an official communication from the Voluntary Anti-Doping Agency (VADA) concerning an alleged anti-doping violation arising from the testing protocol enforced by said agency in preparation for the scheduled WBO/IBF unified middleweight championships contest against [WBA champion] Erislandy Lara to be held in San Antonio, Texas on December 6th.According to the notice, the “A” Sample of [Alimkhanuly's] urine specimen, collected on November 15th, in Porter Ranch, California, allegedly returned an adverse analytical finding for a banned substance at an estimated concentration greater than the minimum reported threshold.
Unlike the WBC, which lately has been giving virtually no penalties to boxers who test positive for banned substances [Conor Benn and Subriel Matias come to mind], WBO policy is that "in the event any WBO champion tests positive for any banned substances, the WBO doesn’t need to demonstrate intent, fault, negligence, or knowing use on the fighter’s part. It is the fighter’s duty to ensure that no prohibited substances enter their body. Fighters are fully responsible for any prohibited substances found to be present in their body."
Alimkhanuly was directed by the WBO to show cause within ten days of issuance of this notice, stating why disciplinary action should not be imposed pursuant to the applicable sections in the governing WBO Regulations of World Championship Contests and all relevant WBO policies; including but not limited to: a) declaring the WBO middleweight championship “vacant”; b) withdrawing WBO world champion status from Alimkhanuly; c) banning him from all WBO world and/or regional championship contests; d) suspending him sion from al WBO world and/or regional championship contests; and e) issuing any other rulings necessary, helpful or convenient to accomplish the purposes, policies and intent of the WBO.
Alimkhanuly's response may include supporting documentation, statements, legal submissions, or any other relevant materials he wishes the WBO to consider. Failure to respond within the prescribed period may result in disciplinary action being taken without further notice and/or hearing, including but not limited to the vacating of your WBO Championship title, effective immediately.
DEC. 3, 2025: WBA middleweight champion Erislandy “The American Dream” Lara will defend his title against hard-hitting challenger Johan Gonzalez as part of a four-fight PBC pay-per-view event on Prime Video this Saturday, December 6th from Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. Lara was originally scheduled to face unified champion Janibek Alimkhanuly, who was pulled from the fight after failing a VADA anti-doping test. The Lara vs. Gonzalez fight will follow the pay-per-view opener between Jesus “Mono” Ramos Jr. and Shane Mosley Jr. for the WBC interim middleweight title beginning at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT. The pay-per-view is headlined by former 140-pound title holder Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz taking on reigning WBA 130-pound champion Lamont Roach for the WBC interim title at 140 pounds. The showdown between two-division champion Stephen Fulton Jr. and WBC 130-pound champion O’Shaquie Foster will now serve as the co-feature. Tickets for the live event are on sale now through Ticketmaster.com.
DEC. 2, 2025: Janibek Alimkhanuly, the two-belt middleweight champion, has tested positive for a banned performance-enhancing substance just days before a scheduled unification fight against WBA middleweight champion Erislandy Lara. Journalist Dan Rafael reported that the substance was meldonium, which is commonly used in Russia. Alimkhanuly, from Kazakhstan, holds the WBO and IBF titles. He reacted to this development by tweeting, "I have always supported clean sport you know this well. I was surprised when I read the news. VADA took the first test and said everything was clean. I have not made any changes to my vitamins. I don’t know what happened with the second test, so I requested a retest." Alimkhanuly vs. Lara, which was scheduled for this Saturday, December 6th in San Antonio, Texas. The WBO acknowledged the positive test as follows: "The WBO has confirmed an adverse analytical finding for WBO middleweight champion Zhanibek Alimkhanuly from VADA testing ahead of his scheduled bout vs. Erislandy Lara. An internal investigation is now underway, and a show cause notice will be issued. No further comments will be made until the process is complete.
The World Boxing Organization has ruled that WBO middleweight champion Zhanibek Alimkhanuly will keep his title despite twice testing positive for the banned substance meldonium, imposing a one-year suspension and a series of conditions that stop short of stripping him of the championship. The decision follows positive “A” and “B” samples collected under the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) program in November 2025, which forced Alimkhanuly out of a scheduled WBA/WBO unification bout against Erislandy Lara in December.
In a lengthy resolution issued by its World Championship Committee, the WBO confirmed that the tests were conducted by recognized anti-doping authorities and verified by a WADA-accredited laboratory, leaving no dispute about the presence of the prohibited substance. Under the organization’s rules, the case fell under a “strict liability” standard, meaning intent or explanation was irrelevant once a positive test was confirmed. Despite that framework, the WBO declined to impose its most severe sanction — vacating the WBO Middleweight Championship — and instead opted for what it described as a “proportionate” response.
The ruling suspends Alimkhanuly for one year, retroactive to December 2, 2025, the date of official notification of the adverse test. He is also required to submit to year-round random drug testing under a WADA-certified program at his own expense, complete an anti-doping education course, and provide certified test results directly to the WBO. When the suspension ends, he will not be allowed a tune-up fight; his first bout must be against either the WBO interim champion or the organization’s mandatory challenger. An interim title fight between Denzel Bentley and Endry Saavedra was ordered to keep the division active during his suspension.
While the ruling is detailed and procedural, the practical impact is limited. Alimkhanuly remains recognized as champion, retains his title status, and faces no financial penalty, fine, or vacating of the belt. The suspension is time-limited, and the conditions imposed largely amount to monitoring and compliance requirements rather than punitive measures. For a confirmed doping violation that canceled a major unification bout and disrupted the middleweight division, the consequences are relatively light.
The committee justified its approach by citing Alimkhanuly’s status as a first-time offender and the absence of prior anti-doping violations. It emphasized proportionality and the legal and commercial interests tied to championship recognition. In effect, the WBO treated the case as a regulatory issue to be managed rather than a breach warranting the strongest available punishment.
For critics, that distinction matters. A positive test for a banned substance typically carries the expectation of severe sporting consequences, especially for a reigning world champion. By allowing Alimkhanuly to keep his title and return after a defined suspension, the ruling sends a message that a confirmed drug violation does not necessarily lead to the loss of a championship.
The WBO framed the outcome as balanced and fair. Others will see it differently — as a decision that, while procedurally careful, does not meaningfully penalize a fighter who failed a drug test, and does little to deter future violations at the highest level of the sport.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
DEC. 5, 2025: After a positive test for the banned substance meldonium, the WBO World Championship Committee has issued a “show cause notice” to WBO / IBF middleweight champion Zhanibek Alimkhanuly. The notice stated, "It has been formally reported that on December 2nd, the WBO received an official communication from the Voluntary Anti-Doping Agency (VADA) concerning an alleged anti-doping violation arising from the testing protocol enforced by said agency in preparation for the scheduled WBO/IBF unified middleweight championships contest against [WBA champion] Erislandy Lara to be held in San Antonio, Texas on December 6th.According to the notice, the “A” Sample of [Alimkhanuly's] urine specimen, collected on November 15th, in Porter Ranch, California, allegedly returned an adverse analytical finding for a banned substance at an estimated concentration greater than the minimum reported threshold.
Unlike the WBC, which lately has been giving virtually no penalties to boxers who test positive for banned substances [Conor Benn and Subriel Matias come to mind], WBO policy is that "in the event any WBO champion tests positive for any banned substances, the WBO doesn’t need to demonstrate intent, fault, negligence, or knowing use on the fighter’s part. It is the fighter’s duty to ensure that no prohibited substances enter their body. Fighters are fully responsible for any prohibited substances found to be present in their body."
Alimkhanuly was directed by the WBO to show cause within ten days of issuance of this notice, stating why disciplinary action should not be imposed pursuant to the applicable sections in the governing WBO Regulations of World Championship Contests and all relevant WBO policies; including but not limited to: a) declaring the WBO middleweight championship “vacant”; b) withdrawing WBO world champion status from Alimkhanuly; c) banning him from all WBO world and/or regional championship contests; d) suspending him sion from al WBO world and/or regional championship contests; and e) issuing any other rulings necessary, helpful or convenient to accomplish the purposes, policies and intent of the WBO.
Alimkhanuly's response may include supporting documentation, statements, legal submissions, or any other relevant materials he wishes the WBO to consider. Failure to respond within the prescribed period may result in disciplinary action being taken without further notice and/or hearing, including but not limited to the vacating of your WBO Championship title, effective immediately.
