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  • Keyshawn Davis sets sights on one man after Albright win

    Keyshawn Davis sets sights on one man after Albright win



    Keyshawn Davis has already made it clear what he wants next after extending his unbeaten record on Saturday.

    Davis moved to 15-0 with 10 knockouts after a dominant unanimous decision win over Nahir Albright, closing the chapter on their rivalry after their 2023 fight ended in a no decision.

    It was the second ring appearance of 2026 for ‘The Businessman’ following his win over Jamaine Ortiz in January, as Davis now looks to move back into world title contention after his previous reign as WBO lightweight champion was cut short due to missing weight.

    Speaking in the post-fight interview after defeating Albright, Davis revealed the names of three fighters that he now has in his sights for his next outing.

    “I want to fight people like Oscar Duarte, I want to fight people like Devin Haney, I was on the phone with Lamont Roach, so I’m calling out these other guys to make a bigger fight for my legacy.”

    Davis missed weight at the first attempt for the clash against Albright before eventually making it, and his preference is now to head to the welterweight division.

    “Man, I’ll probably go to 147, I ain’t gonna lie. All this making weight stuff, it ain’t for me. As y’all can see, I ain’t good at making weight. I just know I can fight.”

    With Duarte at super-lightweight and Roach set to compete for the vacant WBC lightweight title, it suggests the most likely option for Davis out of his targets is a bout with WBO welterweight champion Haney, with the pair already having been linked to one another in recent months.



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  • Thomas Hearns ranks one boxer above all others as the best to ever do it

    Thomas Hearns ranks one boxer above all others as the best to ever do it



    Thomas Hearns once revealed his list of the best boxers of all time, with a popular choice making it into his number one spot.

    Hearns was the first boxer in history to become world champion in five divisions after triumphing at welterweight, light middleweight, middleweight, super middleweight and light heavyweight.

    He was a member of the iconic ‘Four Kings’ that dominated the sport during the 1980s, alongside fellow greats Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler and Roberto Duran.

    When Hearns complied a list of the 10 greatest boxers of all time, those three former rivals all featured, as did some of the biggest names in the history of boxing.

    10: Marvin Hagler. 9: George Foreman. 8: Floyd Mayweather. 7: Mike Tyson. 6: Sugar Ray Leonard. 5: Wilfred Benitez 4: Roberto Duran.

    In the number three spot, ‘The Hitman’ sided with himself, before then naming a heavyweight legend as the second best ever.

    3: Thomas Hearns. 2: Joe Frazier.

    When it came to the greatest of all time, there was just one answer for Hearns, and it was another icon of the heavyweight division.

    1: Muhammad Ali.

    Ali became world heavyweight champion on three occasions, and was involved in in some of the most memorable fights in history, including the ‘Rumble In The Jungle’ against George Foreman and the ‘Thrilla In Manila’ against Joe Frazier.

    His final record stood at 56 wins from 61 fights, having also defeated the likes of Sonny Liston, Floyd Patterson, Ken Norton and Earnie Shavers, and the view of Hearns, along with many others, shows why Ali is more than deserving of his moniker of ‘The Greatest.’



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  • Teofimo Lopez Calls Ryan Garcia-Shakur Talk “Mid”

    Teofimo Lopez Calls Ryan Garcia-Shakur Talk “Mid”


    Teofimo Lopez does not appear impressed by the growing talk around a possible fight between Ryan Garcia and Shakur Stevenson.

    Ryan said earlier Monday during an appearance on ESPN’s First Take that he believes he can become “the face of boxing,” while Shakur later responded publicly by urging Ryan to move ahead with a fight between them.


    “I have all the opportunities to become the face of boxing, but now I just have to prove it,’” Ryan said during the First Take interview with Stephen A. Smith.

    “So then what we waiting for let’s get active @RyanGarcia,” Shakur later wrote on X.

    Teofimo reacted shortly afterward with two separate posts aimed at both fighters.

    “These boys dress up and think that they somebody, s*** is like Comic-Con @RyanGarcia 🦹‍♂️,” Teofimo posted in response.

    Teofimo later added another response aimed at Shakur’s public callout toward Ryan.

    “Mid, mid, mid, Skip,skip!” Teofimo wrote on X.

    The comments arrive four months after Shakur defeated Teofimo in January to take his WBO junior welterweight title. Ryan has also recently mentioned Shakur as a possible future opponent at 140 pounds despite currently holding the WBC welterweight title after his February win over Mario Barrios.

    Ryan has recently floated several possible opponents as he looks for another major fight later this year. Shakur has continued publicly pushing for the matchup after moving up to the light welterweight division, while Teofimo remains linked to the same group of fighters following his January loss.

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    Last Updated on 2026/05/18 at 3:34 PM



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  • Eddie Hearn blocked one man from facing Conor Benn before promotional split: “I was trying to get him”

    Eddie Hearn blocked one man from facing Conor Benn before promotional split: “I was trying to get him”



    Conor Benn called for several high-profile fights during his time with Matchroom Boxing, but former promoter Eddie Hearn appears to have ruled out one potential in-house clash.

    Since Benn’s departure from Matchroom, Hearn has spoken openly about previous discussions surrounding the welterweight’s career, recently claiming that Benn turned down proposed world title fights with Rolando Romero, Lewis Crocker and Josh Kelly.

