Dalton Smith extends Matchroom contract |
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WBC junior welterweight champion Dalton Smith has signed a long-term contract extension with Matchroom Boxing. His next ring action will his first title defenbse, which will take place on home soil when he faces ex-title holder Alberto Puello at Sheffield’s Utilita Arena on Saturday, June 6th, live on DAZN. Smith follows in the footsteps of unified super flyweight champion Jesse ‘Bam’ Rodriguez in putting pen to paper on a multi-fight agreement that exclusively ties him in with Eddie Heanr's Matchroom for years to come. “Matchroom Boxing backed me from day one. They allowed me to build at the right pace, to collect titles, to become a regular headliner in Sheffield and to focus on achieving my dream of becoming WBC world champion,” said Smith.
Smith continued, “I’m happy, I’m continuing to improve in the ring – and I know I’ve got the best team around me. There’s a lot of talk about loyalty these days, but my head hasn’t been turned. I’m delighted to commit my future to this winning team as we chase more success together. With Frank [Smith], Eddie and the wider Matchroom team, my advisor Sean O’Toole, and my whole training team led by my dad, we’ve got something special. This is the team that will take me to that next level. I will show everyone that I am the best 140lbs boxer in the world by collecting every belt in the division, and of course to box at Hillsborough along the way. First up is to deal with my WBC mandatory, Alberto Puello. With two WBC title fights on the bill, June 6 is going to be a massive night in Sheffield.”
Hearn, Matchroom's Sport Chairman, is thrilled to secure Smith’s signature and believes his stunning World Title win over Subriel Matias in the USA at the beginning of the year will prove to be the springboard to many more memorable nights for the Yorkshireman. “That night in Brooklyn ranks up there for me as one of the greatest away day wins from any British fighter,” said Hearn. “The celebrations were euphoric and the memories will live forever. But this young man is not only the fighting pride of Sheffield, he’s a future Hall of Famer for British boxing – and I believe there are many more special nights on the horizon for him, starting on June 6 at the Utilita Arena, live on DAZN. I’m so pleased that he has signed a long-term deal with us. We can begin to manuever a very exciting future ahead. The road to undisputed begins now.”
Former champion Skye Nicolson – who headlines in Australia next week in Melbourne against Mariah Turner on Wednesday, April 29th – is another star boxer who signed a long-term deal with Matchroom recently, along with British & Commonwealth middleweight holder George Liddard and English lightweight titlist Giorgio Visioli.
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Dalton Smith extends Matchroom contract
WBC junior welterweight champion Dalton Smith has signed a long-term contract extension with Matchroom Boxing. His next ring action will his first title defenbse, which will take place on home soil when he faces ex-title holder Alberto Puello at Sheffield’s Utilita Arena on Saturday, June 6th, live on DAZN. Smith follows in the footsteps of unified super flyweight champion Jesse ‘Bam’ Rodriguez in putting pen to paper on a multi-fight agreement that exclusively ties him in with Eddie Heanr's Matchroom for years to come. “Matchroom Boxing backed me from day one. They allowed me to build at the right pace, to collect titles, to become a regular headliner in Sheffield and to focus on achieving my dream of becoming WBC world champion,” said Smith.
Smith continued, “I’m happy, I’m continuing to improve in the ring – and I know I’ve got the best team around me. There’s a lot of talk about loyalty these days, but my head hasn’t been turned. I’m delighted to commit my future to this winning team as we chase more success together. With Frank [Smith], Eddie and the wider Matchroom team, my advisor Sean O’Toole, and my whole training team led by my dad, we’ve got something special. This is the team that will take me to that next level. I will show everyone that I am the best 140lbs boxer in the world by collecting every belt in the division, and of course to box at Hillsborough along the way. First up is to deal with my WBC mandatory, Alberto Puello. With two WBC title fights on the bill, June 6 is going to be a massive night in Sheffield.”
Hearn, Matchroom's Sport Chairman, is thrilled to secure Smith’s signature and believes his stunning World Title win over Subriel Matias in the USA at the beginning of the year will prove to be the springboard to many more memorable nights for the Yorkshireman. “That night in Brooklyn ranks up there for me as one of the greatest away day wins from any British fighter,” said Hearn. “The celebrations were euphoric and the memories will live forever. But this young man is not only the fighting pride of Sheffield, he’s a future Hall of Famer for British boxing – and I believe there are many more special nights on the horizon for him, starting on June 6 at the Utilita Arena, live on DAZN. I’m so pleased that he has signed a long-term deal with us. We can begin to manuever a very exciting future ahead. The road to undisputed begins now.”
Former champion Skye Nicolson – who headlines in Australia next week in Melbourne against Mariah Turner on Wednesday, April 29th – is another star boxer who signed a long-term deal with Matchroom recently, along with British & Commonwealth middleweight holder George Liddard and English lightweight titlist Giorgio Visioli.
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Boxingtalk salutes the late Miguel Canto |
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Boxingtalk belated salutes Mexican boxing icon Miguel Canto Solís, who boxed under the name Miguel Canto and was nicknamed “El Maestro” and “The Little Master” for his refined technical brilliance. Canto passed away at the age of 78 on April 16th in his hometown of Mérida in Mexico's Yucatán. While the exact cause has not been officially determined, medical reports point to a severe chronic neurodegenerative condition that had affected him in recent years. Canto reigned as WBC flyweight world champion from 1975 through 1979. During that stretch, he defended his title 15 times, winning his first 14 defenses before losing the crown by unanimous decision to South Korea’s Chang Hee Park. By then, Canto was 31 years old and had already spent a decade in the professional ranks, having debuted in 1969, with a third-round stoppage **loss** to Raúl Hernández — one of just nine defeats in a career that included 61 victories, 15 by knockout, and four draws.
Canto was the first boxer from Yucatán to reach the pinnacle of world championship boxing. To this day, he remains the only fighter from that Mexican state inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, New York. Other Yucatán-born champions include Gustavo “Guty” Espadas, Freddy Castillo and Lupe Madera — but none matched the technical artistry and global recognition of Canto.
Canto's early career was rocky: a knockout loss in his debut, followed by another defeat shortly thereafter. But under the guidance of his lifelong trainer Jesús “Cholain” Rivero — a university-trained philosopher who dedicated himself to boxing out of passion — Canto refined his style and corrected key technical flaws.
What emerged was one of the purest embodiments of boxing’s core principle: hit and don’t get hit. As he built his career, Canto developed into a master technician, combining footwork, timing, and defensive awareness to neutralize opponents. After a series of wins, draws, and setbacks, he earned his first shot at the WBC flyweight title on August 4, 1973, in Maracaibo, Venezuela against Betulio González. Fighting in hostile territory, he dropped a hard-fought fifteen-round decision.
His redemption came on January 8, 1975, in Sendai, Japan, where he defeated Shoji Oguma in a grueling battle to claim the world title. From there, Canto embarked on a dominant championship run, taking on all challengers across the globe. He successfully defended his title against a roster of top flyweights, including revenge vs. González, Jiro Takada, Ignacio Espinal, Susumu Hanagata, Orlando Javierto, Luis Reyes Arnal, Kimio Furesawa, Martín Vargas, and Oguma in a rematch, among others. His reign was defined not by knockout power, but by surgical precision and ring intelligence.
Canto finally lost his title to Chang Hee Park in South Korea in 1979 and later fought to a draw in their rematch. After a few more bouts, including wins and eventual losses as wear and tear took their toll, he retired in 1982 — closing the book on a remarkable career.
Canto is universally regarded by boxing historians as one of the ten greatest flyweights of all time. That elite list is often topped by Welsh legend Jimmy Wilde, “The Mighty Atom,” who dominated the division in the early 20th century. Alongside Canto and Wilde are names like Masao Ohba, Pone Kingpetch, Peter Kane, Benny Lynch, Pascual Pérez, Frankie Genaro, Pancho Villa, Midget Wolgast, Fidel La Barba, and Betulio González — a collection of fighters who defined excellence at 112 pounds.
Miguel Canto may not have been a knockout artist, but he was something rarer: a master craftsman inside the ring. Boxingtalk joins the WBA, the WBC and the entire boxing community in saluting the great Maestro and sending our deepest sympathy to the friends and family of Miguel Canto.
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Boxingtalk salutes the late Miguel Canto
Boxingtalk belated salutes Mexican boxing icon Miguel Canto Solís, who boxed under the name Miguel Canto and was nicknamed “El Maestro” and “The Little Master” for his refined technical brilliance. Canto passed away at the age of 78 on April 16th in his hometown of Mérida in Mexico's Yucatán. While the exact cause has not been officially determined, medical reports point to a severe chronic neurodegenerative condition that had affected him in recent years. Canto reigned as WBC flyweight world champion from 1975 through 1979. During that stretch, he defended his title 15 times, winning his first 14 defenses before losing the crown by unanimous decision to South Korea’s Chang Hee Park. By then, Canto was 31 years old and had already spent a decade in the professional ranks, having debuted in 1969, with a third-round stoppage **loss** to Raúl Hernández — one of just nine defeats in a career that included 61 victories, 15 by knockout, and four draws.
Canto was the first boxer from Yucatán to reach the pinnacle of world championship boxing. To this day, he remains the only fighter from that Mexican state inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, New York. Other Yucatán-born champions include Gustavo “Guty” Espadas, Freddy Castillo and Lupe Madera — but none matched the technical artistry and global recognition of Canto.
Canto's early career was rocky: a knockout loss in his debut, followed by another defeat shortly thereafter. But under the guidance of his lifelong trainer Jesús “Cholain” Rivero — a university-trained philosopher who dedicated himself to boxing out of passion — Canto refined his style and corrected key technical flaws.
What emerged was one of the purest embodiments of boxing’s core principle: hit and don’t get hit. As he built his career, Canto developed into a master technician, combining footwork, timing, and defensive awareness to neutralize opponents. After a series of wins, draws, and setbacks, he earned his first shot at the WBC flyweight title on August 4, 1973, in Maracaibo, Venezuela against Betulio González. Fighting in hostile territory, he dropped a hard-fought fifteen-round decision.
His redemption came on January 8, 1975, in Sendai, Japan, where he defeated Shoji Oguma in a grueling battle to claim the world title. From there, Canto embarked on a dominant championship run, taking on all challengers across the globe. He successfully defended his title against a roster of top flyweights, including revenge vs. González, Jiro Takada, Ignacio Espinal, Susumu Hanagata, Orlando Javierto, Luis Reyes Arnal, Kimio Furesawa, Martín Vargas, and Oguma in a rematch, among others. His reign was defined not by knockout power, but by surgical precision and ring intelligence.
Canto finally lost his title to Chang Hee Park in South Korea in 1979 and later fought to a draw in their rematch. After a few more bouts, including wins and eventual losses as wear and tear took their toll, he retired in 1982 — closing the book on a remarkable career.
Canto is universally regarded by boxing historians as one of the ten greatest flyweights of all time. That elite list is often topped by Welsh legend Jimmy Wilde, “The Mighty Atom,” who dominated the division in the early 20th century. Alongside Canto and Wilde are names like Masao Ohba, Pone Kingpetch, Peter Kane, Benny Lynch, Pascual Pérez, Frankie Genaro, Pancho Villa, Midget Wolgast, Fidel La Barba, and Betulio González — a collection of fighters who defined excellence at 112 pounds.
Miguel Canto may not have been a knockout artist, but he was something rarer: a master craftsman inside the ring. Boxingtalk joins the WBA, the WBC and the entire boxing community in saluting the great Maestro and sending our deepest sympathy to the friends and family of Miguel Canto.
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Warren "gutted" about canceled show after Okolie positive doping test |
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In the wake of heavyweight Lawrence Okolie failing a doping test, promoter Frank Warren (pictured) issued the following statement on behalf of Queensberry, the promoter of this week's now-canceled Paris show: "[I am] completely gutted to have to cancel the show in Paris this weekend. Ourselves and the DAZN team in France worked incredibly hard to try to keep the show alive but ultimately it wasn’t possible. It’s a real shame for the fighters who worked hard in camp, the fans that bought tickets and our broadcast partner DAZN, but sadly it’s a situation none of us could have predicted. The French supporters have been marvellous and there’s clearly a real passion for boxing so we hope to have news for them soon."
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
APRIL 21, 2026: Queensberry Promotions has just revealed that "the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) has informed Queensberry that heavyweight Lawrence Okolie returned an adverse finding following ant anti-doping test conducted ahead of the show in Paris [scheduled for] this Saturday. A further update regarding the event will be made in due course." A few hours later, Queensberry announced that "Due to circumstances outside of our control, Queensberry and DAZN have regrettably made the decision to cancel this Saturday's scheduled event in Paris. For refunds, please contact your ticket [vendor]." Okolie, who has held world titles at cruiserweight and bridgerweight, was set to fight former Olympic champion Tony Yoka in Yoka's hometown this weekend.
Okolie posted the following statement on his Instagram account: "Before anyone starts imagining the worst, following my bicep injury last year, I sustained an elbow injury on the same arm during this camp. I had a treatment on it and now we are here. I truly hope sense prevails. I will of course be fully cooperating with all relevant authorities and I’m confident any investigation will clear my name. I won’t be making any further comment at this time. Thank you for all your support and see you soon."
Completely gutted to have to cancel the show in Paris this weekend.
Ourselves and the DAZN team in France worked incredibly hard to try to keep the show alive but ultimately it wasn’t possible.
It’s a real shame for the fighters who worked hard in camp, the fans that bought tickets and our broadcast partner DAZN, but sadly it’s a situation none of us could have predicted.
The French supporters have been marvellous and there’s clearly a real passion for boxing so we hope to have news for them soon.
With the spotlight set for Atlanta on May 9th, Ra’eese Aleem is entering the biggest fight of his career with momentum, determination, and one clear objective—to leave as the new IBF featherweight world champion.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
APRIL 21, 2026: Queensberry Promotions has just revealed that "the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) has informed Queensberry that heavyweight Lawrence Okolie returned an adverse finding following ant anti-doping test conducted ahead of the show in Paris [scheduled for] this Saturday. A further update regarding the event will be made in due course." A few hours later, Queensberry announced that "Due to circumstances outside of our control, Queensberry and DAZN have regrettably made the decision to cancel this Saturday's scheduled event in Paris. For refunds, please contact your ticket [vendor]." Okolie, who has held world titles at cruiserweight and bridgerweight, was set to fight former Olympic champion Tony Yoka in Yoka's hometown this weekend.
Okolie posted the following statement on his Instagram account: "Before anyone starts imagining the worst, following my bicep injury last year, I sustained an elbow injury on the same arm during this camp. I had a treatment on it and now we are here. I truly hope sense prevails. I will of course be fully cooperating with all relevant authorities and I’m confident any investigation will clear my name. I won’t be making any further comment at this time. Thank you for all your support and see you soon."
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Warren "gutted" about canceled show after Okolie positive doping test
In the wake of heavyweight Lawrence Okolie failing a doping test, promoter Frank Warren (pictured) issued the following statement on behalf of Queensberry, the promoter of this week's now-canceled Paris show: "[I am] completely gutted to have to cancel the show in Paris this weekend. Ourselves and the DAZN team in France worked incredibly hard to try to keep the show alive but ultimately it wasn’t possible. It’s a real shame for the fighters who worked hard in camp, the fans that bought tickets and our broadcast partner DAZN, but sadly it’s a situation none of us could have predicted. The French supporters have been marvellous and there’s clearly a real passion for boxing so we hope to have news for them soon."
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
APRIL 21, 2026: Queensberry Promotions has just revealed that "the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) has informed Queensberry that heavyweight Lawrence Okolie returned an adverse finding following ant anti-doping test conducted ahead of the show in Paris [scheduled for] this Saturday. A further update regarding the event will be made in due course." A few hours later, Queensberry announced that "Due to circumstances outside of our control, Queensberry and DAZN have regrettably made the decision to cancel this Saturday's scheduled event in Paris. For refunds, please contact your ticket [vendor]." Okolie, who has held world titles at cruiserweight and bridgerweight, was set to fight former Olympic champion Tony Yoka in Yoka's hometown this weekend.
Okolie posted the following statement on his Instagram account: "Before anyone starts imagining the worst, following my bicep injury last year, I sustained an elbow injury on the same arm during this camp. I had a treatment on it and now we are here. I truly hope sense prevails. I will of course be fully cooperating with all relevant authorities and I’m confident any investigation will clear my name. I won’t be making any further comment at this time. Thank you for all your support and see you soon."
Completely gutted to have to cancel the show in Paris this weekend.
Ourselves and the DAZN team in France worked incredibly hard to try to keep the show alive but ultimately it wasn’t possible.
It’s a real shame for the fighters who worked hard in camp, the fans that bought tickets and our broadcast partner DAZN, but sadly it’s a situation none of us could have predicted.
The French supporters have been marvellous and there’s clearly a real passion for boxing so we hope to have news for them soon.
With the spotlight set for Atlanta on May 9th, Ra’eese Aleem is entering the biggest fight of his career with momentum, determination, and one clear objective—to leave as the new IBF featherweight world champion.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
APRIL 21, 2026: Queensberry Promotions has just revealed that "the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) has informed Queensberry that heavyweight Lawrence Okolie returned an adverse finding following ant anti-doping test conducted ahead of the show in Paris [scheduled for] this Saturday. A further update regarding the event will be made in due course." A few hours later, Queensberry announced that "Due to circumstances outside of our control, Queensberry and DAZN have regrettably made the decision to cancel this Saturday's scheduled event in Paris. For refunds, please contact your ticket [vendor]." Okolie, who has held world titles at cruiserweight and bridgerweight, was set to fight former Olympic champion Tony Yoka in Yoka's hometown this weekend.
Okolie posted the following statement on his Instagram account: "Before anyone starts imagining the worst, following my bicep injury last year, I sustained an elbow injury on the same arm during this camp. I had a treatment on it and now we are here. I truly hope sense prevails. I will of course be fully cooperating with all relevant authorities and I’m confident any investigation will clear my name. I won’t be making any further comment at this time. Thank you for all your support and see you soon."
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A few words with heavyweight Lenier Pero |
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Cuba's Lenier “El Justiciero” Pero (13-0, 8 KOs) is approaching a career-defining moment as he prepares to face Jarrell “Big Baby” Miller (27-1-2, 22 KOs) in an eliminator for the WBA heavyweight title on Saturday night (April 25th) at BleauLive Theater at Fontainebleau Las Vegas, live worldwide on DAZN. Pero has embraced the magnitude of the moment while maintaining the discipline that has defined his rise. Pero has spent his training camp in Las Vegas working alongside respected trainer Bob Santos, focusing on sharpening both his physical tools and tactical awareness. “This camp has been all about getting better every day,” said Pero. “Working with Bob Santos, we focus on doing the small things right, staying disciplined and understanding the game. Every session has a purpose. I feel more in control and more confident going into this fight.”
Facing a seasoned and physically imposing opponent in Miller, Pero approaches the matchup with respect, but also with clarity in his own abilities. “Miller’s a strong guy who keeps coming and likes to make it a fight,” Pero continued. “He can take a punch and doesn’t back down, so I know what I’m up against. But this isn’t just about who’s stronger, it’s about staying calm, sticking to my game plan, and controlling the fight with intelligence. That’s how you win fights like this. At this level, the smarter fighter usually wins.”
For the first time in his professional career, Pero will step into the ring in Las Vegas, boxing’s global stage, a moment he views with both pride and purpose. “Fighting in Las Vegas means a lot because so many great fighters have fought here,”Pero stated. “It’s the biggest stage in boxing, it’s the boxing capitol of the world, so it’s both an honor and a big responsibility. I’m excited for the opportunity to show a lot more people what I can do and prove I belong at the top level.”
Beyond rankings and titles, Pero carries a deeper motivation, representing his homeland and inspiring those who follow his journey from Cuba. “This win isn’t just for me,” Pero concluded. “It means a lot to the people back home in Cuba. I carry them with me every time I step in the ring. If I can make them proud and inspire even one kid to believe in themselves, then it’s all worth it. The goal is to come out on top and get my shot a World title.”
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A few words with heavyweight Lenier Pero
Cuba's Lenier “El Justiciero” Pero (13-0, 8 KOs) is approaching a career-defining moment as he prepares to face Jarrell “Big Baby” Miller (27-1-2, 22 KOs) in an eliminator for the WBA heavyweight title on Saturday night (April 25th) at BleauLive Theater at Fontainebleau Las Vegas, live worldwide on DAZN. Pero has embraced the magnitude of the moment while maintaining the discipline that has defined his rise. Pero has spent his training camp in Las Vegas working alongside respected trainer Bob Santos, focusing on sharpening both his physical tools and tactical awareness. “This camp has been all about getting better every day,” said Pero. “Working with Bob Santos, we focus on doing the small things right, staying disciplined and understanding the game. Every session has a purpose. I feel more in control and more confident going into this fight.”