DEC. 3, 2025: WBA middleweight champion Erislandy “The American Dream” Lara will defend his title against hard-hitting challenger Johan Gonzalez as part of a four-fight PBC pay-per-view event on Prime Video this Saturday, December 6th from Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. Lara was originally scheduled to face unified champion Janibek Alimkhanuly, who was pulled from the fight after failing a VADA anti-doping test. The Lara vs. Gonzalez fight will follow the pay-per-view opener between Jesus “Mono” Ramos Jr. and Shane Mosley Jr. for the WBC interim middleweight title beginning at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT. The pay-per-view is headlined by former 140-pound title holder Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz taking on reigning WBA 130-pound champion Lamont Roach for the WBC interim title at 140 pounds. The showdown between two-division champion Stephen Fulton Jr. and WBC 130-pound champion O’Shaquie Foster will now serve as the co-feature. Tickets for the live event are on sale now through Ticketmaster.com.
DEC. 2, 2025: Janibek Alimkhanuly, the two-belt middleweight champion, has tested positive for a banned performance-enhancing substance just days before a scheduled unification fight against WBA middleweight champion Erislandy Lara. Journalist Dan Rafael reported that the substance was meldonium, which is commonly used in Russia. Alimkhanuly, from Kazakhstan, holds the WBO and IBF titles. He reacted to this development by tweeting, "I have always supported clean sport you know this well. I was surprised when I read the news. VADA took the first test and said everything was clean. I have not made any changes to my vitamins. I don’t know what happened with the second test, so I requested a retest." Alimkhanuly vs. Lara, which was scheduled for this Saturday, December 6th in San Antonio, Texas. The WBO acknowledged the positive test as follows: "The WBO has confirmed an adverse analytical finding for WBO middleweight champion Zhanibek Alimkhanuly from VADA testing ahead of his scheduled bout vs. Erislandy Lara. An internal investigation is now underway, and a show cause notice will be issued. No further comments will be made until the process is complete.
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Russell holds off spirited challenge from Hiraoka to retain title |
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Gary Antuanne Russell W12 Andy Hiraoka... In a bout that evolved from early dominance to late drama, Gary Antuanne Russell successfully defended his WBA junior welterweight title with a unanimous decision over Japan’s Andy Hiraoka at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Russell controlled the opening five rounds with superior hand speed and crisp body combinations. However, the previously unbeaten Hiraoka adjusted in the second half, leveraging his reach advantage to target the champion’s midsection and force him onto the back foot. A pivotal moment came in round ten when referee Al Huggins deducted a point from Hiraoka for a pair of low blows that temporarily halted the action. Despite the penalty, the Japanese challenger pressed forward, producing a spirited late rally that tested Russell’s durability. After twelve hard-fought rounds, the judges returned scores of 117-110 and 116-111 (twice), all in favor of the Maryland native. Thankfully, the referee's penalty did not change the result of the fight. Russell now stands at 19-1, strengthening his hold on the WBA's 140-pound crown and inching closer to potential unification clashes. Hiraoka, though suffering his first professional defeat after 24 wins, enhanced his reputation in his U.S. breakout appearance.
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Russell holds off spirited challenge from Hiraoka to retain title
Gary Antuanne Russell W12 Andy Hiraoka... In a bout that evolved from early dominance to late drama, Gary Antuanne Russell successfully defended his WBA junior welterweight title with a unanimous decision over Japan’s Andy Hiraoka at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Russell controlled the opening five rounds with superior hand speed and crisp body combinations. However, the previously unbeaten Hiraoka adjusted in the second half, leveraging his reach advantage to target the champion’s midsection and force him onto the back foot. A pivotal moment came in round ten when referee Al Huggins deducted a point from Hiraoka for a pair of low blows that temporarily halted the action. Despite the penalty, the Japanese challenger pressed forward, producing a spirited late rally that tested Russell’s durability. After twelve hard-fought rounds, the judges returned scores of 117-110 and 116-111 (twice), all in favor of the Maryland native. Thankfully, the referee's penalty did not change the result of the fight. Russell now stands at 19-1, strengthening his hold on the WBA's 140-pound crown and inching closer to potential unification clashes. Hiraoka, though suffering his first professional defeat after 24 wins, enhanced his reputation in his U.S. breakout appearance.
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Ramirez: "I want to fight the best and Benavidez is one of the best" |
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Undefeated two-division champion David “El Monstro” Benavidez officially announced his challenge of Mexico’s first cruiserweight champion, unified WBA and WBO king Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez (pictured). The two men went face to face on Saturday at a press conference to promote their showdown in Las Vegas on Saturday, May 2nd headlining a PBC pay-per-view event available on Prime Video from T-Mobile Arena. The fight will deliver a first of its kind Mexico vs. Mexico showdown on one of boxing’s premier weekends featuring two fighters with a combined record of 79-1, with 55 KOs. During the press conference, the fighters and teams spoke of their intense past sparring sessions and promised that the action on May 2nd would far surpass those gym wars.
Pre-sale tickets are available Tuesday, February 24 from 10 a.m. PT until 10 p.m. PT through AXS.com with the codes: PBC or GBP; Public on-sale begins Wednesday, February 25 at 10 a.m. PT through AXS.com. The event is promoted by Golden Boy Promotions and Sampson Boxing, in association with TGB Promotions.
Here is what the press conference participants had to say Saturday from Park MGM in Las Vegas:
GILBERTO “ZURDO” RAMIREZ
“I’m so glad to be here to make a huge fight for May 2nd. Don’t miss this fight. I know Team Benavidez, they actually helped me a lot for my first world title fight. We’re gonna make this an exciting fight. At the end of the day, the titles are staying with Zurdo.
“I knew this would happen eventually. This is a dream come true. Right now is the right moment at 200 pounds. We’re going to feel comfortable and be at our best.
“He’s the monster. He’s different. He used to beat up a lot of sparring partners. Now we’re here, we’re two warriors and we’re making history.
“I just want to be the best. I want to fight the best and he’s one of the best. I just want to give the fans who love this sport the best fights.”
DAVID BENAVIDEZ
“This is something I’ve been working toward for a long time. We’ve had so many great sparring sessions and I told Zurdo then, we’ll have to do this on pay-per-view one day. Now we’re going for two titles on May 2nd and I’m very grateful.
“I feel like I’m on the cusp of being the face of boxing. And if Zurdo wins, his stock goes up. There’s greatness on the other side of that tunnel for both of us. So we’re gonna come extremely prepared.
“For the whole history of Cinco de Mayo fights, it’s been tremendous fighters like Oscar and Chavez. Not just great fights, but wars. Because they never took easy fights. That’s what we’re doing. We’re two Mexican warriors going for the title.
“Zurdo is a top fighter. He’s a great fighter. I was helping him get ready for Arthur Abraham and we had some great sessions. I knew he was gonna be one of those guys who would be around for a long time. Eventually we were gonna do this.
“I’m gonna go in there and leave everything in the ring. I’m making sure I’m doing extra reps with anything and everything I do. That’s just the way I fight. I want to earn the fans respect and go in there and put on a great fight.
“I want to make my own lane and achieve greatness.”
JOSE BENAVIDEZ SR. David’s Father & Trainer
“David Benavidez doesn’t just have to win. He has to show out to prove he can go after the Bivols and Beterbievs. This is gonna be an explosive fight. I also want to thank all the Mexican people for all their love and support. David Benavidez is showing he truly is the Mexican Monster.
“Be there on May 2nd. A new era will begin. The era of the Mexican Monster.”
JULIAN CHUA, Ramirez’s Trainer
“I can’t say how much of an honor it is to be a part of Cinco de Mayo weekend. The heritage of Mexican boxing built this sport.
“Neither team is too big into talking, and there won’t be a need for it. I’ve seen them sparring up close, and those rounds were all pay-per-view worthy. Now you layer on that it’s a real fight, the competitive nature that brought them both to where they are today, at its peak form, it will be there.
“This is gonna be a shootout and a great war. I don’t feel any pressure, because the way these guys are, it’s gonna be a great fight.”
OSCAR DE LA HOYA, Chairman & CEO of Golden Boy Promotions
“I’m really excited about Cinco de Mayo weekend this year. Traditionally you’ve had great fighters like Julio Cesar Chavez, myself, Canelo Alvarez, fighting on this big weekend. But the fact that two Mexicans are fighting in the main event for the belts, it’s gonna be extra special.
“We have the first Mexican super middleweight and cruiserweight world champion on Cinco de Mayo in one corner in Zurdo Ramirez. And we know that Benavidez brings everything to the table, from round one to round twelve. I expect this to be a classic Mexican war. That’s what fight fans want to see. They want to be part of a historic event. That’s exactly what this fight brings to the table.
“These guys have 55 knockouts between them. They’re not gonna bore the crowd. They’re gonna put on a show. They’re technicians, but they’re fighters. The pressure is on. Cinco de Mayo is a date where people expect fireworks and that’s exactly what we will get.”
SAMPSON LEWKOWICZ, Sampson Boxing
“This is going to be a special Cinco de Mayo. I’m thankful that we’ve come together to make a great show and many more in the future. This is going to be one of the best shows that money can buy.
“Benavidez is taking his own way to become the best of the best. He’s not going to wait around for any challenger or champion. I want to thank ‘Zurdo’ for stepping up, because this is the fight.”
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Ramirez: "I want to fight the best and Benavidez is one of the best"
Undefeated two-division champion David “El Monstro” Benavidez officially announced his challenge of Mexico’s first cruiserweight champion, unified WBA and WBO king Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez (pictured). The two men went face to face on Saturday at a press conference to promote their showdown in Las Vegas on Saturday, May 2nd headlining a PBC pay-per-view event available on Prime Video from T-Mobile Arena. The fight will deliver a first of its kind Mexico vs. Mexico showdown on one of boxing’s premier weekends featuring two fighters with a combined record of 79-1, with 55 KOs. During the press conference, the fighters and teams spoke of their intense past sparring sessions and promised that the action on May 2nd would far surpass those gym wars.
Pre-sale tickets are available Tuesday, February 24 from 10 a.m. PT until 10 p.m. PT through AXS.com with the codes: PBC or GBP; Public on-sale begins Wednesday, February 25 at 10 a.m. PT through AXS.com. The event is promoted by Golden Boy Promotions and Sampson Boxing, in association with TGB Promotions.
Here is what the press conference participants had to say Saturday from Park MGM in Las Vegas:
GILBERTO “ZURDO” RAMIREZ
“I’m so glad to be here to make a huge fight for May 2nd. Don’t miss this fight. I know Team Benavidez, they actually helped me a lot for my first world title fight. We’re gonna make this an exciting fight. At the end of the day, the titles are staying with Zurdo.
“I knew this would happen eventually. This is a dream come true. Right now is the right moment at 200 pounds. We’re going to feel comfortable and be at our best.
“He’s the monster. He’s different. He used to beat up a lot of sparring partners. Now we’re here, we’re two warriors and we’re making history.
“I just want to be the best. I want to fight the best and he’s one of the best. I just want to give the fans who love this sport the best fights.”
DAVID BENAVIDEZ
“This is something I’ve been working toward for a long time. We’ve had so many great sparring sessions and I told Zurdo then, we’ll have to do this on pay-per-view one day. Now we’re going for two titles on May 2nd and I’m very grateful.
“I feel like I’m on the cusp of being the face of boxing. And if Zurdo wins, his stock goes up. There’s greatness on the other side of that tunnel for both of us. So we’re gonna come extremely prepared.
“For the whole history of Cinco de Mayo fights, it’s been tremendous fighters like Oscar and Chavez. Not just great fights, but wars. Because they never took easy fights. That’s what we’re doing. We’re two Mexican warriors going for the title.
“Zurdo is a top fighter. He’s a great fighter. I was helping him get ready for Arthur Abraham and we had some great sessions. I knew he was gonna be one of those guys who would be around for a long time. Eventually we were gonna do this.
“I’m gonna go in there and leave everything in the ring. I’m making sure I’m doing extra reps with anything and everything I do. That’s just the way I fight. I want to earn the fans respect and go in there and put on a great fight.
“I want to make my own lane and achieve greatness.”
JOSE BENAVIDEZ SR. David’s Father & Trainer
“David Benavidez doesn’t just have to win. He has to show out to prove he can go after the Bivols and Beterbievs. This is gonna be an explosive fight. I also want to thank all the Mexican people for all their love and support. David Benavidez is showing he truly is the Mexican Monster.
“Be there on May 2nd. A new era will begin. The era of the Mexican Monster.”
JULIAN CHUA, Ramirez’s Trainer
“I can’t say how much of an honor it is to be a part of Cinco de Mayo weekend. The heritage of Mexican boxing built this sport.
“Neither team is too big into talking, and there won’t be a need for it. I’ve seen them sparring up close, and those rounds were all pay-per-view worthy. Now you layer on that it’s a real fight, the competitive nature that brought them both to where they are today, at its peak form, it will be there.
“This is gonna be a shootout and a great war. I don’t feel any pressure, because the way these guys are, it’s gonna be a great fight.”
OSCAR DE LA HOYA, Chairman & CEO of Golden Boy Promotions
“I’m really excited about Cinco de Mayo weekend this year. Traditionally you’ve had great fighters like Julio Cesar Chavez, myself, Canelo Alvarez, fighting on this big weekend. But the fact that two Mexicans are fighting in the main event for the belts, it’s gonna be extra special.
“We have the first Mexican super middleweight and cruiserweight world champion on Cinco de Mayo in one corner in Zurdo Ramirez. And we know that Benavidez brings everything to the table, from round one to round twelve. I expect this to be a classic Mexican war. That’s what fight fans want to see. They want to be part of a historic event. That’s exactly what this fight brings to the table.
“These guys have 55 knockouts between them. They’re not gonna bore the crowd. They’re gonna put on a show. They’re technicians, but they’re fighters. The pressure is on. Cinco de Mayo is a date where people expect fireworks and that’s exactly what we will get.”
SAMPSON LEWKOWICZ, Sampson Boxing
“This is going to be a special Cinco de Mayo. I’m thankful that we’ve come together to make a great show and many more in the future. This is going to be one of the best shows that money can buy.
“Benavidez is taking his own way to become the best of the best. He’s not going to wait around for any challenger or champion. I want to thank ‘Zurdo’ for stepping up, because this is the fight.”
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Scary scene in ring after headbutt |
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Atif Oberlton TKO1 Joe George... There were some scary moments at Little Cesar's Arena in Detroit during a light heavyweight bout between undefeated Atif Oberlton and Joe George, Jr. There was an accidental clash of heads in the first round. In between rounds, George fell off his stool and down to the canvas face first. He didn't move and received medical attention. George (13-2) regained consciousness but left the ring area on a stretcher and Oberlton (15-0) was declared the winner by technical knockout. Boxingtalk wishes Joe George Jr. a complete and speedy recovery.
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Scary scene in ring after headbutt
Atif Oberlton TKO1 Joe George... There were some scary moments at Little Cesar's Arena in Detroit during a light heavyweight bout between undefeated Atif Oberlton and Joe George, Jr. There was an accidental clash of heads in the first round. In between rounds, George fell off his stool and down to the canvas face first. He didn't move and received medical attention. George (13-2) regained consciousness but left the ring area on a stretcher and Oberlton (15-0) was declared the winner by technical knockout. Boxingtalk wishes Joe George Jr. a complete and speedy recovery.
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Ryan Rozicki returns from injury on March 7th |
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Power-punching Canadian cruiserweight Ryan Rozicki (20-1-1, 19 KOs) will return from injury on March 7th against Gerardo Mellado (12-4, 7 KOs) in a ten rounder presented by Three Lions Promotions at Centre 200 in Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada. As Rozicki pursues his goal of becoming the first Canadian-born cruiserweight champion, he'll be fighting for the first time since December 2024, having been sidelined largely due to a torn right bicep that he reinjured, causing a world title fight to fall through. Rozicki is currently ranked #1 by the WBC.
A Nova Scotia native, Rozicki, 30, is unbeaten in seven fights in Sydney with 1 draw and 6 knockouts. He was scheduled to fight Akani “Prime” Phuzi on October 25th but the bout was cancelled after Rozicki reinjured his right bicep.
The eight-round co-feature is set between Canadian light heavyweights Brandon Brewer (28-4-3, 12 KOs) an Daniel Beaupre (6-2, 3 KOs). Undercard fights include an All-Nova Scotia showdown between a pair of popular local boxers, Brett Beaton (6-4, 4 KOs) and David Logue (4-1, 4 KOs) with the vacant Canadian super middleweight championship at stake. Also, Canadian junior middleweight Dylan Taylor (4-0, 3 KOs) faces Alex Nemeth (1-1-0), of Hungary, in a six-round match. Tickets are on sale and available for purchase online at Ticketmaster (www.ticketmaster.ca) and the Centre 200 website (www.centre200.ca).