Facing a seasoned and physically imposing opponent in Miller, Pero approaches the matchup with respect, but also with clarity in his own abilities. “Miller’s a strong guy who keeps coming and likes to make it a fight,” Pero continued. “He can take a punch and doesn’t back down, so I know what I’m up against. But this isn’t just about who’s stronger, it’s about staying calm, sticking to my game plan, and controlling the fight with intelligence. That’s how you win fights like this. At this level, the smarter fighter usually wins.”
For the first time in his professional career, Pero will step into the ring in Las Vegas, boxing’s global stage, a moment he views with both pride and purpose. “Fighting in Las Vegas means a lot because so many great fighters have fought here,”Pero stated. “It’s the biggest stage in boxing, it’s the boxing capitol of the world, so it’s both an honor and a big responsibility. I’m excited for the opportunity to show a lot more people what I can do and prove I belong at the top level.”
Beyond rankings and titles, Pero carries a deeper motivation, representing his homeland and inspiring those who follow his journey from Cuba. “This win isn’t just for me,” Pero concluded. “It means a lot to the people back home in Cuba. I carry them with me every time I step in the ring. If I can make them proud and inspire even one kid to believe in themselves, then it’s all worth it. The goal is to come out on top and get my shot a World title.”
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Denmark hosts Bank vs. Ndjolonimu eliminator |
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Undefeated Danish fighter Jacob Bank (18-0, 10 KOs) faces the toughest test of his career as he takes on Paulinus Ndjolonimu (20-1, 18 KOs) of Namibia in a WBC super middleweight world title eliminator. According to Boxers, the fight takes place in Kolding, Denmark on April 25th. Bank has built a solid path in the professional ranks, standing out for his discipline, physical attributes, and a style that blends technique with controlled aggression. He's on a run of four straight quality wins, including Tyron Zeuge and Wiliam Scull. Ndjolonimu, with greater experience and international exposure, enters as a dangerous opponent who has proven himself in demanding scenarios. His physical strength and pressure could pose serious challenges for the local fighter. On paper, Ndjolonimu's best win was against Simon Zachenhuber (27-0 at the time) in 2025. |
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Denmark hosts Bank vs. Ndjolonimu eliminator
Undefeated Danish fighter Jacob Bank (18-0, 10 KOs) faces the toughest test of his career as he takes on Paulinus Ndjolonimu (20-1, 18 KOs) of Namibia in a WBC super middleweight world title eliminator. According to Boxers, the fight takes place in Kolding, Denmark on April 25th. Bank has built a solid path in the professional ranks, standing out for his discipline, physical attributes, and a style that blends technique with controlled aggression. He's on a run of four straight quality wins, including Tyron Zeuge and Wiliam Scull. Ndjolonimu, with greater experience and international exposure, enters as a dangerous opponent who has proven himself in demanding scenarios. His physical strength and pressure could pose serious challenges for the local fighter. On paper, Ndjolonimu's best win was against Simon Zachenhuber (27-0 at the time) in 2025. |
Resendiz: being a champion is a great responsibility |
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WBA super middleweight champion Armando “Toro” Reséndiz will look to build off of his 2025 on Cinco de Mayo weekend against ex-154-pound champ Jaime Munguia as part of the Ramirez vs. Benavidez PBC pay-per-view event on Prime Video Saturday, May 2nd at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. In his return to action after upsetting former champion Caleb Plant, Reséndiz will step in to face elite competition once again as he makes his first title defense against the dangerous brawler Munguia, a veteran of seven world title fights. An affable 27-year old from Nayarit, Mexico, Resendiz fought into the twelfth round for the first time against Plant, putting himself in position for another career-defining win that could make him a star of Cinco de Mayo weekends to come. Tickets for the live event are on sale now through www.AXS.com.
Here is what Reséndiz had to say about Munguia and more, from his training camp in California with renowned trainer Manny Robles:
“I have to stay focused until the final bell and give my absolute best. Munguia says his experience will be the difference, but Plant was more experienced than me too. He had faced bigger names, but I’m a fighter who keeps getting better and better—there are no limits. That’s what I want to show people on May 2nd.
“I’ve studied him (Munguía) quite a bit. I’ve been watching him since I was starting my climb as a professional. He's a gritty Mexican boxer with a wealth of experience.
“Being in this position is a huge motivation and a great responsibility. I’m eager to prove that I’m built for great things and I believe that’s exactly what we’ll do.
“The responsibilities have grown a bit more since winning the title. I have to be even more focused in the gym. I’ve had excellent sparring sessions with great boxers, including Terrell Gausha.
“I enjoyed every stage, every moment, every training session, and every pre-fight interview in the run-up to the Plant fight. I was focused on doing everything with my full enthusiasm and that ultimately showed in the final product.
“Overcoming adversity defines me as a warrior. A fighter who doesn’t give up so easily. Faith has been something that’s kept me standing and moving forward, believing that good things will come.
“I tend to stay focused in the present, but I like to watch my past fights and see how I’ve progressed over the years. I watch my fights and say, ‘I know what I was thinking at that moment, but maybe it wasn’t the right thing.’ It inspires me to keep improving and learning new things.”
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The May 2nd event is promoted by Golden Boy Promotions and Sampson Boxing in association with TGB Promotions. Reséndiz vs. Munguia is promoted in association with Warriors Boxing and Zanfer Boxing Promotions.
In addition to the PPV being available for purchase on Prime Video, regardless of Prime membership, fans will also be able to purchase the PPV via DAZN.com. On top of those options, fans will also be able to continue to access the telecast through traditional cable and satellite outlets, as well as PPV.com.
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Resendiz: being a champion is a great responsibility
WBA super middleweight champion Armando “Toro” Reséndiz will look to build off of his 2025 on Cinco de Mayo weekend against ex-154-pound champ Jaime Munguia as part of the Ramirez vs. Benavidez PBC pay-per-view event on Prime Video Saturday, May 2nd at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. In his return to action after upsetting former champion Caleb Plant, Reséndiz will step in to face elite competition once again as he makes his first title defense against the dangerous brawler Munguia, a veteran of seven world title fights. An affable 27-year old from Nayarit, Mexico, Resendiz fought into the twelfth round for the first time against Plant, putting himself in position for another career-defining win that could make him a star of Cinco de Mayo weekends to come. Tickets for the live event are on sale now through www.AXS.com.
Here is what Reséndiz had to say about Munguia and more, from his training camp in California with renowned trainer Manny Robles:
“I have to stay focused until the final bell and give my absolute best. Munguia says his experience will be the difference, but Plant was more experienced than me too. He had faced bigger names, but I’m a fighter who keeps getting better and better—there are no limits. That’s what I want to show people on May 2nd.
“I’ve studied him (Munguía) quite a bit. I’ve been watching him since I was starting my climb as a professional. He's a gritty Mexican boxer with a wealth of experience.
“Being in this position is a huge motivation and a great responsibility. I’m eager to prove that I’m built for great things and I believe that’s exactly what we’ll do.
“The responsibilities have grown a bit more since winning the title. I have to be even more focused in the gym. I’ve had excellent sparring sessions with great boxers, including Terrell Gausha.
“I enjoyed every stage, every moment, every training session, and every pre-fight interview in the run-up to the Plant fight. I was focused on doing everything with my full enthusiasm and that ultimately showed in the final product.
“Overcoming adversity defines me as a warrior. A fighter who doesn’t give up so easily. Faith has been something that’s kept me standing and moving forward, believing that good things will come.
“I tend to stay focused in the present, but I like to watch my past fights and see how I’ve progressed over the years. I watch my fights and say, ‘I know what I was thinking at that moment, but maybe it wasn’t the right thing.’ It inspires me to keep improving and learning new things.”
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The May 2nd event is promoted by Golden Boy Promotions and Sampson Boxing in association with TGB Promotions. Reséndiz vs. Munguia is promoted in association with Warriors Boxing and Zanfer Boxing Promotions.
In addition to the PPV being available for purchase on Prime Video, regardless of Prime membership, fans will also be able to purchase the PPV via DAZN.com. On top of those options, fans will also be able to continue to access the telecast through traditional cable and satellite outlets, as well as PPV.com.
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Sanchez upsets Marrero in CES main event |
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Rowin Javier Sanchez KO3 Jacob Marrero... Boxing is the theater of the unexpected. That saying was never more evident than in two of the final four bouts of CES Boxing’s Riverside Rumble in Hartford, Connecticut last weekend, which saw two heavy favorites lose to underdog opponents. Fighting in his first main event, previously undefeated lightweight Jacob “Lefty” Marrero suffered a scary stoppage in the third round against Rowin Javier Sanchez, who entered the bout with a modest record of 6-2-3 with 4 KOs. After two rounds of back-and-forth action between speedy southpaws - and Marrero’s supporters drowning out Sanchez’ few fans that made the trip from Prichard, Alabama – Rowin landed a perfect right hook that sent the Bridgeport-based Marrero crashing to the canvas on his right side. Referee Johnny Callas probably didn’t need to give Marrero a count, but he did anyway. Marrero remained motionless.
“Typically, I would have immediately waved it off,” said Callas. “However, I could not see his face at all as he had it completely covered by his gloves and he was in a fetal position. When I got down to one knee, I still had to position my head to look underneath him to see his face. Once I saw his condition, he was still out and at that moment I immediately waved it.” Fans in the crowd grew more nervous as he stayed in the same spot minutes after the fight ended, and as medical personnel had entered the ring, applied oxygen and set him up to be carried out on a backboard.
He was hospitalized overnight and BoxingTalk.com subsequently received word he was released later in the day. Marrero is apparently OK but “disappointed” with how things transpired, according to a CES staffer.
UNDERCARD
Prior to the main event, junior welterweight Mykquan Williams, of East Hartford, scored a first-round stoppage of Guillermo Leonel Crocco of Buenos Aires. An overhand right sent Crocco to the canvas, forcing a stoppage at the 1:50 mark. Williams moves to 24-1-2 (13) while his opponent drops to 20-7-1 (6).
Quick-fisted junior lightweight on the rise Iman Lee won a unanimous eight-round decision over Jose Nunez Sosa, Bronx, NY. Lee may have had the advantage of speed and height but the shorter Sosa was a scrappy fellow who made things very entertaining, especially with his punches in bunches style in the first half of the bout. In the fourth round, he knocked Lee off-balance when he countered an offensive burst with a stiff right hand. However, he did begin to slow down a step around this time, which allowLee, from Yonkers, NY, won by scores of 78-74 (twice) and 77-75.
His record improved to 15-0-1 (8) while Sosa falls to 8-3 (6).
In the first upset of the night, light heavyweight Slawomir “Heavy Hitter” Bohdziewicz, suffered the first setback of his professional career, getting dropped twice in a six-round bout with Jose Carlos Rivera. Bohdziewicz is a no-nonsense, all-business type fighter nobody thought would lose to the shorter Rivera, and who had been away from the sport for four-and-a-half years. Rivera looked a bit nervous during ring instructions but once that bell rang, he became a different person. The confidence came back. He dropped Bohdziewicz with a counter left hand in the opening frame after some steady pressure from the CES fighter. He then grew more aggressive. Round two began with the crowd cheering for Bohdziewicz, to spur him on. However, if this was supposed to be Bohdziewicz’ night, Rivera didn’t get the memo. After an attempt by “Heavy Hitter” to bang away at Rivera in a neutral corner, Rivera flipped the script and got “Slaw” in a neutral corner. Bohdziewicz escaped the corner, but Rivera followed in hot pursuit, connecting with a lead straight left and right hook that sent him to the canvas for the second time in the bout. This was a more impactful knockdown, so it was fortunate for Bohdziewicz there were only about two seconds left in the frame once he got to his feet. The last four rounds saw no knockdowns by anyone but it was a back and forth affair, with Bohdziewicz applying greater pressure and Rivera finding holes in his offense, or in spots between his offense bursts, to potshot and score with solid punches. Feeling himself, Rivera entertained the crowd with some showboating. At times held his arms aloft, as if to say “C’mon, I’m right here.” Another time, there were a couple of dance moves that preceded an attack. He could have been a little busier at times but with the knockdowns, he had done enough. He won by scores of 59-53 and 57-55 on two scorecards, while Glenn Feldman saw it was a draw with his scorecard of 56-56. Rivera, who hadn’t fought since August 2021, improves to 10-5-1 (15), while Bohdziewicz’ record is now 7-1 (6).
Stamford’s Douglas Marroquin had a live underdog in front of him in Victor Vazquez of Yonkers, NY in a scheduled six-rounder. However, the unbeaten middleweight did his thing once again, forcing a stoppage after the end of the third round to raise his record to 10-0 (6). “He (Vazquez) asked to stop it,” said referee Steve Willis. “He might have damaged his eye.” The USA Boxing News subsequently heard a ringside doctor talking about possible double vision. Marroquin began the bout with a solid work rate but intensified the leather as the fight wore on. By the second round, he was assaulting Vazquez, 11-6 (5), along the ropes in impressive fashion. Vazquez spit out his mouthpiece, perhaps hoping for a reprieve. However, Willis didn’t put it back in until there was a lull in the action. One round later, Marroquin continued to impress with a fierce attack along the ropes, switching his attack from the head to the body seamlessly. Vazquez was done.
“Send the contract. We sign it. We fight. Anybody can get it,” said Marroquin.
In junior welterweight action, Carlos “Carlito’s Way” Perez, of Meriden, stopped Deonta Williamson of St. Louis in the opening round of their scheduled six-rounder. Using his right jab to keep Williamson at bay, Perez followed up with a right hook to the body that hurt his opponent. Willaimson dropped to one knee but he was in no condition to continue. Callas waved the fight off. The official time was 1:51. “I wasn’t looking for the knockout. I never do,” said Perez. “But I went in there extremely confident because we had a great training camp with a great game plan. The quick ending was the result of that. I saw he kept leaning towards my left, leaving his body wide open, so I timed it very well and threw that well-placed body shot. Once I landed that shot, I knew it was going to be hard for him to get back up.” Perez added he wanted to thank his management team, PGsports, as well as his head coach “Mike Controy, Sean Malone, Dennis Rivera, my brother Kevin Perez and my strength and conditioning coach, Jonathan Hernandez.” With the victory, he is now 6-0 (1), while Williamson drops to 3-8 (3).
Super bantamweight Joseph “J-Elite” Chisolm, 7-1 (6), of Stratford, notched the first distance victory of his career, outpointing Anel Dudo, of Aurora, CO, over six rounds. All of his previous victories were first-round knockouts. Chisolm won by scores of 59-55 and 58-56 (twice). Chisolm had been out of the ring for five months. “I was dealing with my own personal life problems, but I’m back,” said Chisolm. His promoter, Jimmy Burchfield, was asked what he thought of the performance. “I learned he can box. That’s what he did tonight,” said Burchfield. “It’s a good experience. It’s actually better than a first-round knockout. He gained wisdom, experience and knowledge.” Dudo saw his ledger dip to 4-8-1 (1).
Lightweight Conor “The Bullet” O’Donovan, making the trip from Clonmel, Ireland, made time to see more of America by stopping Michael Douglas, 0-2, of Woburn, MA, 31 seconds into the first round with a counter right-hand. “I love it here,” said O’Donovan. “I don’t want to be anywhere else. Thank you CES. We’re going straight to the top.”
In other pro action, junior welterweight Kevante Wineglass dropped and stopped Anthony Jones in the opening round of their scheduled four-rounder. The official time was 1:13. Wineglass is now 4-0 (3) while Jones moves to 0-2.
In a catchweight bout of 152 pounds, Victor Guerra Vargas, of Norwalk, by way of Venezuela, dropped Jean Estiverne, of Stamford, in the second-round before forcing a stoppage with a vicious assault in the fourth frame. Vargas is now 2-0 with two knockouts.
Riverside Rumble also featured a slew of amateur bouts before the pro side of things. The amateur portion of the card – titled Jimmy Burchfield’s Classic Invitational -comprised a total of six amateur bouts. Referee Johnny Callas, who runs the Charter Oak Boxing Academy (COBA), saw his fighter, Kevin Czarniak, notch a TKO victory over Cameron Thomas in the 143-pound novice class. It was interesting to see Callas outside the ring, as an interested observer, rather than inside the ring between pro pugilists. “He’s been with COBA for a couple of years, but in the last seven months he expressed an interest to compete and buckled down on his fundamentals,” said Callas. “I’m thrilled for him, with his second TKO [in his second fight]…He is a great kid and also a great club house presence at COBA.” Callas drove Czarniak to the venue in the gym van, along with numerous fighters to root him on.
In a beautiful moment after every amateur fight, boxers placed medals over one another’s heads. Capping off the amateur portion of the show was Daniel Hernandez, and he didn’t fail to disappoint. In his 165-pound open bout against Kameron Flynn, he threw a right to the body, which opened up Flynn for a left hook upstairs. It sent Flynn crashing to the canvas. That was in the very first round. Referee Lee Deer began a count as soon as Hernandez went to a neutral corner. Flynn attempted to rise, but fell again, forcing Deer to end matters. The sensational victory earned him Fighter of the Night honors.
“The feeling was surreal, but yet very amazing,” said Hernandez. “As a fighter I don’t go in the ring looking for the knockout but grateful to God that I was able to put my talent on display in front of my hometown (Hernandez is from nearby New Britain).”
Hernandez is definitely one to keep an eye on. He’s currently ranked #4 in the nation by USA Boxing. “Overall, I’m in awe of his commitment and discipline to the sport,” said his father, John Hernandez. “We had a plan, he stuck to the plan and it was executed flawlessly.”
“Speaking to my team, said Daniel, “The next step is to definitely turn pro. Of course the Olympics aren’t off the table. If the opportunity presents itself I will definitely go over it with my team. But as of right now, we plan on entering the pro ranks when the time is right.”
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Sanchez upsets Marrero in CES main event
Rowin Javier Sanchez KO3 Jacob Marrero... Boxing is the theater of the unexpected. That saying was never more evident than in two of the final four bouts of CES Boxing’s Riverside Rumble in Hartford, Connecticut last weekend, which saw two heavy favorites lose to underdog opponents. Fighting in his first main event, previously undefeated lightweight Jacob “Lefty” Marrero suffered a scary stoppage in the third round against Rowin Javier Sanchez, who entered the bout with a modest record of 6-2-3 with 4 KOs. After two rounds of back-and-forth action between speedy southpaws - and Marrero’s supporters drowning out Sanchez’ few fans that made the trip from Prichard, Alabama – Rowin landed a perfect right hook that sent the Bridgeport-based Marrero crashing to the canvas on his right side. Referee Johnny Callas probably didn’t need to give Marrero a count, but he did anyway. Marrero remained motionless.
“Typically, I would have immediately waved it off,” said Callas. “However, I could not see his face at all as he had it completely covered by his gloves and he was in a fetal position. When I got down to one knee, I still had to position my head to look underneath him to see his face. Once I saw his condition, he was still out and at that moment I immediately waved it.” Fans in the crowd grew more nervous as he stayed in the same spot minutes after the fight ended, and as medical personnel had entered the ring, applied oxygen and set him up to be carried out on a backboard.
He was hospitalized overnight and BoxingTalk.com subsequently received word he was released later in the day. Marrero is apparently OK but “disappointed” with how things transpired, according to a CES staffer.
UNDERCARD
Prior to the main event, junior welterweight Mykquan Williams, of East Hartford, scored a first-round stoppage of Guillermo Leonel Crocco of Buenos Aires. An overhand right sent Crocco to the canvas, forcing a stoppage at the 1:50 mark. Williams moves to 24-1-2 (13) while his opponent drops to 20-7-1 (6).
Quick-fisted junior lightweight on the rise Iman Lee won a unanimous eight-round decision over Jose Nunez Sosa, Bronx, NY. Lee may have had the advantage of speed and height but the shorter Sosa was a scrappy fellow who made things very entertaining, especially with his punches in bunches style in the first half of the bout. In the fourth round, he knocked Lee off-balance when he countered an offensive burst with a stiff right hand. However, he did begin to slow down a step around this time, which allowLee, from Yonkers, NY, won by scores of 78-74 (twice) and 77-75.
His record improved to 15-0-1 (8) while Sosa falls to 8-3 (6).
In the first upset of the night, light heavyweight Slawomir “Heavy Hitter” Bohdziewicz, suffered the first setback of his professional career, getting dropped twice in a six-round bout with Jose Carlos Rivera. Bohdziewicz is a no-nonsense, all-business type fighter nobody thought would lose to the shorter Rivera, and who had been away from the sport for four-and-a-half years. Rivera looked a bit nervous during ring instructions but once that bell rang, he became a different person. The confidence came back. He dropped Bohdziewicz with a counter left hand in the opening frame after some steady pressure from the CES fighter. He then grew more aggressive. Round two began with the crowd cheering for Bohdziewicz, to spur him on. However, if this was supposed to be Bohdziewicz’ night, Rivera didn’t get the memo. After an attempt by “Heavy Hitter” to bang away at Rivera in a neutral corner, Rivera flipped the script and got “Slaw” in a neutral corner. Bohdziewicz escaped the corner, but Rivera followed in hot pursuit, connecting with a lead straight left and right hook that sent him to the canvas for the second time in the bout. This was a more impactful knockdown, so it was fortunate for Bohdziewicz there were only about two seconds left in the frame once he got to his feet. The last four rounds saw no knockdowns by anyone but it was a back and forth affair, with Bohdziewicz applying greater pressure and Rivera finding holes in his offense, or in spots between his offense bursts, to potshot and score with solid punches. Feeling himself, Rivera entertained the crowd with some showboating. At times held his arms aloft, as if to say “C’mon, I’m right here.” Another time, there were a couple of dance moves that preceded an attack. He could have been a little busier at times but with the knockdowns, he had done enough. He won by scores of 59-53 and 57-55 on two scorecards, while Glenn Feldman saw it was a draw with his scorecard of 56-56. Rivera, who hadn’t fought since August 2021, improves to 10-5-1 (15), while Bohdziewicz’ record is now 7-1 (6).