Ultimately, Rozicki wants to fight IBF cruiserweight champion Jai Opetaia (29-0, 23 KOs). “Jai and his team know who I am,” Rozicki reported. “I have been knocking on that door for years. They obviously don’t want the fight; it is what it is. Right now, I’m focused on my March 7th bout. Then, I’m coming to take what’s mine! I’m going to be the cruiserweight champion of the world.”
“We tried numerous times to get that fight with Jai,” Three Lions Promotions Managing Director Daniel Otter explained. “I’m sure Dana White (Zuffa Boxing) will like that fight (Opetaia vs. Rozicki). He makes his guys take on the best. Ryan has a fight next month, the day before Jai. Let’s see what happens after those fights. I am confident that Ryan has what it takes to stop Jai. To be frank, I think that because of the styles of both fighters, Ryan gets him out of there early. No disrespect to Jai and his team, but Ryan is cut from a different cloth. Everyone will find out soon enough.” Fighting out of Australia, Opetaia (29-0, 23 KOs) recently signed a promotional deal with Zuffa Boxing, and he faces Brandon Glanton (21-3, 18 KOs) on March 8th at Metro Apex in Las Vegas.
Card subject to change.
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Ryan Rozicki returns from injury on March 7th
Power-punching Canadian cruiserweight Ryan Rozicki (20-1-1, 19 KOs) will return from injury on March 7th against Gerardo Mellado (12-4, 7 KOs) in a ten rounder presented by Three Lions Promotions at Centre 200 in Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada. As Rozicki pursues his goal of becoming the first Canadian-born cruiserweight champion, he'll be fighting for the first time since December 2024, having been sidelined largely due to a torn right bicep that he reinjured, causing a world title fight to fall through. Rozicki is currently ranked #1 by the WBC.
A Nova Scotia native, Rozicki, 30, is unbeaten in seven fights in Sydney with 1 draw and 6 knockouts. He was scheduled to fight Akani “Prime” Phuzi on October 25th but the bout was cancelled after Rozicki reinjured his right bicep.
The eight-round co-feature is set between Canadian light heavyweights Brandon Brewer (28-4-3, 12 KOs) an Daniel Beaupre (6-2, 3 KOs). Undercard fights include an All-Nova Scotia showdown between a pair of popular local boxers, Brett Beaton (6-4, 4 KOs) and David Logue (4-1, 4 KOs) with the vacant Canadian super middleweight championship at stake. Also, Canadian junior middleweight Dylan Taylor (4-0, 3 KOs) faces Alex Nemeth (1-1-0), of Hungary, in a six-round match. Tickets are on sale and available for purchase online at Ticketmaster (www.ticketmaster.ca) and the Centre 200 website (www.centre200.ca).
Ultimately, Rozicki wants to fight IBF cruiserweight champion Jai Opetaia (29-0, 23 KOs). “Jai and his team know who I am,” Rozicki reported. “I have been knocking on that door for years. They obviously don’t want the fight; it is what it is. Right now, I’m focused on my March 7th bout. Then, I’m coming to take what’s mine! I’m going to be the cruiserweight champion of the world.”
“We tried numerous times to get that fight with Jai,” Three Lions Promotions Managing Director Daniel Otter explained. “I’m sure Dana White (Zuffa Boxing) will like that fight (Opetaia vs. Rozicki). He makes his guys take on the best. Ryan has a fight next month, the day before Jai. Let’s see what happens after those fights. I am confident that Ryan has what it takes to stop Jai. To be frank, I think that because of the styles of both fighters, Ryan gets him out of there early. No disrespect to Jai and his team, but Ryan is cut from a different cloth. Everyone will find out soon enough.” Fighting out of Australia, Opetaia (29-0, 23 KOs) recently signed a promotional deal with Zuffa Boxing, and he faces Brandon Glanton (21-3, 18 KOs) on March 8th at Metro Apex in Las Vegas.
Card subject to change.
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Introducing fighting police officer Tom Evans |
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On Saturday, February 28th, police officer Tom Evans makes his unlikely professional boxing debut at The Historic Park Theater in Cranston, Rhode Island. The bout is one of six fights taking place at CES Boxing’s Rhode Wars 5, a special night of boxing and entertainment held in tribute to the late Nicky Cardillo. Tickets are available now at CES Fights. Doors open at 6pm, with the first bout taking place at 7pm. Evans is making his pro boxing debut, but he has competed in four Muay Thai contests and in six mixed martial arts bouts, his last one taking place with CES MMA in 2020. "That was supposed to be my last fight," says Evans. "My mother passed away from diabetes and a heart condition about three weeks later. I was having my son at the time, and I got hired by the police department in Rhode Island. I entered the academy and my police career took off, and fighting got put on the back burner."
Across the ring from Evans will be Michigan’s Katriel Young, a fighter twelve years his junior with one win in the six pro bouts under his belt. "He’s definitely a seasoned boxer," said Evans about his opponent. "He has more boxing fights, but I think I have more experience fight-wise. I’ve fought on the big stage on national television before."
Fighting is not something most professional fighters give up easily. But while many come back for money or the spotlight, Evans is returning for a very different reason. "I’m fighting to raise money for the kids of Central Falls Youth Baseball Program," says Evans. I started the program in 2020 using the money from my last fight with CES. We provide everything for free: cleats, jerseys, equipment. It costs about $25–30k annually to run, but we’re fortunate: local politicians help, the mayor supports us, and the schools help promote it. This year, we’re adding girls’ softball."
Beyond his work as a full-time patrolman, Evans runs the youth program while preparing for his fight. He’s also married with three children, is one class away from earning his master’s degree in criminal justice and public administration, and he serves on his district’s school board. "My wife keeps everything together," laughs Evans. "I get up at 6am, take the kids to school, hit the gym, do schoolwork when I can, then pick the kids up, head to work, and I’m in uniform from 4pm until midnight. Sleep usually happens between one and six in the morning."
While most debuting boxers dream of championship belts and million-dollar paydays, Evans is realistic about his goals in the squared circle. "I’m 38 – this is a young man’s game," reasons Evans. "I’m doing this to raise money for charity. Boxing is dangerous. You take it one fight at a time and learn from it.
Trainer Peter Manfredo Sr. is making sure that Evans is fully prepared for what awaits him in the ring. "My first coach was Peter Manfredo," says Evans. "Now he’s gonna be in my corner for my boxing debut. It’s not easy: sparring is intense. You’ve got road work, cardio – even though it’s four rounds, I train like it’s eight rounds. I’m sore and there’s wear and tear at my age, but if you’re not prepared, you’re gonna get hurt. That’s what makes boxing special."
What makes Evans special is his willingness to absorb punishment for the benefit of others – and he does it with a smile. "On February 28th, I’m gonna go out there and put on a good show. Katriel Young is a tough kid. He comes forward, likes to bang, and isn't afraid to throw punches. I’ll look like a boxer, feel like a boxer, and I’m gonna get hit. It’s okay. The kids will be there wearing their baseball jerseys, and we’re going to have fun."
Two weeks later, Evans will trade the boxing ring for the baseball diamond as more than 150 boys and girls ages 4-15 register for the spring season – proof that the Sweet Science has already delivered a victory beyond the ropes. If you’d like to donate to the Central Falls Youth Baseball Program, you can venmo @CFYB-1
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Introducing fighting police officer Tom Evans
On Saturday, February 28th, police officer Tom Evans makes his unlikely professional boxing debut at The Historic Park Theater in Cranston, Rhode Island. The bout is one of six fights taking place at CES Boxing’s Rhode Wars 5, a special night of boxing and entertainment held in tribute to the late Nicky Cardillo. Tickets are available now at CES Fights. Doors open at 6pm, with the first bout taking place at 7pm. Evans is making his pro boxing debut, but he has competed in four Muay Thai contests and in six mixed martial arts bouts, his last one taking place with CES MMA in 2020. "That was supposed to be my last fight," says Evans. "My mother passed away from diabetes and a heart condition about three weeks later. I was having my son at the time, and I got hired by the police department in Rhode Island. I entered the academy and my police career took off, and fighting got put on the back burner."
Across the ring from Evans will be Michigan’s Katriel Young, a fighter twelve years his junior with one win in the six pro bouts under his belt. "He’s definitely a seasoned boxer," said Evans about his opponent. "He has more boxing fights, but I think I have more experience fight-wise. I’ve fought on the big stage on national television before."
Fighting is not something most professional fighters give up easily. But while many come back for money or the spotlight, Evans is returning for a very different reason. "I’m fighting to raise money for the kids of Central Falls Youth Baseball Program," says Evans. I started the program in 2020 using the money from my last fight with CES. We provide everything for free: cleats, jerseys, equipment. It costs about $25–30k annually to run, but we’re fortunate: local politicians help, the mayor supports us, and the schools help promote it. This year, we’re adding girls’ softball."
Beyond his work as a full-time patrolman, Evans runs the youth program while preparing for his fight. He’s also married with three children, is one class away from earning his master’s degree in criminal justice and public administration, and he serves on his district’s school board. "My wife keeps everything together," laughs Evans. "I get up at 6am, take the kids to school, hit the gym, do schoolwork when I can, then pick the kids up, head to work, and I’m in uniform from 4pm until midnight. Sleep usually happens between one and six in the morning."
While most debuting boxers dream of championship belts and million-dollar paydays, Evans is realistic about his goals in the squared circle. "I’m 38 – this is a young man’s game," reasons Evans. "I’m doing this to raise money for charity. Boxing is dangerous. You take it one fight at a time and learn from it.
Trainer Peter Manfredo Sr. is making sure that Evans is fully prepared for what awaits him in the ring. "My first coach was Peter Manfredo," says Evans. "Now he’s gonna be in my corner for my boxing debut. It’s not easy: sparring is intense. You’ve got road work, cardio – even though it’s four rounds, I train like it’s eight rounds. I’m sore and there’s wear and tear at my age, but if you’re not prepared, you’re gonna get hurt. That’s what makes boxing special."
What makes Evans special is his willingness to absorb punishment for the benefit of others – and he does it with a smile. "On February 28th, I’m gonna go out there and put on a good show. Katriel Young is a tough kid. He comes forward, likes to bang, and isn't afraid to throw punches. I’ll look like a boxer, feel like a boxer, and I’m gonna get hit. It’s okay. The kids will be there wearing their baseball jerseys, and we’re going to have fun."
Two weeks later, Evans will trade the boxing ring for the baseball diamond as more than 150 boys and girls ages 4-15 register for the spring season – proof that the Sweet Science has already delivered a victory beyond the ropes. If you’d like to donate to the Central Falls Youth Baseball Program, you can venmo @CFYB-1
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Ryan Garcia finally becomes a champion |
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Ryan Garcia W12 Mario Barrios... In Las Vegas, social media star and perennial troubled prospect Ryan Garcia finally became a champion. Garcia knocked down Mario Barrios in round one and cruised to a unanimous decision win to claim Barrios' WBC 147-pound championship. Official scores were 120-107, 119-108 and 118-109 in favor of Garcia, whose skills were far superior to the now ex-champ Barrios. MORE TO COME |
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Ryan Garcia finally becomes a champion
Ryan Garcia W12 Mario Barrios... In Las Vegas, social media star and perennial troubled prospect Ryan Garcia finally became a champion. Garcia knocked down Mario Barrios in round one and cruised to a unanimous decision win to claim Barrios' WBC 147-pound championship. Official scores were 120-107, 119-108 and 118-109 in favor of Garcia, whose skills were far superior to the now ex-champ Barrios. MORE TO COME |
Crews-Dezurn starts Twitter war vs. Shields on day of their fight! |
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After a fight broke out at the weigh-in that may or may not have injured Franchon Crews-Dezurn, she ignited a social medai war prior to today's women's heavyweight championship fight vs. Claressa Shields. The back-and-forth between the two women has become very public, with Crews-Dezurn tweeting, "I signed a contract with Salita Promotions to fight [Claressa Shields today, Feb. 22nd]. I was not aware a reality TV show was possibly being shot. I did not consent to being a part of any Wynn presentation. Zeus is a reality TV show which is part of the event. The rules have been bent and lines have crossed. My team and I have been set up and put in hostile environments to go viral and [create] content. My team and I have been ambushed and put in unsafe environments w/o proper protection or protocol. Despite what is being portrayed in the media [neither] my team nor I has ever been the aggressors in any situation. I was not aware I would be pushed or the events that took place. This is going too far. I was forced into this predicament. [This is] not the first time violence has erupted at a Claressa Shields event. My reputation is stellar on how my team and I conduct business."
Shields responded, "let’s be clear! Boxers get into it with each other all the time at weigh-ins! To make it seem like [this is] a set up is crazy! Three things happened yesterday when we faced off -- 1. The b rim of her hat hit me in the in the head first, 2. she took the hat off and our foreheads [were] on each other, she starts pressing her forehead into mine! 3. I pushed her out my face! After that push she laughed. Nothing else happened between her and I! Her husband [pro boxer Glenn Dezurn] decides he wants to try to get at me and was trying to start stuff. If we are being completely honest Franchon's husband Glenn is always into it with people at her fights. He tried to fight Shadasia [Green's] brother, he has gotten her put out of gyms, made her lose coaches, and then yesterday caused a whole brawl! He’s the problem and she knows it."
Crews-Dezurn came back with: "Claressa please stop lying & trying to use Glenn as a scapegoat for foolishness. [Claressa] and her [public relations] team are controlling the narrative. They sent a security guard to attack my husband in the back while he was walking away from the stage with other team members."
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Crews-Dezurn starts Twitter war vs. Shields on day of their fight!
After a fight broke out at the weigh-in that may or may not have injured Franchon Crews-Dezurn, she ignited a social medai war prior to today's women's heavyweight championship fight vs. Claressa Shields. The back-and-forth between the two women has become very public, with Crews-Dezurn tweeting, "I signed a contract with Salita Promotions to fight [Claressa Shields today, Feb. 22nd]. I was not aware a reality TV show was possibly being shot. I did not consent to being a part of any Wynn presentation. Zeus is a reality TV show which is part of the event. The rules have been bent and lines have crossed. My team and I have been set up and put in hostile environments to go viral and [create] content. My team and I have been ambushed and put in unsafe environments w/o proper protection or protocol. Despite what is being portrayed in the media [neither] my team nor I has ever been the aggressors in any situation. I was not aware I would be pushed or the events that took place. This is going too far. I was forced into this predicament. [This is] not the first time violence has erupted at a Claressa Shields event. My reputation is stellar on how my team and I conduct business."
Shields responded, "let’s be clear! Boxers get into it with each other all the time at weigh-ins! To make it seem like [this is] a set up is crazy! Three things happened yesterday when we faced off -- 1. The b rim of her hat hit me in the in the head first, 2. she took the hat off and our foreheads [were] on each other, she starts pressing her forehead into mine! 3. I pushed her out my face! After that push she laughed. Nothing else happened between her and I! Her husband [pro boxer Glenn Dezurn] decides he wants to try to get at me and was trying to start stuff. If we are being completely honest Franchon's husband Glenn is always into it with people at her fights. He tried to fight Shadasia [Green's] brother, he has gotten her put out of gyms, made her lose coaches, and then yesterday caused a whole brawl! He’s the problem and she knows it."
Crews-Dezurn came back with: "Claressa please stop lying & trying to use Glenn as a scapegoat for foolishness. [Claressa] and her [public relations] team are controlling the narrative. They sent a security guard to attack my husband in the back while he was walking away from the stage with other team members."