Stamford’s Douglas Marroquin had a live underdog in front of him in Victor Vazquez of Yonkers, NY in a scheduled six-rounder. However, the unbeaten middleweight did his thing once again, forcing a stoppage after the end of the third round to raise his record to 10-0 (6). “He (Vazquez) asked to stop it,” said referee Steve Willis. “He might have damaged his eye.” The USA Boxing News subsequently heard a ringside doctor talking about possible double vision. Marroquin began the bout with a solid work rate but intensified the leather as the fight wore on. By the second round, he was assaulting Vazquez, 11-6 (5), along the ropes in impressive fashion. Vazquez spit out his mouthpiece, perhaps hoping for a reprieve. However, Willis didn’t put it back in until there was a lull in the action. One round later, Marroquin continued to impress with a fierce attack along the ropes, switching his attack from the head to the body seamlessly. Vazquez was done.
“Send the contract. We sign it. We fight. Anybody can get it,” said Marroquin.
In junior welterweight action, Carlos “Carlito’s Way” Perez, of Meriden, stopped Deonta Williamson of St. Louis in the opening round of their scheduled six-rounder. Using his right jab to keep Williamson at bay, Perez followed up with a right hook to the body that hurt his opponent. Willaimson dropped to one knee but he was in no condition to continue. Callas waved the fight off. The official time was 1:51. “I wasn’t looking for the knockout. I never do,” said Perez. “But I went in there extremely confident because we had a great training camp with a great game plan. The quick ending was the result of that. I saw he kept leaning towards my left, leaving his body wide open, so I timed it very well and threw that well-placed body shot. Once I landed that shot, I knew it was going to be hard for him to get back up.” Perez added he wanted to thank his management team, PGsports, as well as his head coach “Mike Controy, Sean Malone, Dennis Rivera, my brother Kevin Perez and my strength and conditioning coach, Jonathan Hernandez.” With the victory, he is now 6-0 (1), while Williamson drops to 3-8 (3).
Super bantamweight Joseph “J-Elite” Chisolm, 7-1 (6), of Stratford, notched the first distance victory of his career, outpointing Anel Dudo, of Aurora, CO, over six rounds. All of his previous victories were first-round knockouts. Chisolm won by scores of 59-55 and 58-56 (twice). Chisolm had been out of the ring for five months. “I was dealing with my own personal life problems, but I’m back,” said Chisolm. His promoter, Jimmy Burchfield, was asked what he thought of the performance. “I learned he can box. That’s what he did tonight,” said Burchfield. “It’s a good experience. It’s actually better than a first-round knockout. He gained wisdom, experience and knowledge.” Dudo saw his ledger dip to 4-8-1 (1).
Lightweight Conor “The Bullet” O’Donovan, making the trip from Clonmel, Ireland, made time to see more of America by stopping Michael Douglas, 0-2, of Woburn, MA, 31 seconds into the first round with a counter right-hand. “I love it here,” said O’Donovan. “I don’t want to be anywhere else. Thank you CES. We’re going straight to the top.”
In other pro action, junior welterweight Kevante Wineglass dropped and stopped Anthony Jones in the opening round of their scheduled four-rounder. The official time was 1:13. Wineglass is now 4-0 (3) while Jones moves to 0-2.
In a catchweight bout of 152 pounds, Victor Guerra Vargas, of Norwalk, by way of Venezuela, dropped Jean Estiverne, of Stamford, in the second-round before forcing a stoppage with a vicious assault in the fourth frame. Vargas is now 2-0 with two knockouts.
Riverside Rumble also featured a slew of amateur bouts before the pro side of things. The amateur portion of the card – titled Jimmy Burchfield’s Classic Invitational -comprised a total of six amateur bouts. Referee Johnny Callas, who runs the Charter Oak Boxing Academy (COBA), saw his fighter, Kevin Czarniak, notch a TKO victory over Cameron Thomas in the 143-pound novice class. It was interesting to see Callas outside the ring, as an interested observer, rather than inside the ring between pro pugilists. “He’s been with COBA for a couple of years, but in the last seven months he expressed an interest to compete and buckled down on his fundamentals,” said Callas. “I’m thrilled for him, with his second TKO [in his second fight]…He is a great kid and also a great club house presence at COBA.” Callas drove Czarniak to the venue in the gym van, along with numerous fighters to root him on.
In a beautiful moment after every amateur fight, boxers placed medals over one another’s heads. Capping off the amateur portion of the show was Daniel Hernandez, and he didn’t fail to disappoint. In his 165-pound open bout against Kameron Flynn, he threw a right to the body, which opened up Flynn for a left hook upstairs. It sent Flynn crashing to the canvas. That was in the very first round. Referee Lee Deer began a count as soon as Hernandez went to a neutral corner. Flynn attempted to rise, but fell again, forcing Deer to end matters. The sensational victory earned him Fighter of the Night honors.
“The feeling was surreal, but yet very amazing,” said Hernandez. “As a fighter I don’t go in the ring looking for the knockout but grateful to God that I was able to put my talent on display in front of my hometown (Hernandez is from nearby New Britain).”
Hernandez is definitely one to keep an eye on. He’s currently ranked #4 in the nation by USA Boxing. “Overall, I’m in awe of his commitment and discipline to the sport,” said his father, John Hernandez. “We had a plan, he stuck to the plan and it was executed flawlessly.”
“Speaking to my team, said Daniel, “The next step is to definitely turn pro. Of course the Olympics aren’t off the table. If the opportunity presents itself I will definitely go over it with my team. But as of right now, we plan on entering the pro ranks when the time is right.”
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Late results: Suslenkov stops Mann in Russia |
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Artem Suslenkov TKO3 Artur Mann... On April 17th, IBA Pro 16 in Serpukhov, Russia saw heavyweight fringe contender Artem Suslenkov stop experienced German cruiserweight Artur Mann (22-5). From the opening bell, Suslenkov imposed relentless pressure, targeting the body and forcing Mann onto the back foot. The sustained attack paid off in the third round, when Suslenkov (17-1 including IBA Pro and World Series of Boxing bouts), dropped Mann twice with heavy hooks. Moments later, a final wave of unanswered punches forced the stoppage, sealing a dominant technical knockout victory.
Suslenkov spoke after his triumph: “After training camp there’s always a degree of fatigue. And once the fight is over, you feel a real sense of relief — a chance to catch your breath a bit. But I stress a bit — there’s still a great deal of work ahead and plenty of fights to come. Mann was dangerous in the first round. I hesitated slightly at the start, but then my coaches in the corner gave me the right advice and things began to improve. Honestly, I didn’t expect to finish the fight that early. We prepared to go the full ten rounds. As for what’s next, I’m ready for anyone. I understand that specific challenges matter, but that’s not how I approach it — I’ll fight whoever I’m offered. A bout with Murad Khalidov? I’d rather not. What’s the point of us fighting each other in Russia? But if it has to happen, then we’ll fight.”
ADDITIONAL RESULTS
On the undercard, Michael “Your Highness” King of Luxembourg) and Yury Osipov of Russia battled to a six-round draw in the middleweight division.
Mikhail Grigoryan delivered one of the most technically impressive performances of the night, neutralizing Jeo Santisima. Controlling distance and dictating angles, Grigoryan repeatedly punished his opponent with sharp left hands and uppercuts. Despite a late push from Santisima, Grigoryan maintained control throughout all ten rounds to secure a clear unanimous decision and remain unbeaten.
Sergey Kalchugin closed his career in emphatic fashion, overwhelming Jamshid Khudoyberganov with sustained pressure and body work. After three one-sided rounds, Khudoyberganov declined to continue, handing Kalchugin a technical knockout victory in his farewell bout.
Danil Belevitin’s professional debut featured both adversity and dominance. After being dropped in a flash knockdown in the second round, Belevitin responded by dramatically increasing the pace, breaking his opponent down with body shots before scoring a knockdown of his own. A barrage of unanswered punches forced the referee to stop the fight, awarding Belevitin a comeback technical knockout victory.
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Late results: Suslenkov stops Mann in Russia
Artem Suslenkov TKO3 Artur Mann... On April 17th, IBA Pro 16 in Serpukhov, Russia saw heavyweight fringe contender Artem Suslenkov stop experienced German cruiserweight Artur Mann (22-5). From the opening bell, Suslenkov imposed relentless pressure, targeting the body and forcing Mann onto the back foot. The sustained attack paid off in the third round, when Suslenkov (17-1 including IBA Pro and World Series of Boxing bouts), dropped Mann twice with heavy hooks. Moments later, a final wave of unanswered punches forced the stoppage, sealing a dominant technical knockout victory.
Suslenkov spoke after his triumph: “After training camp there’s always a degree of fatigue. And once the fight is over, you feel a real sense of relief — a chance to catch your breath a bit. But I stress a bit — there’s still a great deal of work ahead and plenty of fights to come. Mann was dangerous in the first round. I hesitated slightly at the start, but then my coaches in the corner gave me the right advice and things began to improve. Honestly, I didn’t expect to finish the fight that early. We prepared to go the full ten rounds. As for what’s next, I’m ready for anyone. I understand that specific challenges matter, but that’s not how I approach it — I’ll fight whoever I’m offered. A bout with Murad Khalidov? I’d rather not. What’s the point of us fighting each other in Russia? But if it has to happen, then we’ll fight.”
ADDITIONAL RESULTS
On the undercard, Michael “Your Highness” King of Luxembourg) and Yury Osipov of Russia battled to a six-round draw in the middleweight division.
Mikhail Grigoryan delivered one of the most technically impressive performances of the night, neutralizing Jeo Santisima. Controlling distance and dictating angles, Grigoryan repeatedly punished his opponent with sharp left hands and uppercuts. Despite a late push from Santisima, Grigoryan maintained control throughout all ten rounds to secure a clear unanimous decision and remain unbeaten.
Sergey Kalchugin closed his career in emphatic fashion, overwhelming Jamshid Khudoyberganov with sustained pressure and body work. After three one-sided rounds, Khudoyberganov declined to continue, handing Kalchugin a technical knockout victory in his farewell bout.
Danil Belevitin’s professional debut featured both adversity and dominance. After being dropped in a flash knockdown in the second round, Belevitin responded by dramatically increasing the pace, breaking his opponent down with body shots before scoring a knockdown of his own. A barrage of unanswered punches forced the referee to stop the fight, awarding Belevitin a comeback technical knockout victory.
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Republic of Georgia update |
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On May 2nd in Tbilisi in the Republic of Georgia, middleweight Givi Todua will bematched up against Elmo Traya from the Philippines. Todua, 6-0 with 4 KOs, got a quality win last September when he stopped Thailand´s Phumiritdet Chonlathondamrongkhun in six rounds. He's tuned up with an easy fight once since then. Still only 21 years old, the Georgian hero will take on his best opponent to date in Treya, who brings a recird of 16-6 with 11 KOs. Having boxed all over the world in an accomplished amateur career, Todua turned professional in the summer of 2024. Traya, although still only 31 years of age, is a veteran with thirteen years of pro experience. He's had some success, but mostly at junior welterweight and welterweight, so this seems like too big a jump in weight for the visitor. Still, he will not be fazed by going into his opponents back yard.
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Republic of Georgia update
On May 2nd in Tbilisi in the Republic of Georgia, middleweight Givi Todua will bematched up against Elmo Traya from the Philippines. Todua, 6-0 with 4 KOs, got a quality win last September when he stopped Thailand´s Phumiritdet Chonlathondamrongkhun in six rounds. He's tuned up with an easy fight once since then. Still only 21 years old, the Georgian hero will take on his best opponent to date in Treya, who brings a recird of 16-6 with 11 KOs. Having boxed all over the world in an accomplished amateur career, Todua turned professional in the summer of 2024. Traya, although still only 31 years of age, is a veteran with thirteen years of pro experience. He's had some success, but mostly at junior welterweight and welterweight, so this seems like too big a jump in weight for the visitor. Still, he will not be fazed by going into his opponents back yard.
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Okolie fails doping test; Saturday's fight is off |
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Queensberry Promotions has announced that "the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) has informed Queensberry that heavyweight Lawrence Okolie returned an adverse finding following ant anti-doping test conducted ahead of the show in Paris [scheduled for] this Saturday. A further update regarding the event will be made in due course." A few hours later, Queensberry announced that "Due to circumstances outside of our control, Queensberry and DAZN have regrettably made the decision to cancel this Saturday's scheduled event in Paris. For refunds, please contact your ticket [vendor]." Okolie, who has held world titles at cruiserweight and bridgerweight, was set to fight former Olympic champion Tony Yoka in Yoka's hometown this weekend.
Okolie posted the following statement on his Instagram account: "Before anyone starts imagining the worst, following my bicep injury last year, I sustained an elbow injury on the same arm during this camp. I had a treatment on it and now we are here. I truly hope sense prevails. I will of course be fully cooperating with all relevant authorities and I’m confident any investigation will clear my name. I won’t be making any further comment at this time. Thank you for all your support and see you soon."
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Okolie fails doping test; Saturday's fight is off
Queensberry Promotions has announced that "the Voluntary Anti-Doping Association (VADA) has informed Queensberry that heavyweight Lawrence Okolie returned an adverse finding following ant anti-doping test conducted ahead of the show in Paris [scheduled for] this Saturday. A further update regarding the event will be made in due course." A few hours later, Queensberry announced that "Due to circumstances outside of our control, Queensberry and DAZN have regrettably made the decision to cancel this Saturday's scheduled event in Paris. For refunds, please contact your ticket [vendor]." Okolie, who has held world titles at cruiserweight and bridgerweight, was set to fight former Olympic champion Tony Yoka in Yoka's hometown this weekend.
Okolie posted the following statement on his Instagram account: "Before anyone starts imagining the worst, following my bicep injury last year, I sustained an elbow injury on the same arm during this camp. I had a treatment on it and now we are here. I truly hope sense prevails. I will of course be fully cooperating with all relevant authorities and I’m confident any investigation will clear my name. I won’t be making any further comment at this time. Thank you for all your support and see you soon."
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Peter Dobson to oppose Kelvin Davis on May 16th |
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Nearly one year after the lone defeat of his pro career, Kelvin Davis returns home to reassert himself against veteran Peter Dobson in a ten-round welterweight showdown on Saturday, May 16th at Scope Arena in Norfolk, Virginia. Additionally, iron-fisted Dominican featherweight Yan Santana looks to inch closer to a title opportunity in a ten-round battle against Cristian Cruz Chacon. Davis-Dobson and Santana-Cruz join a card headlined by the Keyshawn Davis-Nahir Albright twelve-round junior welterweight rematch. In the ten-round welterweight co-feature, former champion Brian Norman Jr. returns against Canada’s Josh Wagner.
Keyshawn-Albright II, Norman-Wagner, Davis-Dobson and Santana-Cruz will be streamed live on DAZN beginning at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT. Promoted by Top Rank, in association with RDR Promotions, tickets are on sale at the Scope Arena box office and via Ticketmaster.com.
Davis (15-1, 8 KOs), the 29-year-old brother of ex-lightweight champ Keyshawn, looks to bounce back after last June’s majority decision loss to Albright. Davis now moves up to welterweight to take on Dobson (17-3, 10 KOs), a 35-year-old native of the Bronx who has faced the likes of Conor Benn in February 2024 and then-unbeaten Jakil Hacket in July of that year.
Santana (16-0, 13 KOs) looks to become the first man to stop Cruz as he climbs the rankings in a division ruled by proven champions. Santana went 3-0 with one knockout in 2025, including a fifth-round stoppage of Alexis Eduardo Molina in November. Cruz (24-7-2, 12 KOs) is 2-0-1 since his April 2024 decision loss to Ruben Villa, including a points win over Jeremy Hill last September before a split draw against once-beaten Muhammad Yaquobov in November.
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Peter Dobson to oppose Kelvin Davis on May 16th
Nearly one year after the lone defeat of his pro career, Kelvin Davis returns home to reassert himself against veteran Peter Dobson in a ten-round welterweight showdown on Saturday, May 16th at Scope Arena in Norfolk, Virginia. Additionally, iron-fisted Dominican featherweight Yan Santana looks to inch closer to a title opportunity in a ten-round battle against Cristian Cruz Chacon. Davis-Dobson and Santana-Cruz join a card headlined by the Keyshawn Davis-Nahir Albright twelve-round junior welterweight rematch. In the ten-round welterweight co-feature, former champion Brian Norman Jr. returns against Canada’s Josh Wagner.
Keyshawn-Albright II, Norman-Wagner, Davis-Dobson and Santana-Cruz will be streamed live on DAZN beginning at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT. Promoted by Top Rank, in association with RDR Promotions, tickets are on sale at the Scope Arena box office and via Ticketmaster.com.
Davis (15-1, 8 KOs), the 29-year-old brother of ex-lightweight champ Keyshawn, looks to bounce back after last June’s majority decision loss to Albright. Davis now moves up to welterweight to take on Dobson (17-3, 10 KOs), a 35-year-old native of the Bronx who has faced the likes of Conor Benn in February 2024 and then-unbeaten Jakil Hacket in July of that year.
Santana (16-0, 13 KOs) looks to become the first man to stop Cruz as he climbs the rankings in a division ruled by proven champions. Santana went 3-0 with one knockout in 2025, including a fifth-round stoppage of Alexis Eduardo Molina in November. Cruz (24-7-2, 12 KOs) is 2-0-1 since his April 2024 decision loss to Ruben Villa, including a points win over Jeremy Hill last September before a split draw against once-beaten Muhammad Yaquobov in November.
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Whittaker delivers first-round KO |
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Ben Whittaker KO1 Braian Suarez .... Ben Whittaker recorded a second successive first-round knockout on Saturday night. Facing Braian Suarez in Liverpool, Whittaker wasted no time, he was on the front foot and established the jab early, coupled with fast hand speed. Suarez did not seem affected, but as the first round entered its final minute, Whittaker sensed an opportunity for an early finish.Pushing Suarez on to the ropes, Whittaker hit the Argentinian with a left to the body before landing a right hand to knock out the Argentinian. Being promoted to main event status at late notice, Whittaker delivered once again. Whittaker claims he is ‘dangerous’ for light heavyweight rivals. Whittaker has a rare gift of being talented with the microphone, and celebrating his win, ‘The Surgeon’ was pleased with his performance. “That was good baby,” Whittaker told DAZN. “He’s a very good fighter, I was expecting a couple of rounds. I’m hitting now, to take out someone like that in the first round, it shows where I am at.”
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Whittaker delivers first-round KO
Ben Whittaker KO1 Braian Suarez .... Ben Whittaker recorded a second successive first-round knockout on Saturday night. Facing Braian Suarez in Liverpool, Whittaker wasted no time, he was on the front foot and established the jab early, coupled with fast hand speed. Suarez did not seem affected, but as the first round entered its final minute, Whittaker sensed an opportunity for an early finish.Pushing Suarez on to the ropes, Whittaker hit the Argentinian with a left to the body before landing a right hand to knock out the Argentinian. Being promoted to main event status at late notice, Whittaker delivered once again. Whittaker claims he is ‘dangerous’ for light heavyweight rivals. Whittaker has a rare gift of being talented with the microphone, and celebrating his win, ‘The Surgeon’ was pleased with his performance. “That was good baby,” Whittaker told DAZN. “He’s a very good fighter, I was expecting a couple of rounds. I’m hitting now, to take out someone like that in the first round, it shows where I am at.”
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Aleem to Leo: "You will be dethroned" |
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Featherweight contender Ra’eese Aleem, age 34 and fighting out of Las Vegas, delivered a passionate and confident message during his recent appearance on Boxing Primetime, hosted by Andrew Bocanegra and co-host Brian Mendoza. As he prepares for his IBF featherweight title challenge against reigning champion Angelo Leo, Aleem spoke candidly about his journey, his mindset, and the loss that continues to fuel him. Leo-Aleem is set for May 9th in Atlanta, in what is shaping up to be a defining moment in Aleem's career.
Reflecting on his 2023 split-decision defeat to Sam Goodman in Australia, Aleem made it clear he still believes the outcome was unjust. The IBF eliminator remains a major source of motivation, with Aleem stating he was “robbed” while fighting on foreign soil. That experience has sharpened his approach heading into May 9th.