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Hitchins falls ill, cancels tonight's title defense |
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Hitchins falls ill, cancels tonight's title defense
Richardson Hitchins has pulled out of tonight's IBF junior welterweight title defense against Oscar Duarte due to illness. The fight was set to take place in Las Vegas as part of the Mario Barrios vs. Ryan Garcia pay-per-view show. |
Wood outboxes Warrington to win wide decision |
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Leigh Wood W12 Josh Warrington... In a battle of former featherweight champions, Leigh Wood outfought Josh Warrington to win a wide unanimous decision in Nottingham, England. This was a rematch, with Wood winning for the second time. Unlike the first encounter, in which Wood trailed and used a knockout to overcome the scorecards, this time he comprehensively outboxed Warrington and won by scores of 119-110, 119-109 and 117-111. Wood, a former WBA featherweight title holder, is now 29-4. This is likely the end of the road for Warrington (32-5-1), a former two-time world title holder. |
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Wood outboxes Warrington to win wide decision
Leigh Wood W12 Josh Warrington... In a battle of former featherweight champions, Leigh Wood outfought Josh Warrington to win a wide unanimous decision in Nottingham, England. This was a rematch, with Wood winning for the second time. Unlike the first encounter, in which Wood trailed and used a knockout to overcome the scorecards, this time he comprehensively outboxed Warrington and won by scores of 119-110, 119-109 and 117-111. Wood, a former WBA featherweight title holder, is now 29-4. This is likely the end of the road for Warrington (32-5-1), a former two-time world title holder. |
Inspirational Fawaz gains British title at age 37 |
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Bilal Fawaz W12 Ishamel Davis... The Nottingham, England co-feature was won by the inspirational Bilal Fawaz. A victim of human trafficking as a teenager, the Nigerian-born Fawaz became a British and Commonwealth junior middleweight champion at the age of 37. Fawaz is just 11-1-1 but he changed his life in the last five months with wins over Junaid Boston and now Ishamel Davis. Now an ex-champ, Davis (15-4) made a strong start but the energy he showed was absent in the latter stages and that allowed Fawaz to become more aggressive after the halfway point. With Fawaz's stronger finish, he takes the fight by the narrowest of margins with the scorecards reading 114-114, 115-113, and 115-114.
Dave Allen TKO1 Karim Berredjem... Popular British heavyweight Dave Allen had no intention of hanging around. He walked through Karim Berredjem, dropping him twice in the first round until the referee stopped the fight. Lest anyone think it was a premature stoppage, Berredjem's corner threw in the towel at the same time. Allen is now 25-8-2, rebounding from a punishing loss to Arslan Makhmudov. After such a brutal loss, the French Berredjem (12-11) was just what the doctor would have ordered for Allen.
Popular British heavyweight Dave Allen had no intention of hanging around. He walked through Karim Berredjem |
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Inspirational Fawaz gains British title at age 37
Bilal Fawaz W12 Ishamel Davis... The Nottingham, England co-feature was won by the inspirational Bilal Fawaz. A victim of human trafficking as a teenager, the Nigerian-born Fawaz became a British and Commonwealth junior middleweight champion at the age of 37. Fawaz is just 11-1-1 but he changed his life in the last five months with wins over Junaid Boston and now Ishamel Davis. Now an ex-champ, Davis (15-4) made a strong start but the energy he showed was absent in the latter stages and that allowed Fawaz to become more aggressive after the halfway point. With Fawaz's stronger finish, he takes the fight by the narrowest of margins with the scorecards reading 114-114, 115-113, and 115-114.
Dave Allen TKO1 Karim Berredjem... Popular British heavyweight Dave Allen had no intention of hanging around. He walked through Karim Berredjem, dropping him twice in the first round until the referee stopped the fight. Lest anyone think it was a premature stoppage, Berredjem's corner threw in the towel at the same time. Allen is now 25-8-2, rebounding from a punishing loss to Arslan Makhmudov. After such a brutal loss, the French Berredjem (12-11) was just what the doctor would have ordered for Allen.
Popular British heavyweight Dave Allen had no intention of hanging around. He walked through Karim Berredjem |
Ryan wins world title vs. totally unqualified foe |
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Sandy Ryan W10 Karla Ramos Zamora ... A WBC junior welterweight title fight in Nottingham, England went the way of Sandy Ryan after ten action-packed rounds. Mexico's Karla Ramos Zamora landed some big shots in the first half but Ryan would not be deterred and got her act together after the halfway mark. Both fighters could believe they did enough to win but it was Ryan, fighting in her home country, who got the nod by majority decision. Ryan is now a two-division champ with a merely decent record of 9-3-2, but let's not get carried away with the achievement. Zamora is just 12-11-2 and cannot possibly be considered a qualified world title contender. Shame on The WBC for sanctioning this as a vacant world title fight. |
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Ryan wins world title vs. totally unqualified foe
Sandy Ryan W10 Karla Ramos Zamora ... A WBC junior welterweight title fight in Nottingham, England went the way of Sandy Ryan after ten action-packed rounds. Mexico's Karla Ramos Zamora landed some big shots in the first half but Ryan would not be deterred and got her act together after the halfway mark. Both fighters could believe they did enough to win but it was Ryan, fighting in her home country, who got the nod by majority decision. Ryan is now a two-division champ with a merely decent record of 9-3-2, but let's not get carried away with the achievement. Zamora is just 12-11-2 and cannot possibly be considered a qualified world title contender. Shame on The WBC for sanctioning this as a vacant world title fight. |
Watch: Jin Sasaki takes 38 punches to land one! |
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Jin Sasaki TKO2 Marlon Paniamogan ... According to Nikkan Sports, Japanese welterweight Jin Sasaki (20-2-1) scored a dramatic second-round technical knockout victory over Filipino opponent Marlon Paniamogan on February 19th at Korakuen Hall. Sasaki was basically acting like a heavy bag for Paniamogan, absorbing approximately 38 consecutive punches in a defensive shell. Sasaki emerged from the shell to throw a single left hook that floored Paniamogan (13-5-1) and yielded a referee's stoppage. This was Sasaki's first fight since a knockout loss to Brian Norman in a 2025 WBO title challenge.
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Watch: Jin Sasaki takes 38 punches to land one!
Jin Sasaki TKO2 Marlon Paniamogan ... According to Nikkan Sports, Japanese welterweight Jin Sasaki (20-2-1) scored a dramatic second-round technical knockout victory over Filipino opponent Marlon Paniamogan on February 19th at Korakuen Hall. Sasaki was basically acting like a heavy bag for Paniamogan, absorbing approximately 38 consecutive punches in a defensive shell. Sasaki emerged from the shell to throw a single left hook that floored Paniamogan (13-5-1) and yielded a referee's stoppage. This was Sasaki's first fight since a knockout loss to Brian Norman in a 2025 WBO title challenge.
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Barrios and Garcia make weight |
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Mario Barrios will defend his WBC welterweight title this Saturday in Las Vegas against Ryan Garcia. On Friday, Barrios weighed 147 pounds while Garcia came in at 146.5. Barrios turned professional in 2013 and built a solid career at junior welterweight before moving up to welterweight. In 2019, he became an i9nterim champion, successfully defending a secondary 140-pound title without facing elite-level opposition. In 2024, after holding the interim WBC welterweight title, he was elevated to full champion once the belt became vacant. Barrios has a record of 29-2-2 with the two draws coming in his most recent bouts.
Garcia debuted as a professional in 2016 and quickly became one of the most talked-about names in boxing due to a social media presence. His dazzling hand speed and devastating left hook positioned him as one of the lightweight division’s brightest prospects. In 2021, he captured the interim WBC lightweight title by knocking out Luke Campbell, solidifying himself as a legitimate contender. Things haven't gone that well for fim since, including getting suspended for performance enhancing drugs. Garcia has a record of 24-1 with 20 KOs.
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Barrios and Garcia make weight
Mario Barrios will defend his WBC welterweight title this Saturday in Las Vegas against Ryan Garcia. On Friday, Barrios weighed 147 pounds while Garcia came in at 146.5. Barrios turned professional in 2013 and built a solid career at junior welterweight before moving up to welterweight. In 2019, he became an i9nterim champion, successfully defending a secondary 140-pound title without facing elite-level opposition. In 2024, after holding the interim WBC welterweight title, he was elevated to full champion once the belt became vacant. Barrios has a record of 29-2-2 with the two draws coming in his most recent bouts.
Garcia debuted as a professional in 2016 and quickly became one of the most talked-about names in boxing due to a social media presence. His dazzling hand speed and devastating left hook positioned him as one of the lightweight division’s brightest prospects. In 2021, he captured the interim WBC lightweight title by knocking out Luke Campbell, solidifying himself as a legitimate contender. Things haven't gone that well for fim since, including getting suspended for performance enhancing drugs. Garcia has a record of 24-1 with 20 KOs.