Since that setback, Aleem has put together three strong victories that have reestablished him as a top contender in the division. In those performances, he showcased a more complete version of himself—combining relentless pressure with improved patience and ring IQ.
His win over Mikito Nakano in a final eliminator bout proved his ability to perform under high stakes, as he controlled the action and secured his place back in title contention. Against Rudy Garcia, Aleem demonstrated his toughness and consistency, breaking his opponent down over the course of the fight. He followed that with another solid performance against Derlyn Hernandez-Geraldo, where his experience and work rate were key in earning a decisive victory. Across all three fights, Aleem displayed durability, conditioning, and a willingness to adapt—traits that have made him a dangerous opponent heading into this championship opportunity.
Rather than leaving anything to the judges this time, Aleem emphasized his intent to take control and make a statement on fight night. His confidence was unmistakable as he addressed his upcoming title opportunity. “You will be dethroned,” Aleem stated.
Throughout the Boxing Primetime interview, Bocanegra and Mendoza guided a conversation that highlighted Aleem’s mindset—focused, motivated, and confident. While he acknowledged the challenge ahead, his belief remains firm. “Angelo Leo is a great fighter,” Aleem said, while doubling down on his expectation of victory.
The full Boxing Primetime interview featuring Ra’eese Aleem can be viewed here.
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Aleem to Leo: "You will be dethroned"
Featherweight contender Ra’eese Aleem, age 34 and fighting out of Las Vegas, delivered a passionate and confident message during his recent appearance on Boxing Primetime, hosted by Andrew Bocanegra and co-host Brian Mendoza. As he prepares for his IBF featherweight title challenge against reigning champion Angelo Leo, Aleem spoke candidly about his journey, his mindset, and the loss that continues to fuel him. Leo-Aleem is set for May 9th in Atlanta, in what is shaping up to be a defining moment in Aleem's career.
Reflecting on his 2023 split-decision defeat to Sam Goodman in Australia, Aleem made it clear he still believes the outcome was unjust. The IBF eliminator remains a major source of motivation, with Aleem stating he was “robbed” while fighting on foreign soil. That experience has sharpened his approach heading into May 9th.
Since that setback, Aleem has put together three strong victories that have reestablished him as a top contender in the division. In those performances, he showcased a more complete version of himself—combining relentless pressure with improved patience and ring IQ.
His win over Mikito Nakano in a final eliminator bout proved his ability to perform under high stakes, as he controlled the action and secured his place back in title contention. Against Rudy Garcia, Aleem demonstrated his toughness and consistency, breaking his opponent down over the course of the fight. He followed that with another solid performance against Derlyn Hernandez-Geraldo, where his experience and work rate were key in earning a decisive victory. Across all three fights, Aleem displayed durability, conditioning, and a willingness to adapt—traits that have made him a dangerous opponent heading into this championship opportunity.
Rather than leaving anything to the judges this time, Aleem emphasized his intent to take control and make a statement on fight night. His confidence was unmistakable as he addressed his upcoming title opportunity. “You will be dethroned,” Aleem stated.
Throughout the Boxing Primetime interview, Bocanegra and Mendoza guided a conversation that highlighted Aleem’s mindset—focused, motivated, and confident. While he acknowledged the challenge ahead, his belief remains firm. “Angelo Leo is a great fighter,” Aleem said, while doubling down on his expectation of victory.
The full Boxing Primetime interview featuring Ra’eese Aleem can be viewed here.
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Shadasia Green leaves on stretcher after TKO loss |
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Lani Daniels TKO9 Shadasia Green... There was a troubling scene after the co-feature at New York City's Madison Square Garden, as Shadasia Green was taken out of the ring on a stretcher after her upset knockout loss to Lani Daniels. A barrage of punches caused the referee to stop the fight in round nine, as Green remained on her feet but stopped fighting back. Green (16-3, 11 KOs) entered the bout as the unified super middleweight champion, but faces far more serious concerns then the loss. Daniels, from New Zealand, improves her pro record to 12-4-2 with 2 KOs and captured Green's IBF and WBO super middleweight titles with her technical knockout of Green (16-3, 11 KOs). Daniels is a former light heavyweight title holder but had lost two straight matches coming into this fight.
According to ESPN, "Green was initially standing after the loss before she was placed on a stool. She was then quickly placed on a stretcher and taken out of the ring with MVP CEO Nakisa Bidarian [the event promoter] following behind. Bidarian accompanied Green to the hospital."
Boxingtalk wishes Green a complete and speedy recovery... our thoughts are with her.
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Shadasia Green leaves on stretcher after TKO loss
Lani Daniels TKO9 Shadasia Green... There was a troubling scene after the co-feature at New York City's Madison Square Garden, as Shadasia Green was taken out of the ring on a stretcher after her upset knockout loss to Lani Daniels. A barrage of punches caused the referee to stop the fight in round nine, as Green remained on her feet but stopped fighting back. Green (16-3, 11 KOs) entered the bout as the unified super middleweight champion, but faces far more serious concerns then the loss. Daniels, from New Zealand, improves her pro record to 12-4-2 with 2 KOs and captured Green's IBF and WBO super middleweight titles with her technical knockout of Green (16-3, 11 KOs). Daniels is a former light heavyweight title holder but had lost two straight matches coming into this fight.
According to ESPN, "Green was initially standing after the loss before she was placed on a stool. She was then quickly placed on a stretcher and taken out of the ring with MVP CEO Nakisa Bidarian [the event promoter] following behind. Bidarian accompanied Green to the hospital."
Boxingtalk wishes Green a complete and speedy recovery... our thoughts are with her.
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Reports: Daniel Kinahan arrested |
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Daniel Kinahan, the alleged leader of one of Ireland's biggest criminal networks and a founder of boxing management company MTK Global, has been arrested in Dubai, Irish media and ESPN reported Friday. A few years back, Kinahan was a dominant, but behind-the-scenes power broker in boxing, allegedly laundering money from his drug- and criminal-related businesses through MTK. Kinahan gave an infusion of energy and money into the sport but sparked a moral debate among fans.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
APRIL 20, 2022: MTK Global, the leading boxing management firm, has imploded under the scrutiny of the United States government of MTK's reputed leader, Daniel Kinahan. Last week, the U.S. offered a $5 million reward for information leading to Kinahan's arrest, and declared Kinahan's operations to be a transnational criminal organizations. The ramifications of that declaration made it too risky to do do business with MTK, which led to today's announcement that MTK Global will cease operations. MTK's website has already been taken down from the Internet. Here is the full announcement: "As a business we have faced unprecedented levels of unfair scrutiny and criticism since the sanctioning by the United States government of Daniel Joseph Kinahan. It’s a matter of public record that Mr. Kinahan's involvement in MTK ceased in 2017, and despite repeated reassurances in this regard, unfounded allegations about his ongoing association with us and our fighters persist. Since leading promoters have now informed us that they will be severing all ties with MTK and will no longer work with our fighters, we have taken the difficult decision to cease operations at the end of this month. MTK prospered because we always put the long-term interests of our fighters at the heart of what we do. A priority in the weeks ahead will be to ensure that a world-class boxers are supported to find new partnerships as swiftly as possible. MTK gyms are operated independently so will remain open for the foreseeable future. Further announcements will be made in due course. Thank you to all the fans who have supported us over the last decade."
Yesterday, MTK's CEO Bob Yalen abruptlyresigned, with MTK issuing the following statement: "We regret to announce that Bob Yalen has today stepped down as CEO of MTK Global for personal reasons. We would like to thank him for all of his efforts on behalf of the business and his leadership of our team. Yalen said: “I am incredibly proud of the success of MTK Global and I feel privileged to have served as President and CEO since 2018. However, the pressure of the last few weeks has been particularly intense. I need to consider the impact on myself and my family. So after four years leading MTK, I think it’s time for me to step aside to take on new challenges.”
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April 13, 2022 Press Release from U.S. Department of State: The U.S. Department of State announced rewards of up to $5 million for information leading to each of the arrests and/or convictions of Irish transnational organized criminal Christopher Vincent Kinahan and his two sons, Daniel Joseph Kinahan and Christopher Kinahan, Jr., for participating in, or conspiring to participate in, transnational organized crime. After initially distributing South American cocaine and heroin in Ireland, the Kinahans later expanded their narcotics trafficking organization to include the United Kingdom and then throughout mainland Europe. In addition to narcotics trafficking, the Kinahans have engaged in money laundering, firearms trafficking, and murder." EDITOR'S NOTE: Daniel Kinahan is widely reported to be a key figure in MTK Global, the boxing management organization, as well as an advisor to WBC heavyweight champion Tyson Fury.
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Reports: Daniel Kinahan arrested
Daniel Kinahan, the alleged leader of one of Ireland's biggest criminal networks and a founder of boxing management company MTK Global, has been arrested in Dubai, Irish media and ESPN reported Friday. A few years back, Kinahan was a dominant, but behind-the-scenes power broker in boxing, allegedly laundering money from his drug- and criminal-related businesses through MTK. Kinahan gave an infusion of energy and money into the sport but sparked a moral debate among fans.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
APRIL 20, 2022: MTK Global, the leading boxing management firm, has imploded under the scrutiny of the United States government of MTK's reputed leader, Daniel Kinahan. Last week, the U.S. offered a $5 million reward for information leading to Kinahan's arrest, and declared Kinahan's operations to be a transnational criminal organizations. The ramifications of that declaration made it too risky to do do business with MTK, which led to today's announcement that MTK Global will cease operations. MTK's website has already been taken down from the Internet. Here is the full announcement: "As a business we have faced unprecedented levels of unfair scrutiny and criticism since the sanctioning by the United States government of Daniel Joseph Kinahan. It’s a matter of public record that Mr. Kinahan's involvement in MTK ceased in 2017, and despite repeated reassurances in this regard, unfounded allegations about his ongoing association with us and our fighters persist. Since leading promoters have now informed us that they will be severing all ties with MTK and will no longer work with our fighters, we have taken the difficult decision to cease operations at the end of this month. MTK prospered because we always put the long-term interests of our fighters at the heart of what we do. A priority in the weeks ahead will be to ensure that a world-class boxers are supported to find new partnerships as swiftly as possible. MTK gyms are operated independently so will remain open for the foreseeable future. Further announcements will be made in due course. Thank you to all the fans who have supported us over the last decade."
Yesterday, MTK's CEO Bob Yalen abruptlyresigned, with MTK issuing the following statement: "We regret to announce that Bob Yalen has today stepped down as CEO of MTK Global for personal reasons. We would like to thank him for all of his efforts on behalf of the business and his leadership of our team. Yalen said: “I am incredibly proud of the success of MTK Global and I feel privileged to have served as President and CEO since 2018. However, the pressure of the last few weeks has been particularly intense. I need to consider the impact on myself and my family. So after four years leading MTK, I think it’s time for me to step aside to take on new challenges.”
***
April 13, 2022 Press Release from U.S. Department of State: The U.S. Department of State announced rewards of up to $5 million for information leading to each of the arrests and/or convictions of Irish transnational organized criminal Christopher Vincent Kinahan and his two sons, Daniel Joseph Kinahan and Christopher Kinahan, Jr., for participating in, or conspiring to participate in, transnational organized crime. After initially distributing South American cocaine and heroin in Ireland, the Kinahans later expanded their narcotics trafficking organization to include the United Kingdom and then throughout mainland Europe. In addition to narcotics trafficking, the Kinahans have engaged in money laundering, firearms trafficking, and murder." EDITOR'S NOTE: Daniel Kinahan is widely reported to be a key figure in MTK Global, the boxing management organization, as well as an advisor to WBC heavyweight champion Tyson Fury.
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Baumgardner retains her titles |
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Alycia Baumgardner W10 Bo Mi Re Shin... Three-belt junior lightweight champion Alycia Baumgardner largely controlled the action in New York City's Madison Square Garden on Friday, defeating Bo Mi Re Shin by unanimous decision. Official scores were 98-92 (twice) and 99-91. Baumgardner retained her WBA, WBO and IBF titles in a bout that was contested ver ten, three-minute rounds, a rarity because women's boxing normally features two-minute rounds. |
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Baumgardner retains her titles
Alycia Baumgardner W10 Bo Mi Re Shin... Three-belt junior lightweight champion Alycia Baumgardner largely controlled the action in New York City's Madison Square Garden on Friday, defeating Bo Mi Re Shin by unanimous decision. Official scores were 98-92 (twice) and 99-91. Baumgardner retained her WBA, WBO and IBF titles in a bout that was contested ver ten, three-minute rounds, a rarity because women's boxing normally features two-minute rounds. |
Lorente arises from knockdown to win featherweight eliminator |
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Cristóbal Lorente W12 Nathaniel Collins... At The SSE Hydro in Glasgow, Scotland, Spain’s Cristóbal Lorente delivered a standout performance, winning a WBC featherweight elimmination bout. Lorente defeated the home boxer, Nathaniel Collins, pushing the winner closer to a shot at the full world title currently held by Bruce Carrington. After their first encounter ended in a draw, both fighters returned to the ring determined to leave no doubt. But it was Lorente who showed clear technical improvement and excellent physical conditioning. One of the key moments came in the sixth round, when Collins scored a knockdown against Lorente. Despite hitting the canvas, the Spaniard recovered well, adjusted his strategy, and remained competitive through the remaining rounds. After twelve rounds of sustained action punctuated by shifting momentum, the judges’ scorecards reflected the closeness and intensity of the fight, awarding a split decision victory to Lorente.
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Lorente arises from knockdown to win featherweight eliminator
Cristóbal Lorente W12 Nathaniel Collins... At The SSE Hydro in Glasgow, Scotland, Spain’s Cristóbal Lorente delivered a standout performance, winning a WBC featherweight elimmination bout. Lorente defeated the home boxer, Nathaniel Collins, pushing the winner closer to a shot at the full world title currently held by Bruce Carrington. After their first encounter ended in a draw, both fighters returned to the ring determined to leave no doubt. But it was Lorente who showed clear technical improvement and excellent physical conditioning. One of the key moments came in the sixth round, when Collins scored a knockdown against Lorente. Despite hitting the canvas, the Spaniard recovered well, adjusted his strategy, and remained competitive through the remaining rounds. After twelve rounds of sustained action punctuated by shifting momentum, the judges’ scorecards reflected the closeness and intensity of the fight, awarding a split decision victory to Lorente.
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Rodriguez to seek third weight class title vs. Vargas |
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Three-belt super flyweight champion Jesse ‘Bam’ Rodriguez will move up and challenge Antonio Vargas for the WBC bantamweight title at the Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona on Saturday June 13th, live worldwide on DAZN. Rodriguez (23-0 16 KOs) is gunning to become a three-weight champion in Arizona and does so in a venue that holds happy memories for the Texas star, with Bam unifying the flyweight division with a stoppage win over Sunny Edwards in December 2023. The 26-year old had already enjoyed huge success in the state, with his first title win coming in Phoenix in February 2022 when he defeated Carlos Cuadras to become WBC regular champion at super flyweight. He returned to the same city in June 2024 to stop Juan Francisco Estrada to become the WBC champion at super flyweight.
That win over Estrada was the first of a run of four big wins inside the distance for Bam, destroying Pedro Guevara in Philadelphia, then stopping Phumelele Cafu to add the WBO title to his collection, before claiming another strap in Saudi Arabia with another spectacular win over WBA champion Fernando Martinez.
Vargas (19-1-1 11 KOs) is the man standing in the way of Bam’s quest for more history in the desert, and the 29 year old can catapult himself into the elite if he can become the first man to beat Bam. The Florida-based Texan has again been elevated to full WBA champion, having previously landed the interim title in December 2024 against Winston Guererro in Florida and being elevated before defending the strap in Japan against Daigo Higa in July, with their back-and-forth humdinger ending in a draw. Vargas became champion in recess after a fight with former champion Seiya Tsutsumi was postponed for a third time, but the Japanese has now been placed into the same position after being unable to face Vargas at the fourth attempt, and Vargas now elevated once again.
“New weight class, same goals – dominate and pick up all the belts,” said Rodriguez. “On June 13, I look forward to becoming a three-division World Champion.”
“Jesse ‘Bam’ Rodriguez is one of the best pound-for-pound fighters in the world, and
that’s exactly why I took this fight,” said Vargas. “These are the moments champions live for. I respect his skill, his IQ, everything he brings to the ring. I look forward to defending my WBA World title and I’m ready to prove that I’m one of the best fighters in my weight class.
“I’ve worked my entire life to become a World champion, and I’m going to defend it with everything I have. I’m focused, I’m prepared, and everyone is going to see the best version of myself. But most of all I fight to glorify Jesus Christ”
“This is another fantastic fight for the best schedule in the sport,” said promoter Eddie Hearn. “We were delighted to announce earlier the extension to our long-term deal with Jesse, and yet again, he has chosen to reach out for greatness and become a three-weight World champion, which would be an incredible achievement at just 26 years of age.
“Antonio is a very talented fighter and has been waiting for a big fight to prove it – and there are few bigger challenges in the sport than taking on Bam. Every time we do a show in and around Phoenix there’s always fireworks, and fans can expect nothing less on June 13.”
Announcements on the undercard and ticket on sale dates will be made in due course.
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Rodriguez to seek third weight class title vs. Vargas
Three-belt super flyweight champion Jesse ‘Bam’ Rodriguez will move up and challenge Antonio Vargas for the WBC bantamweight title at the Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona on Saturday June 13th, live worldwide on DAZN. Rodriguez (23-0 16 KOs) is gunning to become a three-weight champion in Arizona and does so in a venue that holds happy memories for the Texas star, with Bam unifying the flyweight division with a stoppage win over Sunny Edwards in December 2023. The 26-year old had already enjoyed huge success in the state, with his first title win coming in Phoenix in February 2022 when he defeated Carlos Cuadras to become WBC regular champion at super flyweight. He returned to the same city in June 2024 to stop Juan Francisco Estrada to become the WBC champion at super flyweight.
That win over Estrada was the first of a run of four big wins inside the distance for Bam, destroying Pedro Guevara in Philadelphia, then stopping Phumelele Cafu to add the WBO title to his collection, before claiming another strap in Saudi Arabia with another spectacular win over WBA champion Fernando Martinez.
Vargas (19-1-1 11 KOs) is the man standing in the way of Bam’s quest for more history in the desert, and the 29 year old can catapult himself into the elite if he can become the first man to beat Bam. The Florida-based Texan has again been elevated to full WBA champion, having previously landed the interim title in December 2024 against Winston Guererro in Florida and being elevated before defending the strap in Japan against Daigo Higa in July, with their back-and-forth humdinger ending in a draw. Vargas became champion in recess after a fight with former champion Seiya Tsutsumi was postponed for a third time, but the Japanese has now been placed into the same position after being unable to face Vargas at the fourth attempt, and Vargas now elevated once again.
“New weight class, same goals – dominate and pick up all the belts,” said Rodriguez. “On June 13, I look forward to becoming a three-division World Champion.”
“Jesse ‘Bam’ Rodriguez is one of the best pound-for-pound fighters in the world, and
that’s exactly why I took this fight,” said Vargas. “These are the moments champions live for. I respect his skill, his IQ, everything he brings to the ring. I look forward to defending my WBA World title and I’m ready to prove that I’m one of the best fighters in my weight class.
“I’ve worked my entire life to become a World champion, and I’m going to defend it with everything I have. I’m focused, I’m prepared, and everyone is going to see the best version of myself. But most of all I fight to glorify Jesus Christ”
“This is another fantastic fight for the best schedule in the sport,” said promoter Eddie Hearn. “We were delighted to announce earlier the extension to our long-term deal with Jesse, and yet again, he has chosen to reach out for greatness and become a three-weight World champion, which would be an incredible achievement at just 26 years of age.
“Antonio is a very talented fighter and has been waiting for a big fight to prove it – and there are few bigger challenges in the sport than taking on Bam. Every time we do a show in and around Phoenix there’s always fireworks, and fans can expect nothing less on June 13.”
Announcements on the undercard and ticket on sale dates will be made in due course.
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Spotlight on Resendiz vs. Munguia |
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On a May 2nd pay-per-view from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, newly elevated WBA super middleweight champion Armando “Toro” Reséndiz and former junior middleweight champion Jaime Munguía will square off in an all-Mexican co-feature. The main event that night will be a two-belt cruiserweight championship fight with Gilberto Ramirez defending against undefeated two-division champion David Benavidez, who is moving up from light heavyweight. Resendiz (16-2) defeated ex-champ Caleb Plant by split decision last year to become WBA interim champ, and then was elevated to WBA champion when the division's true world champion, Terence Crawford, announced his retirement. Munguia (45-2) last fought in May 2025, avenging a prior loss to Bruno Surace. Munguia held the WBO 154-pound title from 2018-2019. Here is what these two Mexican warriors had to say at an open workout this week:
ARMANDO RESENDIZ
“I’ve come so far since that fight against Plant and I’m really excited to be in this position. I’ve learned that adversity isn’t your enemy, but rather your teacher.”
“I’m staying focused in the moment, on what matters, and that’s going out there and winning. That keeps my feet on the ground and allows me to stay centered.”
“Being the hunted instead of the hunter is certainly a different, but my mindset doesn’t change, I’m ready to brawl.”
“I want the biggest fights and toughest opponents, but that’s not my focus. All I can do is win on May 2 and continue on to great things.”
JAIME MUNGUIA
“Experience is on my side, no doubt about it. I’ve faced the bigger names, I know my way through 12 rounds. I have the edge.”
“I’m going to go after the KO. I can’t predict a specific round, but I can guarantee that the fans will witness a show on May 2.”
“Having Eddy Reynoso in my corner is truly an honor. He provides me with the tools I need to feel confident throughout fight week and when I step into the ring.”
“So many things go through your head when you walk towards the ring to fight on Cinco de Mayo. It’s not just another day. Fighting on Cinco de Mayo is representing the Mexican fans.”
“Canelo and I have talked about Reséndiz before, and he told me that I have all the tools I need to come out on top.”
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Spotlight on Resendiz vs. Munguia
On a May 2nd pay-per-view from T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, newly elevated WBA super middleweight champion Armando “Toro” Reséndiz and former junior middleweight champion Jaime Munguía will square off in an all-Mexican co-feature. The main event that night will be a two-belt cruiserweight championship fight with Gilberto Ramirez defending against undefeated two-division champion David Benavidez, who is moving up from light heavyweight. Resendiz (16-2) defeated ex-champ Caleb Plant by split decision last year to become WBA interim champ, and then was elevated to WBA champion when the division's true world champion, Terence Crawford, announced his retirement. Munguia (45-2) last fought in May 2025, avenging a prior loss to Bruno Surace. Munguia held the WBO 154-pound title from 2018-2019. Here is what these two Mexican warriors had to say at an open workout this week:
ARMANDO RESENDIZ
“I’ve come so far since that fight against Plant and I’m really excited to be in this position. I’ve learned that adversity isn’t your enemy, but rather your teacher.”
“I’m staying focused in the moment, on what matters, and that’s going out there and winning. That keeps my feet on the ground and allows me to stay centered.”
“Being the hunted instead of the hunter is certainly a different, but my mindset doesn’t change, I’m ready to brawl.”
“I want the biggest fights and toughest opponents, but that’s not my focus. All I can do is win on May 2 and continue on to great things.”
JAIME MUNGUIA
“Experience is on my side, no doubt about it. I’ve faced the bigger names, I know my way through 12 rounds. I have the edge.”
“I’m going to go after the KO. I can’t predict a specific round, but I can guarantee that the fans will witness a show on May 2.”
“Having Eddy Reynoso in my corner is truly an honor. He provides me with the tools I need to feel confident throughout fight week and when I step into the ring.”
“So many things go through your head when you walk towards the ring to fight on Cinco de Mayo. It’s not just another day. Fighting on Cinco de Mayo is representing the Mexican fans.”
“Canelo and I have talked about Reséndiz before, and he told me that I have all the tools I need to come out on top.”
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Weigh-in report from New York City |
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Friday's ESPN main event, unified junior lightweight champion Alycia Baumgardner defending three of the four major titles against Bo Mi Re Shin, will feature ten three‑minute rounds. It will take place in the Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Baumgardner weighed in at 129.8 pounds while Shin scaled in at 129.4. For the co-feature, super middleweight champion Shadasia Green came in right at the 168-pound weight limite, while challenger Lani Daniels weighed 167.6. Also on the card, Krystal Rosado and Fernanda Reyes both weighed in at the 118-pound bantamweight limit before their eight-round encounter. |
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Weigh-in report from New York City
Friday's ESPN main event, unified junior lightweight champion Alycia Baumgardner defending three of the four major titles against Bo Mi Re Shin, will feature ten three‑minute rounds. It will take place in the Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Baumgardner weighed in at 129.8 pounds while Shin scaled in at 129.4. For the co-feature, super middleweight champion Shadasia Green came in right at the 168-pound weight limite, while challenger Lani Daniels weighed 167.6. Also on the card, Krystal Rosado and Fernanda Reyes both weighed in at the 118-pound bantamweight limit before their eight-round encounter. |
Zuffa adds Rozicki to growing cruiserweight roster |
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For the second time this week, Zuffa Boxing has signed a cruiserweight contender. Days after inking ex-champ Chris Billam-Smith, Zuffa announced a deal with power-punching Canadian Ryan Rozicki (21-1-1, 19 KOs). Rozicki is currently ranked #1 by the WBC. Zuffa now has two attractive opponents for its star 200 pounder, current Zuffa champion and former IBF champion Jai Opetaia. Rozicki has wanted to fight Opetaia some time now. “Jai and his team know who I am,” Rozicki said back in February. “I have been knocking on that door for years. They obviously don’t want the fight; it is what it is."
“We tried numerous times to get that fight with Jai,” Three Lions Promotions Managing Director Daniel Otter explained at the time. “I’m sure Dana White (Zuffa Boxing) will like that fight (Opetaia vs. Rozicki). He makes his guys take on the best... 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.” Opetaia (30-0, 23 KOs) signed a promotional deal with Zuffa Boxing last year and defeated Brandon Glanton (21-3, 18 KOs) on March 8th at Metro Apex in Las Vegas.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
APRIL 14, 2026: Former cruiserweight champion Chris Billam-Smith agreed to a multi-fight promotional deal with Zuffa Boxing [and seems destined for a fight with Zuffa champion Jai Opetaia, considered the top 200-pounder in the world]. Billam-Smith will have his next fight to be announced soon; "This move is about proving I am the best in the world. I can't wait to get back in the ring, headlining shows, live on Sky," he said. Billam-Smith beat Brandon Glanton in his most recent fight last April. The 35-year-old has a 21-2 record and the reputation for being one of the most exciting fighters in Britain.
"I'm really excited by this opportunity to work with Zuffa and Sky Sports," said Billam-Smith. "When two powerhouses in the world of entertainment come together like this, you know it will be a success, and you want to be a part of that. This move is about proving I am the best in the world. I can't wait to get back in the ring, headlining shows, live on Sky Sports."
Billam-Smith has a tremendous fanbase in his hometown of Bournemouth and headlined at the Vitality Stadium when he dethroned Lawrence Okolie to win the WBO cruiserweight title in 2023. That win came a year after he thrilled his supporters with an all-action victory over Isaac Chamberlain to win the European championship and set up his world title shot with a crunching knockout victory over Armend Xhoxhaj. He also topped the bill at Crystal Palace's Selhurst Park when he avenged an early career defeat to Richard Riakporhe and defended his world title against the hard-punching Londoner.
Trained by Shane McGuigan, one of the UK's most successful coaches, from the start of his career, Billam-Smith has won British, Commonwealth, European and world titles on his route to the top of the division, all while routinely fighting in front of sold-out crowds. Determined to take on the best opposition, he previously told Sky Sports: "I'm very motivated, very driven now, very excited. I feel in a really good place, probably the best place I've felt for many, many years, probably pre-Lawrence Okolie fight. I think mentally, where I'm at in life, but also physically as well. I feel like I'm in a really good position so I'm excited to get back in the ring. I want the best fights out there. The ones that are going to get me up for making a statement."
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Zuffa adds Rozicki to growing cruiserweight roster
For the second time this week, Zuffa Boxing has signed a cruiserweight contender. Days after inking ex-champ Chris Billam-Smith, Zuffa announced a deal with power-punching Canadian Ryan Rozicki (21-1-1, 19 KOs). Rozicki is currently ranked #1 by the WBC. Zuffa now has two attractive opponents for its star 200 pounder, current Zuffa champion and former IBF champion Jai Opetaia. Rozicki has wanted to fight Opetaia some time now. “Jai and his team know who I am,” Rozicki said back in February. “I have been knocking on that door for years. They obviously don’t want the fight; it is what it is."
“We tried numerous times to get that fight with Jai,” Three Lions Promotions Managing Director Daniel Otter explained at the time. “I’m sure Dana White (Zuffa Boxing) will like that fight (Opetaia vs. Rozicki). He makes his guys take on the best... 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.” Opetaia (30-0, 23 KOs) signed a promotional deal with Zuffa Boxing last year and defeated Brandon Glanton (21-3, 18 KOs) on March 8th at Metro Apex in Las Vegas.
PRIOR BOXINGTALK COVERAGE
APRIL 14, 2026: Former cruiserweight champion Chris Billam-Smith agreed to a multi-fight promotional deal with Zuffa Boxing [and seems destined for a fight with Zuffa champion Jai Opetaia, considered the top 200-pounder in the world]. Billam-Smith will have his next fight to be announced soon; "This move is about proving I am the best in the world. I can't wait to get back in the ring, headlining shows, live on Sky," he said. Billam-Smith beat Brandon Glanton in his most recent fight last April. The 35-year-old has a 21-2 record and the reputation for being one of the most exciting fighters in Britain.
"I'm really excited by this opportunity to work with Zuffa and Sky Sports," said Billam-Smith. "When two powerhouses in the world of entertainment come together like this, you know it will be a success, and you want to be a part of that. This move is about proving I am the best in the world. I can't wait to get back in the ring, headlining shows, live on Sky Sports."
Billam-Smith has a tremendous fanbase in his hometown of Bournemouth and headlined at the Vitality Stadium when he dethroned Lawrence Okolie to win the WBO cruiserweight title in 2023. That win came a year after he thrilled his supporters with an all-action victory over Isaac Chamberlain to win the European championship and set up his world title shot with a crunching knockout victory over Armend Xhoxhaj. He also topped the bill at Crystal Palace's Selhurst Park when he avenged an early career defeat to Richard Riakporhe and defended his world title against the hard-punching Londoner.
Trained by Shane McGuigan, one of the UK's most successful coaches, from the start of his career, Billam-Smith has won British, Commonwealth, European and world titles on his route to the top of the division, all while routinely fighting in front of sold-out crowds. Determined to take on the best opposition, he previously told Sky Sports: "I'm very motivated, very driven now, very excited. I feel in a really good place, probably the best place I've felt for many, many years, probably pre-Lawrence Okolie fight. I think mentally, where I'm at in life, but also physically as well. I feel like I'm in a really good position so I'm excited to get back in the ring. I want the best fights out there. The ones that are going to get me up for making a statement."
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Tickets on sale now for Davis brothers show in Norfolk, VA |
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Tickets for the twelve-round junior welterweight rematch between Keyshawn Davis and Nahir Albright, scheduled for Saturday, May 16th at Norfolk, Virginia's Scope Arena, are on sale now. In the ten-round welterweight co-feature, former champion Brian Norman Jr. (28-1, 22 KOs) takes on Canada’s Josh Wagner (19-2, 10 KOs). Keyshawn-Albright II and Norman-Wagner will be streamed live on DAZN.
In undercard action, Keyshawn’s older brother Kelvin Davis (15-1, 8 KOs) returns in a ten-rounder at welterweight, while younger brother Keon Davis (4-0, 3 KOs) sees action in a six-round bout in the same division. Additional undercard details will be announced shortly. Promoted by Top Rank, in association with RDR Promotions, tickets are available at the Scope Arena box office and Ticketmaster.com.
Davis (14-0, 10 KOs) enters the rematch with momentum after a winning 140-pound debut in January, when he handed Jamaine Ortiz his first stoppage defeat. The former lightweight champion and Olympic silver medalist fought Albright to a no contest in October 2023. Now, he returns home looking to settle unfinished business.
Albright (17-2-1, 7 KOs), a Philadelphia native who turned pro with roughly 30 amateur fights, has turned in two of the best performances of his career since the first Keyshawn fight. Last June, he handed older brother Kelvin his first pro loss, and in January, he battled Frank Martin to a draw.
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Tickets on sale now for Davis brothers show in Norfolk, VA
Tickets for the twelve-round junior welterweight rematch between Keyshawn Davis and Nahir Albright, scheduled for Saturday, May 16th at Norfolk, Virginia's Scope Arena, are on sale now. In the ten-round welterweight co-feature, former champion Brian Norman Jr. (28-1, 22 KOs) takes on Canada’s Josh Wagner (19-2, 10 KOs). Keyshawn-Albright II and Norman-Wagner will be streamed live on DAZN.
In undercard action, Keyshawn’s older brother Kelvin Davis (15-1, 8 KOs) returns in a ten-rounder at welterweight, while younger brother Keon Davis (4-0, 3 KOs) sees action in a six-round bout in the same division. Additional undercard details will be announced shortly. Promoted by Top Rank, in association with RDR Promotions, tickets are available at the Scope Arena box office and Ticketmaster.com.
Davis (14-0, 10 KOs) enters the rematch with momentum after a winning 140-pound debut in January, when he handed Jamaine Ortiz his first stoppage defeat. The former lightweight champion and Olympic silver medalist fought Albright to a no contest in October 2023. Now, he returns home looking to settle unfinished business.
Albright (17-2-1, 7 KOs), a Philadelphia native who turned pro with roughly 30 amateur fights, has turned in two of the best performances of his career since the first Keyshawn fight. Last June, he handed older brother Kelvin his first pro loss, and in January, he battled Frank Martin to a draw.
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Usyk briefly addresses criticism over choice of opponent |
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At a press conference in London, world heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk (pictured) made it clear that his upcoming bout against kickboxing legend Rico Verhoeven is an act of personal will. At an event organized by Matchroom Boxing, the boxers stood face-to-face for two plus minutes, ahead of their clash scheduled for May 23rd at the Pyramids of Giza, Egypt. Addressing criticism regarding the apparent mismatch of a champion fighting someone who is 1-0 as a boxer, Usyk responded with a serenity that struck those in attendance: “For once, I want to do what I want, not what I need,” the Ukrainian declared. “Many times I do what other people need… now I do what I need. For me, it is a challenge.”
Usyk, who has cleared out the division by defeating Daniel Dubois, Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua, downplayed external pressure, asserting that his love for life transcends the ring and that this event in Egypt is a gift to himself after years of a grueling career.
Arriving in London, Verhoeven insisted he is no mere bystander. Aware of the difference in boxing technique, Verhoeven is counting on sheer unpredictability and his physical advantage:“I am going to bring kickboxing angles that Usyk does not know. If I connect cleanly, he will go down. He is a cruiserweight moved up to heavyweight, and there is a 20-kilogram weight difference in my favor.”
Promoter Eddie Hearn and trainer Peter Fury agreed on the magnitude of the ascent event, describing it as an “absolute spectacle” and a “fantasy come true.” The conference concluded with a tense and prolonged face-off between both fighters. On May 23rd, the boxing world will pause to see if the will of a genius is enough to stop the force of nature represented by Verhoeven.
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Usyk briefly addresses criticism over choice of opponent
At a press conference in London, world heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk (pictured) made it clear that his upcoming bout against kickboxing legend Rico Verhoeven is an act of personal will. At an event organized by Matchroom Boxing, the boxers stood face-to-face for two plus minutes, ahead of their clash scheduled for May 23rd at the Pyramids of Giza, Egypt. Addressing criticism regarding the apparent mismatch of a champion fighting someone who is 1-0 as a boxer, Usyk responded with a serenity that struck those in attendance: “For once, I want to do what I want, not what I need,” the Ukrainian declared. “Many times I do what other people need… now I do what I need. For me, it is a challenge.”
Usyk, who has cleared out the division by defeating Daniel Dubois, Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua, downplayed external pressure, asserting that his love for life transcends the ring and that this event in Egypt is a gift to himself after years of a grueling career.
Arriving in London, Verhoeven insisted he is no mere bystander. Aware of the difference in boxing technique, Verhoeven is counting on sheer unpredictability and his physical advantage:“I am going to bring kickboxing angles that Usyk does not know. If I connect cleanly, he will go down. He is a cruiserweight moved up to heavyweight, and there is a 20-kilogram weight difference in my favor.”
Promoter Eddie Hearn and trainer Peter Fury agreed on the magnitude of the ascent event, describing it as an “absolute spectacle” and a “fantasy come true.” The conference concluded with a tense and prolonged face-off between both fighters. On May 23rd, the boxing world will pause to see if the will of a genius is enough to stop the force of nature represented by Verhoeven.
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Whittaker headlines on Saturday: "On paper, perhaps I haven’t done too much yet" |
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Ben Whittaker is ready to face his toughest test to date when he headlines at Liverpool’s M&S Bank Arena this Saturday against Argentina’s Braian Suarez (21-4, 20 KOs), live on DAZN. The former British Olympian was promoted to the main event after hometown hero Callum Smith saw his WBO interim light heavyweight title clash with David Morrell postponed due to injury. But Whittaker (10-0-1, 7 KOs) says Merseyside is a special place for him, having won his first ABA Championship in the city as an amateur which propelled him towards his Tokyo 2021 Games silver medal success.
And now he is plotting a victory this weekend as a pro to steer him towards his dream of fighting next in America – before ultimately challenging the top names in the 175-pound division. “Training camp has gone well, like everybody says. But I’m in a good place. I’m confident, I feel good. So now it’s just a case of going out there and performing a game plan,” said Whittaker, speaking to Matchroom Boxing presenter Jamie Ward.
“For me activity is key. I want to look good and win. The more you win, the more you get the bigger fights – and for me, that’s all that matters. As a fighter, you always want to steal the show. So being the headliner is something special to me. I’ve fought here in Liverpool plenty of times. It is where I won my first ABA title, so this place genuinely means something to me.
“When my girlfriend and my manager first told me the news, I thought it was an April Fools! But I think when the stars align, everything happens for a reason and it’s down to me now to go and put a show on.”
Whittaker faced-off with Suarez for the first time this week, with the pair sizing each other up outside the city’s famous Royal Liver Building. But it was Callum Smith’s would-be opponent David Morrell who wanted to face him next, after calling the Midlands man out last week. “They all call me out for a reason, I suppose. 100 per cent it’s a compliment,” Whittaker said. “On paper, perhaps I haven’t done too much yet but they are calling me out. So when you have these guys who are champions, or who have fought for world titles, calling me out then it shows I’m doing something right.
“But, for me, when I get there I want to stay there. That’s why I listen to my team and trust the process in taking the fights that I’m supposed to be taking for now, then take over.”
Whittaker hopes he will pick up this weekend where he left off last November when he dismantled Benjamin Gavazi inside the first round with a devastating knockout.
“A lot of people have seen me dancing and stuff, but that knockout showed that I can really hit,” said Whittaker.
“I came out, hunted him down and got him out of there. What a night it was. Hopefully I can do the same again on Saturday.”
Whittaker knows that Suarez, who last fought in the UK against Lyndon Arthur in 2023 for the IBO title, will be desperate to cause a major upset. But the Brit is confident, he will leave Liverpool with his undefeated record firmly in tact. “He’s a good opponent,” Whittaker said. “He’s had more knockouts than I’ve had fights. On paper, he’s a tough fighter and the Argentine fighters are always game. A lot of people might brush past that it was the IBO, but he has still been in a world title fight. For me, this is a good step up and a step up that I need. I just believe that I am better than him in every department.”
Should he triumph in style, Whittaker fully expects to have his next fight in the US, which would be the realisation of a career-long dream of his. “That is the plan, of course,” he said. “But you can never look too far ahead and you need to get the job done. God willing, everything goes to plan and I go to America. I’m looking forward to it. The fans out there want me to fight out there, so I’d like to do that one day and put on a show. I’ve even already got the ring walk planned.”
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Whittaker headlines on Saturday: "On paper, perhaps I haven’t done too much yet"
Ben Whittaker is ready to face his toughest test to date when he headlines at Liverpool’s M&S Bank Arena this Saturday against Argentina’s Braian Suarez (21-4, 20 KOs), live on DAZN. The former British Olympian was promoted to the main event after hometown hero Callum Smith saw his WBO interim light heavyweight title clash with David Morrell postponed due to injury. But Whittaker (10-0-1, 7 KOs) says Merseyside is a special place for him, having won his first ABA Championship in the city as an amateur which propelled him towards his Tokyo 2021 Games silver medal success.
And now he is plotting a victory this weekend as a pro to steer him towards his dream of fighting next in America – before ultimately challenging the top names in the 175-pound division. “Training camp has gone well, like everybody says. But I’m in a good place. I’m confident, I feel good. So now it’s just a case of going out there and performing a game plan,” said Whittaker, speaking to Matchroom Boxing presenter Jamie Ward.
“For me activity is key. I want to look good and win. The more you win, the more you get the bigger fights – and for me, that’s all that matters. As a fighter, you always want to steal the show. So being the headliner is something special to me. I’ve fought here in Liverpool plenty of times. It is where I won my first ABA title, so this place genuinely means something to me.
“When my girlfriend and my manager first told me the news, I thought it was an April Fools! But I think when the stars align, everything happens for a reason and it’s down to me now to go and put a show on.”
Whittaker faced-off with Suarez for the first time this week, with the pair sizing each other up outside the city’s famous Royal Liver Building. But it was Callum Smith’s would-be opponent David Morrell who wanted to face him next, after calling the Midlands man out last week. “They all call me out for a reason, I suppose. 100 per cent it’s a compliment,” Whittaker said. “On paper, perhaps I haven’t done too much yet but they are calling me out. So when you have these guys who are champions, or who have fought for world titles, calling me out then it shows I’m doing something right.