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Little-known company claims it will promote Mayweather comeback this summer |
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Little-known CSI Sports has issued a press release stating boxing legend Floyd “Money” Mayweather (50-0) will be coming out of retirement after a Spring 2026 Mike Tyson exhibition and that Mayweahter has signed an exclusive agreement with CSI Sports / Fight Sports to resume his professional boxing career. CSI says Mayweather's first official bout after the Tyson exhibition is slated for Summer 2026 against an opponent to be announced. Additional details, including event dates, broadcast information, and the professional opponent for Mayweather’s first sanctioned return will be announced in the coming weeks.
His last professional bout was in 2017, a win over mixed martial artist Conor McGregor. “I still have what it takes to set more records in the sport of boxing – from my upcoming Mike Tyson event to my next professional fight afterwards – no one will generate a bigger gate, have a larger global broadcast audience and generate more money with each event – than my events. And I plan to keep doing it with my global media partner, CSI Sports," said Mayweather.
“Signing Floyd Mayweather to un-retire after he captures another world-wide audience with his Mike Tyson match-up, highlights our commitment to providing our global audience with the most high-profile fighters in the sport. Floyd will once again continue to dominate boxing with the biggest audience and highest gross events of all time, and we are proud and privileged to be able to do with our global team at CSI Sports / Fight Sports. We look forward to even more announcements that will excite fans and continue to build the sport in 2026!” said co-founders Richard and Craig Miele.
In a professional boxing career that spanned three decades, Mayweather is known for his impeccable defensive skills, speed and strategic ring generalship. He has expertly managed a remarkable career, amassing an unblemished and unmatched record of 50 wins, no losses while taking on and decisively beating the very best of the era. He is responsible for all three of the highest grossing boxing events in history—vs. Manny Pacquiao, vs. Conor McGregor and vs. Canelo Alvarez—and has earned well over $1B in professional prize fighting alone. Mayweather has remained a prominent figure in the sport even after his official retirement with his unmatched and unprecedented record of 50 wins, no losses.
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Little-known company claims it will promote Mayweather comeback this summer
Little-known CSI Sports has issued a press release stating boxing legend Floyd “Money” Mayweather (50-0) will be coming out of retirement after a Spring 2026 Mike Tyson exhibition and that Mayweahter has signed an exclusive agreement with CSI Sports / Fight Sports to resume his professional boxing career. CSI says Mayweather's first official bout after the Tyson exhibition is slated for Summer 2026 against an opponent to be announced. Additional details, including event dates, broadcast information, and the professional opponent for Mayweather’s first sanctioned return will be announced in the coming weeks.
His last professional bout was in 2017, a win over mixed martial artist Conor McGregor. “I still have what it takes to set more records in the sport of boxing – from my upcoming Mike Tyson event to my next professional fight afterwards – no one will generate a bigger gate, have a larger global broadcast audience and generate more money with each event – than my events. And I plan to keep doing it with my global media partner, CSI Sports," said Mayweather.
“Signing Floyd Mayweather to un-retire after he captures another world-wide audience with his Mike Tyson match-up, highlights our commitment to providing our global audience with the most high-profile fighters in the sport. Floyd will once again continue to dominate boxing with the biggest audience and highest gross events of all time, and we are proud and privileged to be able to do with our global team at CSI Sports / Fight Sports. We look forward to even more announcements that will excite fans and continue to build the sport in 2026!” said co-founders Richard and Craig Miele.
In a professional boxing career that spanned three decades, Mayweather is known for his impeccable defensive skills, speed and strategic ring generalship. He has expertly managed a remarkable career, amassing an unblemished and unmatched record of 50 wins, no losses while taking on and decisively beating the very best of the era. He is responsible for all three of the highest grossing boxing events in history—vs. Manny Pacquiao, vs. Conor McGregor and vs. Canelo Alvarez—and has earned well over $1B in professional prize fighting alone. Mayweather has remained a prominent figure in the sport even after his official retirement with his unmatched and unprecedented record of 50 wins, no losses.
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Conor Benn jilts Matchroom for Zuffa |
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British boxing star Conor Benn announced he is bolting the Matchroom roster to fight under the Zuffa Boxing banner. Matchroom and its leader, Eddie Hearn, faithfully defended Benn when he tested positive for banned perfromance enhancing substances. But boxing is not a sport known for loyalty. Here is what Benn wrote: "First and foremost, I want to thank Eddie [Heanr] and the entire team at Matchroom for everything they’ve done for me over the past decade. From guiding me when I first turned pro, to headlining stadium shows, they were not only with me for those highlight moments but stood shoulder to shoulder with me during the tough times. It’s been a journey beyond anything we could have imagined, and for their belief, support, and guidance, I will always be truly grateful, but Zuffa Boxing presented me with an opportunity I simply couldn’t refuse. I’d love Eddie to continue to be part of my team and for our partnership to evolve in this new chapter. I’m filled with excitement and hunger for what’s ahead with Zuffa Boxing. I want the legacy fights, the biggest nights, the biggest stages. I fear no man at any weight, and I’m ready to give the fans the fights they’ve been calling for. I’m in my prime, and together we have bold, ambitious plans."
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Conor Benn jilts Matchroom for Zuffa
British boxing star Conor Benn announced he is bolting the Matchroom roster to fight under the Zuffa Boxing banner. Matchroom and its leader, Eddie Hearn, faithfully defended Benn when he tested positive for banned perfromance enhancing substances. But boxing is not a sport known for loyalty. Here is what Benn wrote: "First and foremost, I want to thank Eddie [Heanr] and the entire team at Matchroom for everything they’ve done for me over the past decade. From guiding me when I first turned pro, to headlining stadium shows, they were not only with me for those highlight moments but stood shoulder to shoulder with me during the tough times. It’s been a journey beyond anything we could have imagined, and for their belief, support, and guidance, I will always be truly grateful, but Zuffa Boxing presented me with an opportunity I simply couldn’t refuse. I’d love Eddie to continue to be part of my team and for our partnership to evolve in this new chapter. I’m filled with excitement and hunger for what’s ahead with Zuffa Boxing. I want the legacy fights, the biggest nights, the biggest stages. I fear no man at any weight, and I’m ready to give the fans the fights they’ve been calling for. I’m in my prime, and together we have bold, ambitious plans."
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IBF delays Bivol vs. Eifert purse bid by a few days |
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UPDATE: The Bivol vs. Eifert purse bid has been postponed by the IBF until Tuesday, February 24th. Original story (Feb. 12, 2026): The IBF announced that a purse bid for light heavyweight champion Dimitrii Bivol's mandatory defense against Michael Eifert of Germany has been rescheduled from February 13th to February 20th. Bivol (pictured) is the true world champion of the 175-pound division based on his winning the second of two undisputed championship bouts against fellow Russian Artur Beterbiev. But he has not fought since February of 2025. Eifert is very lightly credentialed at 13-1, with his best win coming in March 2023 in an IBF eliminator vs. former world champion Jean Pascal. Eifert has only fought once since then against a nondescript opponent, instead choosing to wait for this IBF title shot to come his way. Bivol is also recognized as champion by the WBA and WBO and actually is the true world 175-pound monarch, so there is little pressure on him to actually fight Eifert if he is not inclined to do so.
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IBF delays Bivol vs. Eifert purse bid by a few days
UPDATE: The Bivol vs. Eifert purse bid has been postponed by the IBF until Tuesday, February 24th. Original story (Feb. 12, 2026): The IBF announced that a purse bid for light heavyweight champion Dimitrii Bivol's mandatory defense against Michael Eifert of Germany has been rescheduled from February 13th to February 20th. Bivol (pictured) is the true world champion of the 175-pound division based on his winning the second of two undisputed championship bouts against fellow Russian Artur Beterbiev. But he has not fought since February of 2025. Eifert is very lightly credentialed at 13-1, with his best win coming in March 2023 in an IBF eliminator vs. former world champion Jean Pascal. Eifert has only fought once since then against a nondescript opponent, instead choosing to wait for this IBF title shot to come his way. Bivol is also recognized as champion by the WBA and WBO and actually is the true world 175-pound monarch, so there is little pressure on him to actually fight Eifert if he is not inclined to do so.
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Zuffa titles one step closer to reality |
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Zuffa boxing championships to another step towards becoming a reality. With the first title fight about two weeks away, the promotional company unvelied the actual belt design, presenting it to Truki Alalshikh, the morst powerful man in boxing and the cairman of Saudi Arabia's General Entertainemnt Authority, on Wednesday. Alalshikh said, "I am happy, I met with my brothers Dana [White] and Nick [Kahn] in Las Vegas and they gifted me the first Zuffa Boxing belt - made with beautiful diamonds. This is a huge start for Zuffa, and only the very best will be lucky enough to win this belt." Australia's Jai Opetaia and Brandon Glanton of the United States will fight for the Zuffa Boxing cruiserweight title on March 8th at the Meta Apex in Las Vegas.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
FEB. 11, 2026: Zuffa Boxing has announced that, for the main Event in Zuffa Boxing 04, Australia's Jai Opetaia and Brandon Glanton of the United States will fight for the inaugural Zuffa Boxing cruiserweight championship. The fight will take place on March 8th at the Meta Apex in Las Vegas. Opetaia is the reigning IBF champion. His record is 29-0, with three IBF defenses against non-descript challengers in 2025. His efforts at unification have been largely ignored by the other champions and sanctioning bodies. Glanton is 2103 and is coming off a 2025 that saw him lose to former cruiserweight champion Chris Billam-Smith then defeat former light heavyweight champion Marcus Browne.
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Zuffa titles one step closer to reality
Zuffa boxing championships to another step towards becoming a reality. With the first title fight about two weeks away, the promotional company unvelied the actual belt design, presenting it to Truki Alalshikh, the morst powerful man in boxing and the cairman of Saudi Arabia's General Entertainemnt Authority, on Wednesday. Alalshikh said, "I am happy, I met with my brothers Dana [White] and Nick [Kahn] in Las Vegas and they gifted me the first Zuffa Boxing belt - made with beautiful diamonds. This is a huge start for Zuffa, and only the very best will be lucky enough to win this belt." Australia's Jai Opetaia and Brandon Glanton of the United States will fight for the Zuffa Boxing cruiserweight title on March 8th at the Meta Apex in Las Vegas.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
FEB. 11, 2026: Zuffa Boxing has announced that, for the main Event in Zuffa Boxing 04, Australia's Jai Opetaia and Brandon Glanton of the United States will fight for the inaugural Zuffa Boxing cruiserweight championship. The fight will take place on March 8th at the Meta Apex in Las Vegas. Opetaia is the reigning IBF champion. His record is 29-0, with three IBF defenses against non-descript challengers in 2025. His efforts at unification have been largely ignored by the other champions and sanctioning bodies. Glanton is 2103 and is coming off a 2025 that saw him lose to former cruiserweight champion Chris Billam-Smith then defeat former light heavyweight champion Marcus Browne.
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Spotlight on Barboza vs. Sims |
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Arnold Barboza Jr. is back! After more than nine months away from the ring, the California native returns on March 14th at the Honda Center in Anaheim, where he faces Chicago’s Kenneth Sims Jr. in his welterweight debut. Stepping up to 147 pounds against a proven contender, Barboza begins a new chapter with the same focus and intensity that has defined his career thus far. His last outing came on May 2nd in New York City, when he met then-reigning world junior welterweight champion Teofimo Lopez under the bright lights of Times Square. In a battle that was years in the making, Barboza showcased his composure and grit but came up short that night. Although he experienced the first loss of his professional career, he strengthened his resolve to return better than ever.
Before the Lopez loss, Barboza captured the WBO interim title with a hard-fought split decision victory over Jack Catterall in Manchester, UK, proving he could travel into hostile territory, beat the odds and emerge victorious against world-class opposition. Since turning professional in 2013, Barboza Jr. has compiled a resume that includes quality wins over Alex Saucedo, Mike Alvarado, Jose Pedraza and Jose Ramirez. Known for his technical approach, sharp ring IQ and versatile style, he has established himself as one of the sport’s most disciplined and consistent competitors — and now looks to make his mark in the welterweight division.
Sims enters this California vs. Chicago clash fresh off the biggest moment of his career, a WBA title eliminator against Mexico’s Oscar Duarte at Credit Union 1 Arena in Chicago. Fighting in front of a passionate hometown crowd, “Bossman” displayed his slick, technical style against Duarte’s relentless pressure in a twelve-round battle. Though the contest ended in a majority decision loss, Sims left with his stock elevated — showcasing composure and championship potential on a major stage. The performance was the latest chapter in his journey through the professional ranks. Since turning pro in 2014, Sims has built a resume highlighted by an upset victory over previously undefeated Elvis Rodriguez in 2021. He followed that with six consecutive victories. Before his professional success, Sims Jr. was a decorated amateur — a nine-time national champion and proud member of Team USA. He competed in the 2012 Olympic Trials, narrowly falling to future pro champion Jose Ramirez, and later represented the United States at the 2013 World Championships.
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Spotlight on Barboza vs. Sims
Arnold Barboza Jr. is back! After more than nine months away from the ring, the California native returns on March 14th at the Honda Center in Anaheim, where he faces Chicago’s Kenneth Sims Jr. in his welterweight debut. Stepping up to 147 pounds against a proven contender, Barboza begins a new chapter with the same focus and intensity that has defined his career thus far. His last outing came on May 2nd in New York City, when he met then-reigning world junior welterweight champion Teofimo Lopez under the bright lights of Times Square. In a battle that was years in the making, Barboza showcased his composure and grit but came up short that night. Although he experienced the first loss of his professional career, he strengthened his resolve to return better than ever.
Before the Lopez loss, Barboza captured the WBO interim title with a hard-fought split decision victory over Jack Catterall in Manchester, UK, proving he could travel into hostile territory, beat the odds and emerge victorious against world-class opposition. Since turning professional in 2013, Barboza Jr. has compiled a resume that includes quality wins over Alex Saucedo, Mike Alvarado, Jose Pedraza and Jose Ramirez. Known for his technical approach, sharp ring IQ and versatile style, he has established himself as one of the sport’s most disciplined and consistent competitors — and now looks to make his mark in the welterweight division.
Sims enters this California vs. Chicago clash fresh off the biggest moment of his career, a WBA title eliminator against Mexico’s Oscar Duarte at Credit Union 1 Arena in Chicago. Fighting in front of a passionate hometown crowd, “Bossman” displayed his slick, technical style against Duarte’s relentless pressure in a twelve-round battle. Though the contest ended in a majority decision loss, Sims left with his stock elevated — showcasing composure and championship potential on a major stage. The performance was the latest chapter in his journey through the professional ranks. Since turning pro in 2014, Sims has built a resume highlighted by an upset victory over previously undefeated Elvis Rodriguez in 2021. He followed that with six consecutive victories. Before his professional success, Sims Jr. was a decorated amateur — a nine-time national champion and proud member of Team USA. He competed in the 2012 Olympic Trials, narrowly falling to future pro champion Jose Ramirez, and later represented the United States at the 2013 World Championships.
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Two IBO titles at stake in Dublin on March 14th |
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On Saturday, March 14th, undefeated Pierce "Big Bang" O'Leary takes on his biggest competition to date when Mark Chamberlain crosses the Irish Sea to fight him for the vacant IBO junior welterweight title in Dublin. (The last holder of this title was Adam Azim in 2025). O'Leary is 18-0 with a career-best win over then-undefeated Hovhannes Martirosyan in 2024. Chamberlain is 17-1-1 and coming off a draw with undefeated Jack Rafferty in August. Joining Chamberlain on the journey will be fellow Brit Colm Murphy (16-0), who takes a massive step up in competition when he fights Irishman Jono Carroll for the vacant IBO junior lightweight title. (The last holder of this title was Anthony Cacace in 2025). At 25-3, Carroll is a certified warrior whose best win saw him retire Scott Quigg in 2020.
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Two IBO titles at stake in Dublin on March 14th
On Saturday, March 14th, undefeated Pierce "Big Bang" O'Leary takes on his biggest competition to date when Mark Chamberlain crosses the Irish Sea to fight him for the vacant IBO junior welterweight title in Dublin. (The last holder of this title was Adam Azim in 2025). O'Leary is 18-0 with a career-best win over then-undefeated Hovhannes Martirosyan in 2024. Chamberlain is 17-1-1 and coming off a draw with undefeated Jack Rafferty in August. Joining Chamberlain on the journey will be fellow Brit Colm Murphy (16-0), who takes a massive step up in competition when he fights Irishman Jono Carroll for the vacant IBO junior lightweight title. (The last holder of this title was Anthony Cacace in 2025). At 25-3, Carroll is a certified warrior whose best win saw him retire Scott Quigg in 2020.
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