“But, for me, when I get there I want to stay there. That’s why I listen to my team and trust the process in taking the fights that I’m supposed to be taking for now, then take over.”
Whittaker hopes he will pick up this weekend where he left off last November when he dismantled Benjamin Gavazi inside the first round with a devastating knockout.
“A lot of people have seen me dancing and stuff, but that knockout showed that I can really hit,” said Whittaker.
“I came out, hunted him down and got him out of there. What a night it was. Hopefully I can do the same again on Saturday.”
Whittaker knows that Suarez, who last fought in the UK against Lyndon Arthur in 2023 for the IBO title, will be desperate to cause a major upset. But the Brit is confident, he will leave Liverpool with his undefeated record firmly in tact. “He’s a good opponent,” Whittaker said. “He’s had more knockouts than I’ve had fights. On paper, he’s a tough fighter and the Argentine fighters are always game. A lot of people might brush past that it was the IBO, but he has still been in a world title fight. For me, this is a good step up and a step up that I need. I just believe that I am better than him in every department.”
Should he triumph in style, Whittaker fully expects to have his next fight in the US, which would be the realisation of a career-long dream of his. “That is the plan, of course,” he said. “But you can never look too far ahead and you need to get the job done. God willing, everything goes to plan and I go to America. I’m looking forward to it. The fans out there want me to fight out there, so I’d like to do that one day and put on a show. I’ve even already got the ring walk planned.”
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Boxingtalk salutes Regis Prograis on his retirement |
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Former junior welterweight champion Regis "Rougarou" Prograis announced his retirement from boxing following last weekend's loss to Conor Benn in London. Boxingtalk salutes Prograis, who leaves with a record of 30-4 after a pro career that spanned 2012-2026. He enjoyed two title reigns: as WBA champion commencing in 2019 and as WBC champion starting in 2022. Prograis tweeted: "Good fight Conor. It was a pleasure sharing the ring with you. Best of luck in your career... On to the next chapter of my life and part two of my book Stories & Lessons from Regis Prograis! Major thanks to everyone who supported me! My career was all about overcoming the odds stacked against me and not being afraid of chasing my dreams. I hope I inspired you to do the same!"
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Boxingtalk salutes Regis Prograis on his retirement
Former junior welterweight champion Regis "Rougarou" Prograis announced his retirement from boxing following last weekend's loss to Conor Benn in London. Boxingtalk salutes Prograis, who leaves with a record of 30-4 after a pro career that spanned 2012-2026. He enjoyed two title reigns: as WBA champion commencing in 2019 and as WBC champion starting in 2022. Prograis tweeted: "Good fight Conor. It was a pleasure sharing the ring with you. Best of luck in your career... On to the next chapter of my life and part two of my book Stories & Lessons from Regis Prograis! Major thanks to everyone who supported me! My career was all about overcoming the odds stacked against me and not being afraid of chasing my dreams. I hope I inspired you to do the same!"
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Resendiz to defend title vs. Munguia on May 2nd |
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On May 2nd, WBA / WBO cruiserweight champion Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez will defend his 200-pound titles against undefeated two-division champion David “El Monstro” Benavidez, who is the reigning WBC light heavyweight title holder. That fight headlines a PBC pay-per-view event available on Prime Video at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Also on the card will be WBA super middleweight champion Armando “Toro” Reséndiz defending against former junior middleweight title holder Jaime Munguía, and Oscar Duarte taking on hard-hitting Angel Fierro in a ten-round junior welterweight attraction. |
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Resendiz to defend title vs. Munguia on May 2nd
On May 2nd, WBA / WBO cruiserweight champion Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez will defend his 200-pound titles against undefeated two-division champion David “El Monstro” Benavidez, who is the reigning WBC light heavyweight title holder. That fight headlines a PBC pay-per-view event available on Prime Video at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Also on the card will be WBA super middleweight champion Armando “Toro” Reséndiz defending against former junior middleweight title holder Jaime Munguía, and Oscar Duarte taking on hard-hitting Angel Fierro in a ten-round junior welterweight attraction. |
Iman Lee moving up to 130 this weekend |
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Yonkers, New York native Iman Lee (14-0-1, 8 KOs) will see action on Saturday, April 18th when he faces Jose Nunez Sosa (8-2, 6 KOs) in a ten-round junior lightweight contest at the Connecticut Convention Center in Hartford. Tickets are on sale now at CESFights.com. Doors open at 4pm, with the Jimmy Burchfield Classic Invitational amateur showcase beginning at 5pm. At just 26 years old, Lee enters the biggest fight of his professional career following a breakout year in 2025. He gained valuable international experience as part of the WBC Grand Prix featherweight tournament, where he went 2-0-1. "I learned to be calmer and take my time," said Lee of his key takeaways from the experience. "Those were six-round fights where you had to showcase everything quickly, but I learned to slow down, pick my shots better, and listen to my coaches. It really opened my eyes."
Lee faced a wide range of styles during the tournament, defeating slick Argentine Juan Manuel Albornoz in round one and Mexican pressure fighter Hector Calderon in round two before drawing with South Africa’s Bekzizwe Maitse in the quarterfinals. "The experience showed me that I have to adapt no matter the style, height, or type of opponent," said Lee. "It also proved that I can adjust on the fly in the ring if I need to."
Learning to adjust mid-fight to be successful is a trait that will serve Iman well as he transitions from prospect to contender. That adaptability will be tested again on April 18th, when Lee faces Jose Nunez Sosa, a hard-hitting 26-year old from the Dominican Republic known for his aggressive style and knockout power, with six of his eight wins coming inside the distance. "I’ve sparred with him a couple of times in the past, so I’m familiar with him," said Lee. "He likes to fight, so for me, it’s about staying calm and sharp, using my reach, and relying on my stamina."
The bout also marks Lee’s debut at 130 pounds after competing primarily at featherweight. "I didn't have to move up - I did it for the opportunity to fight for [a regional] title," explains the 5-foot-10 Lee. "It means a lot for me to fight for that belt."
Fighting less than two hours from his hometown, Lee is expected to draw strong support from the New York area and is eager to deliver a statement performance. "I'm very thankful for everyone who is coming out to support," Lee said. "I’m looking forward to putting on a great performance on a stacked card."
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Iman Lee moving up to 130 this weekend
Yonkers, New York native Iman Lee (14-0-1, 8 KOs) will see action on Saturday, April 18th when he faces Jose Nunez Sosa (8-2, 6 KOs) in a ten-round junior lightweight contest at the Connecticut Convention Center in Hartford. Tickets are on sale now at CESFights.com. Doors open at 4pm, with the Jimmy Burchfield Classic Invitational amateur showcase beginning at 5pm. At just 26 years old, Lee enters the biggest fight of his professional career following a breakout year in 2025. He gained valuable international experience as part of the WBC Grand Prix featherweight tournament, where he went 2-0-1. "I learned to be calmer and take my time," said Lee of his key takeaways from the experience. "Those were six-round fights where you had to showcase everything quickly, but I learned to slow down, pick my shots better, and listen to my coaches. It really opened my eyes."
Lee faced a wide range of styles during the tournament, defeating slick Argentine Juan Manuel Albornoz in round one and Mexican pressure fighter Hector Calderon in round two before drawing with South Africa’s Bekzizwe Maitse in the quarterfinals. "The experience showed me that I have to adapt no matter the style, height, or type of opponent," said Lee. "It also proved that I can adjust on the fly in the ring if I need to."
Learning to adjust mid-fight to be successful is a trait that will serve Iman well as he transitions from prospect to contender. That adaptability will be tested again on April 18th, when Lee faces Jose Nunez Sosa, a hard-hitting 26-year old from the Dominican Republic known for his aggressive style and knockout power, with six of his eight wins coming inside the distance. "I’ve sparred with him a couple of times in the past, so I’m familiar with him," said Lee. "He likes to fight, so for me, it’s about staying calm and sharp, using my reach, and relying on my stamina."
The bout also marks Lee’s debut at 130 pounds after competing primarily at featherweight. "I didn't have to move up - I did it for the opportunity to fight for [a regional] title," explains the 5-foot-10 Lee. "It means a lot for me to fight for that belt."
Fighting less than two hours from his hometown, Lee is expected to draw strong support from the New York area and is eager to deliver a statement performance. "I'm very thankful for everyone who is coming out to support," Lee said. "I’m looking forward to putting on a great performance on a stacked card."
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Wilkens Mathieu to step up against Esquiva Falcao |
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Super middleweight Wilkens Mathieu will return home for the first main event of his career on June 11th at Quebec City's Théâtre Capitole. By far the biggest test of his career awaits him, as Brazil's Esquiva Falcão (32-2, 21 KOs) — an Olympic silver medalist and former middleweight title challenger — will face the 21-year-old Quebecer. “Many said I was too young to face [Shakeel] Phinn, and they’ll probably say the same about Falcão, but people need to understand that I don’t have time to waste. I already believe I’m the best in the world, so I have to face the best in the world — and it starts by beating an Olympic medalist in front of my city on June 11th,” said Mathieu.
“Against Shakeel Phinn, Quebec discovered Wilkens’ talent. Against a guy like Esquiva Falcão, the whole world is about to discover it,” added trainer Giuseppe Moffa.
Mathieu (15-0, 10 KOs) made a statement last October by dominating and knocking down Phinn, his Quebec rival, on his way to a unanimous decision victory in Montreal. His next opponent, Falcão, will not be intimidated by the rising star’s record. Mathieu was only seven years old when the Brazilian won silver at the London Olympic Games.
After winning his first 30 pro fights, Falcão became the first to defeat Quebec contender Patrice Volny, stopping him in six rounds in 2021. In 2023, he challenged undefeated Vincenzo Gualtieri for a vacant IBF middleweight title but lost by decision in Germany. His only other loss came in another competitive decision in 2024 against Tokyo Olympic champion Hebert Conceição. Now back on track at super middleweight, the 36-year old has won his last two fights, capturing the Brazilian championship last November.
“I respect my opponent — I know he’s a good fighter, an undefeated one. But he hasn’t faced a boxer like me yet: an experienced fighter who hits hard and has a real hunger to win. I’ve already fought for a world title and I plan to do it again. God will be with me on June 11 — and the victory will go to Brazil,” said Falcão.
Also in action at the Théâtre Capitole will be light heavyweight Mehmet Unal (15-0, 13 KOs), super middleweight Moreno Fendero (14-0, 10 KOs), Thetford Mines warrior Thomas Chabot (12-1, 8 KOs) and popular Trois-Rivières boxer Daylen Pepin (2-0).
The full event will be broadcast on Punching Grace, while TVA Sports will air the preliminary bouts. Tickets for the June 11 gala, presented by Eye of the Tiger at Théâtre Capitole, are now available on Ticketmaster.
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Wilkens Mathieu to step up against Esquiva Falcao
Super middleweight Wilkens Mathieu will return home for the first main event of his career on June 11th at Quebec City's Théâtre Capitole. By far the biggest test of his career awaits him, as Brazil's Esquiva Falcão (32-2, 21 KOs) — an Olympic silver medalist and former middleweight title challenger — will face the 21-year-old Quebecer. “Many said I was too young to face [Shakeel] Phinn, and they’ll probably say the same about Falcão, but people need to understand that I don’t have time to waste. I already believe I’m the best in the world, so I have to face the best in the world — and it starts by beating an Olympic medalist in front of my city on June 11th,” said Mathieu.
“Against Shakeel Phinn, Quebec discovered Wilkens’ talent. Against a guy like Esquiva Falcão, the whole world is about to discover it,” added trainer Giuseppe Moffa.
Mathieu (15-0, 10 KOs) made a statement last October by dominating and knocking down Phinn, his Quebec rival, on his way to a unanimous decision victory in Montreal. His next opponent, Falcão, will not be intimidated by the rising star’s record. Mathieu was only seven years old when the Brazilian won silver at the London Olympic Games.
After winning his first 30 pro fights, Falcão became the first to defeat Quebec contender Patrice Volny, stopping him in six rounds in 2021. In 2023, he challenged undefeated Vincenzo Gualtieri for a vacant IBF middleweight title but lost by decision in Germany. His only other loss came in another competitive decision in 2024 against Tokyo Olympic champion Hebert Conceição. Now back on track at super middleweight, the 36-year old has won his last two fights, capturing the Brazilian championship last November.
“I respect my opponent — I know he’s a good fighter, an undefeated one. But he hasn’t faced a boxer like me yet: an experienced fighter who hits hard and has a real hunger to win. I’ve already fought for a world title and I plan to do it again. God will be with me on June 11 — and the victory will go to Brazil,” said Falcão.
Also in action at the Théâtre Capitole will be light heavyweight Mehmet Unal (15-0, 13 KOs), super middleweight Moreno Fendero (14-0, 10 KOs), Thetford Mines warrior Thomas Chabot (12-1, 8 KOs) and popular Trois-Rivières boxer Daylen Pepin (2-0).
The full event will be broadcast on Punching Grace, while TVA Sports will air the preliminary bouts. Tickets for the June 11 gala, presented by Eye of the Tiger at Théâtre Capitole, are now available on Ticketmaster.
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Perro Angulo to give bare knuckles a go in July |
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Last week, Bare Knuckle Boxing (BKB) announced the signing of former interim champion and fan-favorite warrior Alfredo “El Perro” Angulo (26-8, 21 KOs in traditional boxing) to a multi-fight deal, adding another proven striker to its rapidly growing roster. Angulo is expected to make his BKB debut July 18 at BKB 56 in Los Angeles. A relentless pressure fighter known for his toughness and all-action style, Angulo brings decades of high-level experience to BKB. The Mexicali native built a decorated professional boxing career that included capturing the WBO interim light middleweight title from 2009 to 2010.
Before turning pro in 2005, Angulo compiled nearly 100 amateur bouts, highlighted by a victory over future world champion Tim Bradley. He also represented Mexico on the international stage, earning medals at the 2002 Central American and Caribbean Games and the 2003 Pan American Games, before competing in the 2004 Olympic Games.
Throughout his career, Angulo faced a who’s-who of elite competition, including Canelo Alvarez, Erislandy Lara, Kermit Cintron and Sergio Mora, earning a reputation as one of boxing’s most fearless and entertaining fighters. His aggressive style and durability have already proven to be a natural fit for bare knuckle.
“This is a huge signing for BKB,” said BKB CEO David Tetreault. “Alfredo Angulo is the definition of a warrior. Fans know exactly what they’re going to get every time he steps into the ring—heart, pressure, and nonstop action. He’s built for bare knuckle, and we’re excited to showcase him on the BKB stage.”
Angulo’s journey has been marked by resilience as much as success. A highly publicized visa dispute in 2012 saw him detained for eight months, a challenge he overcame with perspective and gratitude—famously donating his hair to Locks of Love during that time to support children battling cancer.
“I’ve fought the best in the world, and I’m still hungry,” said Angulo. “Bare knuckle brings out a different kind of fighter, and that’s who I am. I’m ready to give the fans exciting fights and show them that ‘El Perro’ still has a lot left.”
From its origins in 2015 as BYB Extreme Fighting Series, founded by MMA pioneer Dhafir "Dada 5000" Harris and Mike Vazquez, BKB has transformed bare knuckle boxing into a regulated, globally broadcast promoter through strategic acquisitions, including the original UK-based BKB in 2024 and Bad To The Bone in 2025, and a fighter-first philosophy that emphasizes athlete welfare and opportunity.
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Perro Angulo to give bare knuckles a go in July
Last week, Bare Knuckle Boxing (BKB) announced the signing of former interim champion and fan-favorite warrior Alfredo “El Perro” Angulo (26-8, 21 KOs in traditional boxing) to a multi-fight deal, adding another proven striker to its rapidly growing roster. Angulo is expected to make his BKB debut July 18 at BKB 56 in Los Angeles. A relentless pressure fighter known for his toughness and all-action style, Angulo brings decades of high-level experience to BKB. The Mexicali native built a decorated professional boxing career that included capturing the WBO interim light middleweight title from 2009 to 2010.
Before turning pro in 2005, Angulo compiled nearly 100 amateur bouts, highlighted by a victory over future world champion Tim Bradley. He also represented Mexico on the international stage, earning medals at the 2002 Central American and Caribbean Games and the 2003 Pan American Games, before competing in the 2004 Olympic Games.
Throughout his career, Angulo faced a who’s-who of elite competition, including Canelo Alvarez, Erislandy Lara, Kermit Cintron and Sergio Mora, earning a reputation as one of boxing’s most fearless and entertaining fighters. His aggressive style and durability have already proven to be a natural fit for bare knuckle.
“This is a huge signing for BKB,” said BKB CEO David Tetreault. “Alfredo Angulo is the definition of a warrior. Fans know exactly what they’re going to get every time he steps into the ring—heart, pressure, and nonstop action. He’s built for bare knuckle, and we’re excited to showcase him on the BKB stage.”
Angulo’s journey has been marked by resilience as much as success. A highly publicized visa dispute in 2012 saw him detained for eight months, a challenge he overcame with perspective and gratitude—famously donating his hair to Locks of Love during that time to support children battling cancer.
“I’ve fought the best in the world, and I’m still hungry,” said Angulo. “Bare knuckle brings out a different kind of fighter, and that’s who I am. I’m ready to give the fans exciting fights and show them that ‘El Perro’ still has a lot left.”
From its origins in 2015 as BYB Extreme Fighting Series, founded by MMA pioneer Dhafir "Dada 5000" Harris and Mike Vazquez, BKB has transformed bare knuckle boxing into a regulated, globally broadcast promoter through strategic acquisitions, including the original UK-based BKB in 2024 and Bad To The Bone in 2025, and a fighter-first philosophy that emphasizes athlete welfare and opportunity.
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Team Boxing League week four preview |
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TBL Team Boxing League’s (“TBL”) fourth week of the season offers three nights of contests pitting major metropolitan city teams against one another in a format that lends itself to non-stop action. TBL features male and female boxers competing across a series of weight classes in a total of 24 individual one-round contests. Boasting 16 different fighters on each team’s roster, intrigue, strategy and skill will all be on display as TBL's coaches determine which boxers from the “Launch Rounds” (1-8) and “Middle Rounds” (9-16) will return for the decisive “Money Rounds” (17-24). The winners of each matchup will be determined by overall team performance scored on an individual round basis by State Athletic Commission judges. Every moment of the season can be watched LIVE on EnvoyTV, streamed on Team Boxing League’s YouTube channel, or accessed through the Team Boxing League App on Apple TV 4K, Roku, Amazon Fire TV, iPhone, and Android devices - and is also available in Spanish on Estrella TV.
PHOENIX FURY vs. NASHVILLE SMASH
Friday night features a match between the Phoenix Fury (1-0) and the Nashville Smash (0-1) from the Nashville Municipal Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee. The Phoenix Fury head into battle led by cruiserweight Charles “CP the Champ” Pugh (2-0 TBL, 2-0, 2 KO), light heavyweight Raiko “El Corojo” Santana (2-0 TBL, 13-4, 7 KO) and female featherweight Tierra Brandt (1-0 TBL) against a Nashville Smash squad highlighted by featherweight Josh Johnson (5-0, 4 KO), middleweight Isaiah Elrod (2-0, 1 KO TBL, 7-0, 5 KO) and the TBL debuting Suzana Griffin (6-2, 3 KO). April 17th contests between light heavyweights Raiko Santana vs. William Langston, heavyweights Manuel Villalobos vs. Terrell Woods and female featherweights Tierra Brandt vs. Brooke Evans will play a critical role determining the outcome. For those who wish to attend the April 17, 2026 event live, the Nashville Municipal Auditorium is located at 417 4th Ave N, Nashville, TN 37201.
HOUSTON HITMEN vs. DALLAS ENFORCERS
Saturday night will see in-state rivals the Houston Hitmen (0-2) take on the Dallas Enforcers (0-1) from the Curtis Culwell Center in Dallas, Texas. Houston stars including welterweight Manuel Sangroni (2-0 TBL, 2-0, 1 KO), David Stevens (2-0 TBL, 15-2, 10 KO) and lightweight Jaedyn Alpough (1-2 TBL, 1-01, 1 KO) will take on a Dallas Enforcers Team featuring standouts such as light heavyweight Abimbola “Space” Osundario (1-1 TBL, 6-1, 4 KO), cruiserweight Kalvin “Hot Sauce” Henderson (0-2 TBL, 19-3, 13 KO) and female featherweight Melissa Parker (7-4, 2 KO). Key matchups on April 18th include light heavyweights Devin Thorn vs. Abimbola Osundario, cruiserweights David Stearns vs. Kalvin Henderson and heavyweights Ronnie Mayberry vs. Derrick Darr. For those who wish to attend the April 18, 2026 event live, the Curtis Culwell Center is located at 4999 Naaman Forest Blvd, Garland, TX 75040.
MIAMI ASSASSINS vs. ATLANTA ATTACK
TBL returns on Sunday night with the matchup of the week pitting the Miami Assassins (1-0) against the Atlanta Attack (1-0) from the Georgia International Convention Center in Atlanta, Georgia. Boasting welterweight Darruis “the Hawk” Jackson (10-0, 7 KO), cruiserweight Yuniesky “the Monster” Gonzalez (2-0 TBL, 21-6, 17 KO) and female featherweight Ali Valle (0-1 TBL, 3-0, 3 KO), the Miami Assassins will look to defeat southern rival the Atlanta Attack led by super welterweight Amin Mitchell (2-0, 1 KO TBL, 2-0, 1 KO), heavyweight Samuel Clarkson (2-0 TBL, 22-7, 15 KO) and female super lightweight Ariel Davis (1-0, 1 KO TBL). Must-see matchups on April 19th include welterweights Darrius Jackson vs. Javonn Davis, heavyweights Nestor Santana vs. Samuel Clarkson and heavyweights Gustavo Trujillo vs. Samuel Clarkson.
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Team Boxing League week four preview
TBL Team Boxing League’s (“TBL”) fourth week of the season offers three nights of contests pitting major metropolitan city teams against one another in a format that lends itself to non-stop action. TBL features male and female boxers competing across a series of weight classes in a total of 24 individual one-round contests. Boasting 16 different fighters on each team’s roster, intrigue, strategy and skill will all be on display as TBL's coaches determine which boxers from the “Launch Rounds” (1-8) and “Middle Rounds” (9-16) will return for the decisive “Money Rounds” (17-24). The winners of each matchup will be determined by overall team performance scored on an individual round basis by State Athletic Commission judges. Every moment of the season can be watched LIVE on EnvoyTV, streamed on Team Boxing League’s YouTube channel, or accessed through the Team Boxing League App on Apple TV 4K, Roku, Amazon Fire TV, iPhone, and Android devices - and is also available in Spanish on Estrella TV.
PHOENIX FURY vs. NASHVILLE SMASH
Friday night features a match between the Phoenix Fury (1-0) and the Nashville Smash (0-1) from the Nashville Municipal Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee. The Phoenix Fury head into battle led by cruiserweight Charles “CP the Champ” Pugh (2-0 TBL, 2-0, 2 KO), light heavyweight Raiko “El Corojo” Santana (2-0 TBL, 13-4, 7 KO) and female featherweight Tierra Brandt (1-0 TBL) against a Nashville Smash squad highlighted by featherweight Josh Johnson (5-0, 4 KO), middleweight Isaiah Elrod (2-0, 1 KO TBL, 7-0, 5 KO) and the TBL debuting Suzana Griffin (6-2, 3 KO). April 17th contests between light heavyweights Raiko Santana vs. William Langston, heavyweights Manuel Villalobos vs. Terrell Woods and female featherweights Tierra Brandt vs. Brooke Evans will play a critical role determining the outcome. For those who wish to attend the April 17, 2026 event live, the Nashville Municipal Auditorium is located at 417 4th Ave N, Nashville, TN 37201.
HOUSTON HITMEN vs. DALLAS ENFORCERS
Saturday night will see in-state rivals the Houston Hitmen (0-2) take on the Dallas Enforcers (0-1) from the Curtis Culwell Center in Dallas, Texas. Houston stars including welterweight Manuel Sangroni (2-0 TBL, 2-0, 1 KO), David Stevens (2-0 TBL, 15-2, 10 KO) and lightweight Jaedyn Alpough (1-2 TBL, 1-01, 1 KO) will take on a Dallas Enforcers Team featuring standouts such as light heavyweight Abimbola “Space” Osundario (1-1 TBL, 6-1, 4 KO), cruiserweight Kalvin “Hot Sauce” Henderson (0-2 TBL, 19-3, 13 KO) and female featherweight Melissa Parker (7-4, 2 KO). Key matchups on April 18th include light heavyweights Devin Thorn vs. Abimbola Osundario, cruiserweights David Stearns vs. Kalvin Henderson and heavyweights Ronnie Mayberry vs. Derrick Darr. For those who wish to attend the April 18, 2026 event live, the Curtis Culwell Center is located at 4999 Naaman Forest Blvd, Garland, TX 75040.
MIAMI ASSASSINS vs. ATLANTA ATTACK
TBL returns on Sunday night with the matchup of the week pitting the Miami Assassins (1-0) against the Atlanta Attack (1-0) from the Georgia International Convention Center in Atlanta, Georgia. Boasting welterweight Darruis “the Hawk” Jackson (10-0, 7 KO), cruiserweight Yuniesky “the Monster” Gonzalez (2-0 TBL, 21-6, 17 KO) and female featherweight Ali Valle (0-1 TBL, 3-0, 3 KO), the Miami Assassins will look to defeat southern rival the Atlanta Attack led by super welterweight Amin Mitchell (2-0, 1 KO TBL, 2-0, 1 KO), heavyweight Samuel Clarkson (2-0 TBL, 22-7, 15 KO) and female super lightweight Ariel Davis (1-0, 1 KO TBL). Must-see matchups on April 19th include welterweights Darrius Jackson vs. Javonn Davis, heavyweights Nestor Santana vs. Samuel Clarkson and heavyweights Gustavo Trujillo vs. Samuel Clarkson.
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If Suslenkov wants to be the man, he has to beat the Mann |
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Moscow is set to host a high-risk, high-reward heavyweight collision this Friday (April 17th) as local man Artem Suslenkov squares off against blown-up cruiserweight Artur Mann of Germany. Sporting a record of 16-1 (including IBA Pro and World Series of Boxing bouts), Suslenkov has emerged as one of his country’s heavyweight hopes. The Volgograd native enters this bout riding a wave of confidence following his win over Michael Hunter in 2024 and a dominant performance against Christian Hammer last year, where he displayed not only punching power but also the footwork and ring IQ needed to break down tight defensive guards. For Suslenkov, this fight represents the chance to prove he’s ready for elite-level opposition in a division currently enjoying a golden era.
Mann (22-4, 11 KOs), nicknamed “Thunderman,” brings the experience of a fighter who has already challenged the best in lower weight divisions such as ex-champ Mairis Briedis. A methodical operator with polished technique and a proven chin, Mann has gone rounds in hostile environments across the globe. At age 35, the German veteran understands this may be his last real opportunity to make a statement and insert himself into the conversation for a major world title shot.
Stylistically, the matchup presents a compelling contrast. Suslenkov is expected to lean on his explosiveness and sustained body attack to wear down the visitor, while Mann will likely aim to extend the fight, relying on counterpunching and hoping frustration begins to creep into the Russian’s approach as the rounds progress. Distance management will be critical—if Mann allows himself to get trapped along the ropes, the night in Moscow could come to an abrupt end.
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If Suslenkov wants to be the man, he has to beat the Mann
Moscow is set to host a high-risk, high-reward heavyweight collision this Friday (April 17th) as local man Artem Suslenkov squares off against blown-up cruiserweight Artur Mann of Germany. Sporting a record of 16-1 (including IBA Pro and World Series of Boxing bouts), Suslenkov has emerged as one of his country’s heavyweight hopes. The Volgograd native enters this bout riding a wave of confidence following his win over Michael Hunter in 2024 and a dominant performance against Christian Hammer last year, where he displayed not only punching power but also the footwork and ring IQ needed to break down tight defensive guards. For Suslenkov, this fight represents the chance to prove he’s ready for elite-level opposition in a division currently enjoying a golden era.
Mann (22-4, 11 KOs), nicknamed “Thunderman,” brings the experience of a fighter who has already challenged the best in lower weight divisions such as ex-champ Mairis Briedis. A methodical operator with polished technique and a proven chin, Mann has gone rounds in hostile environments across the globe. At age 35, the German veteran understands this may be his last real opportunity to make a statement and insert himself into the conversation for a major world title shot.
Stylistically, the matchup presents a compelling contrast. Suslenkov is expected to lean on his explosiveness and sustained body attack to wear down the visitor, while Mann will likely aim to extend the fight, relying on counterpunching and hoping frustration begins to creep into the Russian’s approach as the rounds progress. Distance management will be critical—if Mann allows himself to get trapped along the ropes, the night in Moscow could come to an abrupt end.
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Brian Norman books ring return for May 16th |
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On May 16th at Norfolk, Virginia's Scope Arena, ex-welterweight title holder Brian Norman (28-1, 22 KOs) returns to action against Canada’s Josh Wagner (19-2, 10 KOs). The main event that night will be a rematch of a no contest between Norfolk's Keyshawn Davis, a former lightweight champion, and Nahir Albright. Norman's championship run began in May 2024, when the 25-year old stopped Giovani Santillan in the tenth round to earn the WBO interim welterweight title. The Atlanta native was elevated to full champion later that year after Terence Crawford vacated the title and followed in 2025 with successful title defenses against Derrieck Cuevas and Jin Sasaki before losing the crown to Devin Haney in November. That was Norman's last fight to date.
Norman said, “The God of War is back…I stayed patient. I stayed working. And now it’s time to remind the world. See ya’ll in May.”
Wagner is a twelve-year pro whose only losses have come against then-undefeated David Papot in November 2024 and once-beaten Harlem Eubank last November. “I’m coming to take over Virginia,” said Wagner. “The boss is ready to showcase his skills and cause a huge upset. No man scares me.”
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Brian Norman books ring return for May 16th
On May 16th at Norfolk, Virginia's Scope Arena, ex-welterweight title holder Brian Norman (28-1, 22 KOs) returns to action against Canada’s Josh Wagner (19-2, 10 KOs). The main event that night will be a rematch of a no contest between Norfolk's Keyshawn Davis, a former lightweight champion, and Nahir Albright. Norman's championship run began in May 2024, when the 25-year old stopped Giovani Santillan in the tenth round to earn the WBO interim welterweight title. The Atlanta native was elevated to full champion later that year after Terence Crawford vacated the title and followed in 2025 with successful title defenses against Derrieck Cuevas and Jin Sasaki before losing the crown to Devin Haney in November. That was Norman's last fight to date.
Norman said, “The God of War is back…I stayed patient. I stayed working. And now it’s time to remind the world. See ya’ll in May.”
Wagner is a twelve-year pro whose only losses have come against then-undefeated David Papot in November 2024 and once-beaten Harlem Eubank last November. “I’m coming to take over Virginia,” said Wagner. “The boss is ready to showcase his skills and cause a huge upset. No man scares me.”
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Friday: Lorente vs. Collins in 126-pound eliminator |
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On Friday (April 17th), Spanish featherweight Cristóbal Lorente will enter hostile territory to face undefeated Nathaniel Collins of Scotland in a rematch that will serve as a WBC featherweight eliminator. The event, organized by Queensberry Promotions, will determine who gets to the head of the line for a shot at WBC title holder Bruce Carrington. The show will be broadcast live throughout the world through the DAZN platform. Lorente (20-0-3) and Collins (17-0-1) fought to a twelve-round draw in October. Lorente is recognized for his tactical discipline in the ring. Collins stands out for his rhythm and aggressiveness, factors and will try to use his home advantage to maintain his rise in the rankings.
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Friday: Lorente vs. Collins in 126-pound eliminator
On Friday (April 17th), Spanish featherweight Cristóbal Lorente will enter hostile territory to face undefeated Nathaniel Collins of Scotland in a rematch that will serve as a WBC featherweight eliminator. The event, organized by Queensberry Promotions, will determine who gets to the head of the line for a shot at WBC title holder Bruce Carrington. The show will be broadcast live throughout the world through the DAZN platform. Lorente (20-0-3) and Collins (17-0-1) fought to a twelve-round draw in October. Lorente is recognized for his tactical discipline in the ring. Collins stands out for his rhythm and aggressiveness, factors and will try to use his home advantage to maintain his rise in the rankings.
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Late replacement for Vargas, but still a battle of unbeatens |
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Star Boxing has located a replacement opponent to preserve an undefeated vs. undefeated showdown in New York City's on Friday. Long Island’s Alex Vargas (14-0, 5 KOs) will now face Chicago's Rani Jalomo (7-0-1, 4 KOs) on the Most Valuable Promotions show at the Infosys Theater in Madison Square Garden. Originally scheduled to face Ryan O’Rourke, Vargas will now face off with Jalomo, as Star Boxing has preserved a "someone's 0 has to go" junior welterweight showdown. Vargas and Jalomo will square off on one of boxing’s biggest stages as part of MVPW 02, which will air on ESPN platforms. Be sure to tune into ESPN+ around 8:30 PM for the Vargas v. Jalomo fight.
For Star Boxing, the seamless late adjustment is an example of the promotion’s ability to deliver under pressure. Earlier this year, Wendy Toussaint was secured as a last-minute addition at Madison Square Garden to fight Austin Williams after WBC middleweight champion Carlos Adames missed weight, preserving a major fight night on short notice..
Vargas (14-0, 5 KOs), fighting out of Bellport, New York, enters with hometown support and a major opportunity to shine in front of a New York crowd. “I’ve been doubted my entire career, but that’s what motivated me,” said Vargas. “Fighting at Madison Square Garden is a dream, and on Friday night I’m going to prove I belong here.”
“This is what Star Boxing is all about - developing elite talent, overcoming challenges, and delivering meaningful fights on major stages,” said Star Boxing CEO Joe DeGuardia. “Alex is ready, Rani is stepping up, and fans are going to see a tremendous fight.”
The April 17th event will be headlined by unified 130-pound champion Alycia Baumgardner defending her titles against contender Bo Mi Re Shin in a championship showdown that will headline the night of action. Catch the Baumgardner v. Shin fight live on ESPN.
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Late replacement for Vargas, but still a battle of unbeatens
Star Boxing has located a replacement opponent to preserve an undefeated vs. undefeated showdown in New York City's on Friday. Long Island’s Alex Vargas (14-0, 5 KOs) will now face Chicago's Rani Jalomo (7-0-1, 4 KOs) on the Most Valuable Promotions show at the Infosys Theater in Madison Square Garden. Originally scheduled to face Ryan O’Rourke, Vargas will now face off with Jalomo, as Star Boxing has preserved a "someone's 0 has to go" junior welterweight showdown. Vargas and Jalomo will square off on one of boxing’s biggest stages as part of MVPW 02, which will air on ESPN platforms. Be sure to tune into ESPN+ around 8:30 PM for the Vargas v. Jalomo fight.
For Star Boxing, the seamless late adjustment is an example of the promotion’s ability to deliver under pressure. Earlier this year, Wendy Toussaint was secured as a last-minute addition at Madison Square Garden to fight Austin Williams after WBC middleweight champion Carlos Adames missed weight, preserving a major fight night on short notice..
Vargas (14-0, 5 KOs), fighting out of Bellport, New York, enters with hometown support and a major opportunity to shine in front of a New York crowd. “I’ve been doubted my entire career, but that’s what motivated me,” said Vargas. “Fighting at Madison Square Garden is a dream, and on Friday night I’m going to prove I belong here.”
“This is what Star Boxing is all about - developing elite talent, overcoming challenges, and delivering meaningful fights on major stages,” said Star Boxing CEO Joe DeGuardia. “Alex is ready, Rani is stepping up, and fans are going to see a tremendous fight.”
The April 17th event will be headlined by unified 130-pound champion Alycia Baumgardner defending her titles against contender Bo Mi Re Shin in a championship showdown that will headline the night of action. Catch the Baumgardner v. Shin fight live on ESPN.
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Manny Pacquiao buys into Team Boxing franchise |
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Team Boxing League ("TBL") and Manny Pacquiao Promotions ("MPP") announced the official signing of a partnership, solidifying Manny Pacquiao's transition from global boxing icon to franchise owner and long-term stakeholder in the future of the sport. As part of the agreement, Pacquiao and MPP will join the ownership group of the TBL's San Diego TJ's, marking a major step in the evolution of boxing toward a team-based, league-driven model built on ownership, structure, and global scalability. The partnership represents a nine-figure commitment centered on long-term platform growth, positioning Pacquiao at the forefront of a new era in boxing that emphasizes equity, participation, and global expansion. "This is not just about fighting anymore," said Pacquiao. "This is a new chapter in my life. I have accomplished everything I wanted in boxing, and now I want to build something bigger than myself. I truly believe this is the League of Destiny, and I want to help shape the future of boxing and create opportunities for the next generation."
Team Boxing League is a fast-paced, team-based format featuring city-based franchises, seasonal competition, and a structured path to championship contention—bringing consistency, rivalries, and long-term fan engagement to a historically fragmented sport. Pacquiao's involvement signals a broader shift in the sport, moving away from one-off events toward a scalable ecosystem where fighters, teams, and stakeholders are aligned through shared success and long-term value creation. "This partnership represents exactly what Team Boxing League was built for," said Kevin Cassidy, CEO of Team Boxing League. "Bringing in a global icon like Manny Pacquiao as an owner validates our vision of transforming boxing into a true league model - one driven by structure, shared economics, and long-term opportunity for fighters, teams, and investors alike. This is how we start to scale the league globally."
"This isn't just Manny coming back to fight, this is Manny building an empire around boxing," said Jas Mathur, CEO of Manny Pacquiao Promotions. "This is a nine-figure platform play focused on ownership, participation, and long-term upside. We are shifting boxing from transactions to ownership and building a global ecosystem that will support fighters, teams, and partners for years to come."
Through this partnership, Manny Pacquiao Promotions will play a key role in helping expand TBL's global footprint, leveraging Pacquiao's international reach to drive new audiences and partnerships across sports, media, and entertainment while accelerating the league's long-term growth strategy.
"I'm proud to be an owner of Manny Pacquiao's San Diego TJ's," Pacquiao added. "This is my team, and I'm excited to build something special by bringing great fighters, strong competition, and a winning culture to fans around the world."
With a focus on structure, scalability, and next-generation opportunity, Team Boxing League is positioning itself as a transformative force in the sport, offering fighters new economic models including revenue participation and long-term upside while delivering a more consistent and engaging product for fans.
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Manny Pacquiao buys into Team Boxing franchise
Team Boxing League ("TBL") and Manny Pacquiao Promotions ("MPP") announced the official signing of a partnership, solidifying Manny Pacquiao's transition from global boxing icon to franchise owner and long-term stakeholder in the future of the sport. As part of the agreement, Pacquiao and MPP will join the ownership group of the TBL's San Diego TJ's, marking a major step in the evolution of boxing toward a team-based, league-driven model built on ownership, structure, and global scalability. The partnership represents a nine-figure commitment centered on long-term platform growth, positioning Pacquiao at the forefront of a new era in boxing that emphasizes equity, participation, and global expansion. "This is not just about fighting anymore," said Pacquiao. "This is a new chapter in my life. I have accomplished everything I wanted in boxing, and now I want to build something bigger than myself. I truly believe this is the League of Destiny, and I want to help shape the future of boxing and create opportunities for the next generation."
Team Boxing League is a fast-paced, team-based format featuring city-based franchises, seasonal competition, and a structured path to championship contention—bringing consistency, rivalries, and long-term fan engagement to a historically fragmented sport. Pacquiao's involvement signals a broader shift in the sport, moving away from one-off events toward a scalable ecosystem where fighters, teams, and stakeholders are aligned through shared success and long-term value creation. "This partnership represents exactly what Team Boxing League was built for," said Kevin Cassidy, CEO of Team Boxing League. "Bringing in a global icon like Manny Pacquiao as an owner validates our vision of transforming boxing into a true league model - one driven by structure, shared economics, and long-term opportunity for fighters, teams, and investors alike. This is how we start to scale the league globally."
"This isn't just Manny coming back to fight, this is Manny building an empire around boxing," said Jas Mathur, CEO of Manny Pacquiao Promotions. "This is a nine-figure platform play focused on ownership, participation, and long-term upside. We are shifting boxing from transactions to ownership and building a global ecosystem that will support fighters, teams, and partners for years to come."
Through this partnership, Manny Pacquiao Promotions will play a key role in helping expand TBL's global footprint, leveraging Pacquiao's international reach to drive new audiences and partnerships across sports, media, and entertainment while accelerating the league's long-term growth strategy.
"I'm proud to be an owner of Manny Pacquiao's San Diego TJ's," Pacquiao added. "This is my team, and I'm excited to build something special by bringing great fighters, strong competition, and a winning culture to fans around the world."
With a focus on structure, scalability, and next-generation opportunity, Team Boxing League is positioning itself as a transformative force in the sport, offering fighters new economic models including revenue participation and long-term upside while delivering a more consistent and engaging product for fans.
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Ramirez reflects on Benavidez sparring sessions |
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WBA / WBO cruiserweight champion Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez plans to make the most of his opportunity to headline Cinco de Mayo Weekend in Las Vegas as he takes on undefeated two-division champion David “El Monstro” Benavidez on a PBC pay-per-view event available on Prime Video on Saturday, May 2nd at T-Mobile Arena. “It’s an honor to be in this position,” said Ramirez (48-1, 30 KOs). “You have to be a great fighter and a big name to headline Cinco de Mayo Weekend. Now it’s my time.” Benavidez vs. Zurdo will present a first of its kind Mexico-vs.-Mexico matchup, as the first championship showdown between Mexican fighters to take place above 168 pounds.
For the Sinaloa-native Ramirez, this historic angle adds even more juice to the biggest fight of his career. “Fighting another Mexican is extra motivation,” said Ramirez. “We’re making history. There’s never been a fight like this between Mexican fighters this big. It’s going to be an amazing night. We’re going to leave everything we have in the ring.”
On top of their shared heritage, Ramirez and Benavidez also have a shared history inside of the ring, as Benavidez was used as a sparring partner ahead of Ramirez’s first world title fight, a 2016 victory over Arthur Abraham. When reflecting on the sparring, Ramirez remembers high-level action that should preview what fans are on for on May 2nd. “Our sparring sessions would have been a great pay-per-view,” said Ramirez. “We both know that each of us has a lot of skill that we’ll be bringing into the ring. But I’ve also grown a lot as a fighter since we sparred. I’ve gotten a lot more experience that I’m gonna take into this fight.”
When Ramirez and Benavidez first shared the ring, Benavidez was still a year and a half away from becoming the youngest super middleweight world champion in boxing history. While they would both continue to win as they moved up in weight, Ramirez shared that he’s watched Benavidez and thought about them stepping into the ring for real throughout their last decade of successes. “I’ve thought about fighting for David for about 10 years,” said Ramirez. “I think we both wanted to fight each other for that long. Now the time is almost here. David is a great fighter. I’ve been watching him a lot over the years and keeping an eye on him, knowing that one day we’d get in there together.”
Throughout a career that saw Ramirez make five successful defenses of his 168-pound belt before a 5-1 run that ended in a decision loss to Dmitry Bivol, he has perhaps reached his peak on his current cruiserweight run. Following a title-winning performance over then unbeaten Arsen Goulamirian in March 2024, Ramirez unified his WBA title with WBO champion Chris Billiam-Smith via unanimous decision that November. He then turned away the dangerous former champion Yuniel Dorticos last June, but despite the recent run of wins, he believes his best performance will come on May 2nd.
“I think my last two performances have been good, but they’re not as great as this performance will be,” said Ramirez. “This is gonna be a war. We’re gonna give all the Mexican people a big party on May 2nd.”
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Ramirez reflects on Benavidez sparring sessions
WBA / WBO cruiserweight champion Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez plans to make the most of his opportunity to headline Cinco de Mayo Weekend in Las Vegas as he takes on undefeated two-division champion David “El Monstro” Benavidez on a PBC pay-per-view event available on Prime Video on Saturday, May 2nd at T-Mobile Arena. “It’s an honor to be in this position,” said Ramirez (48-1, 30 KOs). “You have to be a great fighter and a big name to headline Cinco de Mayo Weekend. Now it’s my time.” Benavidez vs. Zurdo will present a first of its kind Mexico-vs.-Mexico matchup, as the first championship showdown between Mexican fighters to take place above 168 pounds.
For the Sinaloa-native Ramirez, this historic angle adds even more juice to the biggest fight of his career. “Fighting another Mexican is extra motivation,” said Ramirez. “We’re making history. There’s never been a fight like this between Mexican fighters this big. It’s going to be an amazing night. We’re going to leave everything we have in the ring.”
On top of their shared heritage, Ramirez and Benavidez also have a shared history inside of the ring, as Benavidez was used as a sparring partner ahead of Ramirez’s first world title fight, a 2016 victory over Arthur Abraham. When reflecting on the sparring, Ramirez remembers high-level action that should preview what fans are on for on May 2nd. “Our sparring sessions would have been a great pay-per-view,” said Ramirez. “We both know that each of us has a lot of skill that we’ll be bringing into the ring. But I’ve also grown a lot as a fighter since we sparred. I’ve gotten a lot more experience that I’m gonna take into this fight.”
When Ramirez and Benavidez first shared the ring, Benavidez was still a year and a half away from becoming the youngest super middleweight world champion in boxing history. While they would both continue to win as they moved up in weight, Ramirez shared that he’s watched Benavidez and thought about them stepping into the ring for real throughout their last decade of successes. “I’ve thought about fighting for David for about 10 years,” said Ramirez. “I think we both wanted to fight each other for that long. Now the time is almost here. David is a great fighter. I’ve been watching him a lot over the years and keeping an eye on him, knowing that one day we’d get in there together.”
Throughout a career that saw Ramirez make five successful defenses of his 168-pound belt before a 5-1 run that ended in a decision loss to Dmitry Bivol, he has perhaps reached his peak on his current cruiserweight run. Following a title-winning performance over then unbeaten Arsen Goulamirian in March 2024, Ramirez unified his WBA title with WBO champion Chris Billiam-Smith via unanimous decision that November. He then turned away the dangerous former champion Yuniel Dorticos last June, but despite the recent run of wins, he believes his best performance will come on May 2nd.
“I think my last two performances have been good, but they’re not as great as this performance will be,” said Ramirez. “This is gonna be a war. We’re gonna give all the Mexican people a big party on May 2nd.”
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Garnica to face Correa on May 15th |
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A high-stakes Northern California rivalry will take center stage on May 15th as undefeated Oakland bantamweight Anthony Garnica faces San Jose’s Eros Correa on a show presented by Showtime Boxing Promotions. Taking place at Thunder Studios in Long Beach, California, the event will be televised live on Fox Deportes, bringing the action to a national audience. Garnica (13-0, 8 KOs), age 25, has an aggressive yet composed style. He'll face the toughest test of his career against Correa. “Fans can expect an action-packed fight,” said Garnica. “Eros is coming in hungry to revamp his career, and I respect the tough opponents he’s faced. I’ve followed his journey closely, and I’m excited to step in the ring with someone of his caliber. At the end of the day, it’s going to come down to styles—and mine will prevail.”
Correa (15-2, 9 KOs), a 33 year-old veteran now fighting out of Las Vegas, brings experience, grit, and a renewed sense of purpose as he looks to defend NorCal pride while reestablishing himself after a closely contested decision loss to Michael Angeletti in June 2025 and a brief injury earlier that year. Now fully healthy, he has revamped his training camp under renowned coach Richard Barrientes, sharpening his tools for what he views as a career-defining opportunity. “I’m excited to get back into the ring, and I know this title will get me back in the rankings where I belong,” said Correa. “I’ve been working with my new trainer and I’ve elevated my skillset. I’m ready to show that on May 15th.”
The undercard will feature Andy Dominguez Velasquez and Criztec Bazaldua in separate bouts, both of whom continue to build momentum early in their professional careers. Known for their aggressive styles and fan-friendly performances, both fighters are expected to add excitement to an already stacked card, with opponents to be announced in the coming weeks.
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Garnica to face Correa on May 15th
A high-stakes Northern California rivalry will take center stage on May 15th as undefeated Oakland bantamweight Anthony Garnica faces San Jose’s Eros Correa on a show presented by Showtime Boxing Promotions. Taking place at Thunder Studios in Long Beach, California, the event will be televised live on Fox Deportes, bringing the action to a national audience. Garnica (13-0, 8 KOs), age 25, has an aggressive yet composed style. He'll face the toughest test of his career against Correa. “Fans can expect an action-packed fight,” said Garnica. “Eros is coming in hungry to revamp his career, and I respect the tough opponents he’s faced. I’ve followed his journey closely, and I’m excited to step in the ring with someone of his caliber. At the end of the day, it’s going to come down to styles—and mine will prevail.”
Correa (15-2, 9 KOs), a 33 year-old veteran now fighting out of Las Vegas, brings experience, grit, and a renewed sense of purpose as he looks to defend NorCal pride while reestablishing himself after a closely contested decision loss to Michael Angeletti in June 2025 and a brief injury earlier that year. Now fully healthy, he has revamped his training camp under renowned coach Richard Barrientes, sharpening his tools for what he views as a career-defining opportunity. “I’m excited to get back into the ring, and I know this title will get me back in the rankings where I belong,” said Correa. “I’ve been working with my new trainer and I’ve elevated my skillset. I’m ready to show that on May 15th.”
The undercard will feature Andy Dominguez Velasquez and Criztec Bazaldua in separate bouts, both of whom continue to build momentum early in their professional careers. Known for their aggressive styles and fan-friendly performances, both fighters are expected to add excitement to an already stacked card, with opponents to be announced in the coming weeks.
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Michael Osumah progressing at junior middleweight |
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Michael Osumah TKO4 Sergio Gil... Nigerian power took center stage in Las Vegas, where unbeaten junior middleweight Michael Osumah scored a fourth-round technical knockout of Argentina’s Sergio Gil (22-16-2) on Saturday night at the The Cosmopolitan. From the opening bell, the difference in firepower was undeniable. Osumah (11-0, 10 KOs) wasted no time asserting himself, taking command of center ring and using his reach to break down Gil’s guard. The Argentine veteran attempted to lean on his experience to weather the storm, but Osumah’s hand speed began to crack that defense as early as the second round. The beginning of the end came in the third, when a left hook from Osumah sent Gil reeling into the ropes. Though the Argentine showed grit to survive the round, the damage was done. By the fourth, it was all one-way traffic. A barrage of unanswered combinations forced the referee to step in and wave it off at the 1:45 mark, saving Gil from further punishment. |
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Michael Osumah progressing at junior middleweight
Michael Osumah TKO4 Sergio Gil... Nigerian power took center stage in Las Vegas, where unbeaten junior middleweight Michael Osumah scored a fourth-round technical knockout of Argentina’s Sergio Gil (22-16-2) on Saturday night at the The Cosmopolitan. From the opening bell, the difference in firepower was undeniable. Osumah (11-0, 10 KOs) wasted no time asserting himself, taking command of center ring and using his reach to break down Gil’s guard. The Argentine veteran attempted to lean on his experience to weather the storm, but Osumah’s hand speed began to crack that defense as early as the second round. The beginning of the end came in the third, when a left hook from Osumah sent Gil reeling into the ropes. Though the Argentine showed grit to survive the round, the damage was done. By the fourth, it was all one-way traffic. A barrage of unanswered combinations forced the referee to step in and wave it off at the 1:45 mark, saving Gil from further punishment. |
South African update |
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South African female junior welterweight Nozipho Bell, whose don her best work in the featherweight division, returns on April 28th in Gquberha, South Africa. Bell (15-5-1 with 5 KOs) will take on Namibian-born Zimbabwean Chiedza Homakoma (8-9-3 with 4 KOs) on a show staged by Mbali Zantsi. The 36 year-old Bell has been a contender for most of her career, and has challenged for WBO and IBO titles abroad. Her highest profile fight was a wool-tile loss to Ewa Brodncka, Be hs lost two straight, Also a former South African national champion at 130 pounds, she has now decided to move to 140 in pursuit of another world title opportunity. “The Queen Tiger” Homakoma, age 32, always comes to fight, and after facing some of the best boxers Africa has to offer, she is motivated to upset the favorite. |
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South African update
South African female junior welterweight Nozipho Bell, whose don her best work in the featherweight division, returns on April 28th in Gquberha, South Africa. Bell (15-5-1 with 5 KOs) will take on Namibian-born Zimbabwean Chiedza Homakoma (8-9-3 with 4 KOs) on a show staged by Mbali Zantsi. The 36 year-old Bell has been a contender for most of her career, and has challenged for WBO and IBO titles abroad. Her highest profile fight was a wool-tile loss to Ewa Brodncka, Be hs lost two straight, Also a former South African national champion at 130 pounds, she has now decided to move to 140 in pursuit of another world title opportunity. “The Queen Tiger” Homakoma, age 32, always comes to fight, and after facing some of the best boxers Africa has to offer, she is motivated to upset the favorite. |
IBA bare knuckle results from Almaty |
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Last weekend, the IBA held a night of combat fighting at the Almaty Arena in Kazakhstan as the inaugural IBA NOMAD 14 joint tournament captivated a capacity of 13,000 spectators. The fights appeared to be bare knuckle fights using mixed martial arts style gloves. The full replay of the show is available on the IBA YouTube channel. The night culminated in a rematch for the lightweight title. In a clash that kept the crowd on their feet, Zhuman “Arlan” Zhumabekov (Kazakhstan) and Rosa Freire Lewandowski (Brazil) pushed each other to the limit. Zhumabekov reclaimed his status with a clinical performance winning by a technical knockout. The bout served as a fitting finale to a night defined by elite athleticism and raw intensity.
The unprecedented interest in the tournament, evidenced by the Almaty Arena and massive digital engagement, underscores the success of the IBA’s new strategic direction. Chris Roberts OBE, IBA Secretary General & CEO, expressed his satisfaction with the event’s impact: “Tonight in Almaty, we witnessed something truly special. Seeing 10,000 passionate fans at the arena is a testament to the incredible appetite for this innovative format. The level of competition was world-class, and the atmosphere was electric from the very first bout. This partnership with Nomad Fighting has allowed us to bridge traditional values with modern sports entertainment, and the results speak for themselves. This is a bold step forward in our mission to bring elite boxing to new audiences globally.”
The main card featured a string of standout performances that resonated with the local audience:
• The Return of Arman Ashimov (Kazakhstan): The “People’s Champion” proved his legendary status once again in his clash against Dishot Narkuziev (Uzbekistan), providing one of the most emotional moments of the evening and clinching the victory by the technical knockout.
• Zhalgas Zhumagulov (Kazakhstan): The former UFC star made a successful transition to the IBA Nomad platform, demonstrating his technical versatility against Kairat Nurbaev (Kyrgyzstan) and produced a knockout win.
• Title Grudge Match: The rivalry between Vasif Abbasov (Kazakhstan) and Isa “Tandovskiy” Isaev (Russia) reached its boiling point in a fiercely contested battle for the lightweight belt which ended in a technical knockout performed by Abbasov.
IBA NOMAD 14 Official Results
• Main Event: Zhuman Zhumabekov (Kazakhstan) vs Rosa Freire Lewandowski (Brazil) – Zhumabekov won by technical knockout.
Vasif Abbasov (Kazakhstan) vs Isa Isaev (Russia) – Abbasov won by technical knockout.
• Arman Ashimov (Kazakhstan) vs Dishot Narkuziev (Uzbekistan) – Ashimov won by technical knockout.
• Zhalgas Zhumagulov (Kazakhstan) vs Kairat Nurbaev (Kyrgyzstan) – Zhumagulov won by knockout.
Title fight (Bantamweight)
Aidos “Alim” Zhapparbergenov (Kazakhstan) vs Asror “Vozhak” Akparkhodjayev (Tajikistan) — Draw
Main card
Zhalgas “Zhako” Zhumagulov (Kazakhstan) vs Kairat “Ataman” Nurbay Uulu (Kyrgyzstan) — Zhumagulov wins by knockout
Arman “Mustafa Ozturk” Ashimov (Kazakhstan) vs Dilshod “Showtime” Norkuziyev (Tajikistan) — Ashimov wins by technical knockout
Bekzhan “Aiu” Bakirov (Kazakhstan) vs Oomatbek Elshoro Uulu (Kyrgyzstan) — Bakirov wins by decision
Ibragim Islamov (Russia) vs Kalys Akylbaev (Kyrgyzstan) — Islamov won by technical knockout
Prelims
Temerulan “Underdog” Shashubay (Kazakhstan) vs Timur “Fartovyi” Abdurahmanov (Russia) — Abdurahmanov won by technical knockout
Erali “Big Boss” Boyqobilov vs Safarali “Shef” Rajabov (show match) — Boyqobilov wins by decision
Dastan “Kazakh Diamonds” Beken (Kazakhstan) vs Abdurakhman “Asiat” Abdurakhmanov (Kyrgyzstan) — Abdurakhmanov wins by decision
Kanat “Kanski Festival” Kulmagambetov (Kazakhstan) vs Bobur “Aziatski Lev” Abdulazizov (Uzbekistan) — Kulmagambetov wins by technical knockout
Shahobiddin “Uzbeksky Levsha” Egamov (Uzbekistan) vs Ernar “Storm” Khusainov (Kazakhstan) — Egamov wins by decision
Azamat “Zlo” Bakytov (Kazakhstan) vs Shokhrukh “Uzbeksky Tank” Ilkhomov (Uzbekistan) — Bakytov wins by unanimous decision
Bekzat Amanzholov (Kazakhstan) vs Ali “Batyr” Batyrbekov (Kazakhstan) — Batyrbekov wins by first-round technical knockout
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IBA bare knuckle results from Almaty
Last weekend, the IBA held a night of combat fighting at the Almaty Arena in Kazakhstan as the inaugural IBA NOMAD 14 joint tournament captivated a capacity of 13,000 spectators. The fights appeared to be bare knuckle fights using mixed martial arts style gloves. The full replay of the show is available on the IBA YouTube channel. The night culminated in a rematch for the lightweight title. In a clash that kept the crowd on their feet, Zhuman “Arlan” Zhumabekov (Kazakhstan) and Rosa Freire Lewandowski (Brazil) pushed each other to the limit. Zhumabekov reclaimed his status with a clinical performance winning by a technical knockout. The bout served as a fitting finale to a night defined by elite athleticism and raw intensity.
The unprecedented interest in the tournament, evidenced by the Almaty Arena and massive digital engagement, underscores the success of the IBA’s new strategic direction. Chris Roberts OBE, IBA Secretary General & CEO, expressed his satisfaction with the event’s impact: “Tonight in Almaty, we witnessed something truly special. Seeing 10,000 passionate fans at the arena is a testament to the incredible appetite for this innovative format. The level of competition was world-class, and the atmosphere was electric from the very first bout. This partnership with Nomad Fighting has allowed us to bridge traditional values with modern sports entertainment, and the results speak for themselves. This is a bold step forward in our mission to bring elite boxing to new audiences globally.”
The main card featured a string of standout performances that resonated with the local audience:
• The Return of Arman Ashimov (Kazakhstan): The “People’s Champion” proved his legendary status once again in his clash against Dishot Narkuziev (Uzbekistan), providing one of the most emotional moments of the evening and clinching the victory by the technical knockout.
• Zhalgas Zhumagulov (Kazakhstan): The former UFC star made a successful transition to the IBA Nomad platform, demonstrating his technical versatility against Kairat Nurbaev (Kyrgyzstan) and produced a knockout win.
• Title Grudge Match: The rivalry between Vasif Abbasov (Kazakhstan) and Isa “Tandovskiy” Isaev (Russia) reached its boiling point in a fiercely contested battle for the lightweight belt which ended in a technical knockout performed by Abbasov.
IBA NOMAD 14 Official Results
• Main Event: Zhuman Zhumabekov (Kazakhstan) vs Rosa Freire Lewandowski (Brazil) – Zhumabekov won by technical knockout.
Vasif Abbasov (Kazakhstan) vs Isa Isaev (Russia) – Abbasov won by technical knockout.
• Arman Ashimov (Kazakhstan) vs Dishot Narkuziev (Uzbekistan) – Ashimov won by technical knockout.
• Zhalgas Zhumagulov (Kazakhstan) vs Kairat Nurbaev (Kyrgyzstan) – Zhumagulov won by knockout.
Title fight (Bantamweight)
Aidos “Alim” Zhapparbergenov (Kazakhstan) vs Asror “Vozhak” Akparkhodjayev (Tajikistan) — Draw
Main card
Zhalgas “Zhako” Zhumagulov (Kazakhstan) vs Kairat “Ataman” Nurbay Uulu (Kyrgyzstan) — Zhumagulov wins by knockout
Arman “Mustafa Ozturk” Ashimov (Kazakhstan) vs Dilshod “Showtime” Norkuziyev (Tajikistan) — Ashimov wins by technical knockout
Bekzhan “Aiu” Bakirov (Kazakhstan) vs Oomatbek Elshoro Uulu (Kyrgyzstan) — Bakirov wins by decision
Ibragim Islamov (Russia) vs Kalys Akylbaev (Kyrgyzstan) — Islamov won by technical knockout
Prelims
Temerulan “Underdog” Shashubay (Kazakhstan) vs Timur “Fartovyi” Abdurahmanov (Russia) — Abdurahmanov won by technical knockout
Erali “Big Boss” Boyqobilov vs Safarali “Shef” Rajabov (show match) — Boyqobilov wins by decision
Dastan “Kazakh Diamonds” Beken (Kazakhstan) vs Abdurakhman “Asiat” Abdurakhmanov (Kyrgyzstan) — Abdurakhmanov wins by decision
Kanat “Kanski Festival” Kulmagambetov (Kazakhstan) vs Bobur “Aziatski Lev” Abdulazizov (Uzbekistan) — Kulmagambetov wins by technical knockout
Shahobiddin “Uzbeksky Levsha” Egamov (Uzbekistan) vs Ernar “Storm” Khusainov (Kazakhstan) — Egamov wins by decision
Azamat “Zlo” Bakytov (Kazakhstan) vs Shokhrukh “Uzbeksky Tank” Ilkhomov (Uzbekistan) — Bakytov wins by unanimous decision
Bekzat Amanzholov (Kazakhstan) vs Ali “Batyr” Batyrbekov (Kazakhstan) — Batyrbekov wins by first-round technical knockout
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