    Now, former IBF and WBC welterweight champ Jaron Ennis has revealed that he pushed for a fight with Benn while both fighters were aligned with Hearn, only for the idea to be dismissed immediately.

    Speaking on the All The Smoke Fight Podcast, Ennis said:

    “I told Eddie to let me fight him.

    “I said that I would fight Conor, he [Hearn] turned around and said ‘absolutely not’. I’m going to get in trouble but he said ‘absolutely not’. I was trying to get him though.”

    ‘Boots’ Ennis – who the promoter brands ‘the next Terence Crawford – did praise Benn and suggested he has continued to improve in recent outings.

    “He is good and I think he is getting better.”

    Ennis is currently preparing to challenge Xander Zayas for the unified super-welterweight title next month, with the American aiming to become champion in a second weight class. Should Benn move up to 154lbs in the future, Hearn may be more keen on making the fight happen after their promotional split.

    In the meantime, the Brit looks to challenge Ryan Garcia for the WBC welterweight belt later this year.



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  • Mexico-conquering world champion John H Stracey sings new World Cup anthem for England

    Mexico-conquering world champion John H Stracey sings new World Cup anthem for England



    John H Stracey swapped the gloves for a microphone in his second act. Half a century on from his famous world title triumph in Mexico City, the former champion is now hoping a new World Cup song can inspire England ahead of the 2026 tournament.

    After several street scuffles as a small lad in Bethnal Green, Stracey’s father marched him through the doors Repton Boxing Club at 11 years old.

    He moved through the amateur ranks impressively – schoolboy, junior, senior – and represented his country at the Olympics in 1968, losing in the last 16 to eventual gold medallist Ronnie Harris of the USA.

    If his Olympics run didn’t end as he wanted, it would still prepare Stracey for his own World Cup final. He turned over to the paid ranks five days before his 19th birthday and won the British and European welterweight titles before landing a shot at Mexican great José Nápoles in the sweltering, high-altitude cauldron of Mexico City for the WBC world title in 1975.

    “I was very, very confident. Extremely confident. I actually preferred being away from home. When you’re defending a title at home, there’s so much pressure. But when you go abroad for a title fight, everybody expects you to lose anyway. If you lose, they say, ‘Well, he boxed 5,000 miles away.’ But if you win, that’s the great thing about it.

    “Mexico suited me because I’d already boxed there as an amateur in the Olympics. Chris Finnegan won gold there, and we had some really good fighters.

    “But the big thing was the altitude. It was 7,500 feet above sea level, so you couldn’t just arrive and start training hard the next day. You had to ease yourself into it.  If you look, I’m the only British boxer ever to win it in Mexico, no one’s ever done it, and I don’t know if it’s because they don’t prepare properly.

    “When we went there for the Olympics, we arrived two weeks early. For the Napoles fight, I made sure I got there three weeks before. I knew if I was going to have any chance at becoming champion, I had to be there long enough to become accustomed to it.”

    Stracey recovered from a first-round knockdown in front of 42,000 fans at the Plaza de Toros – just 24 of whom, he says, had travelled from Britain – to stop Nápoles in the sixth and become world champion. After all deductions, he walked away with £2,000 and a car, but, more importantly, he had fulfilled a lifelong ambition to win the title. Yet boxing was never the only thing Stracey imagined himself doing.

    Long before he became world champion, he had dreams of becoming a singer. In fact, when he mentions a talent competition trophy he won at 12 years old, it’s easy to imagine it sitting proudly alongside the green and gold WBC belt today.

    “Music had always been there. In fact, before boxing, I wanted to be a singer. I won a talent competition in 1962 at a holiday camp. That’s what I wanted to do originally, but singing became number two and boxing number one.”

    After retiring in 1978, Stracey swapped the buzz of the ring for the stage, alongside various business ventures. He’s proud to point out that he has shared stages with the likes of Johnny Mathis, Tony Christie and Russ Abbot, and performed, as he once fought, in Las Vegas. Today, he writes songs and takes his act all over the country, drawing great satisfaction from sing-alongs at retirement homes, sometimes changing his stage name so boxing doesn’t dominate the conversation.

    This year, the national pride born from his boxing days and his passion for singing collide with the release of ‘66 All Over Again’, a catchy World Cup anthem backing the Three Lions to bring the trophy home 60 years on from their last success, which Stracey, now 75, watched as a 16-year-old amateur fighter.

    “Oh, I loved it [watching in 1966]. Alan Ball became my favourite player. It was such a special time to be English.”

    “The song actually started years ago, around 2010. I wrote the lyrics and a mate of mine helped with the music because I can’t write music myself. I can hear the tune in my head, though.

    “Nothing really happened with it for years, but recently some people heard it and loved it, so now we’re releasing it for the 2026 World Cup.”

    If Harry Kane, Jude Bellingham, Declan Rice et al. need extra motivation, they perhaps won’t look to the lyrics or the tune, but to the man singing and what he managed to achieve back in 1975 on away soil.

    Indeed, the former world champion points out that if England makes it through the group, there’s a chance they’ll play in the thin air of Mexico City during the knockout stage. He’s not unaware of the synchronicity and would happily return to the place so vital to his story to share the moment.

    “If they flew me over, I’d be right in my element.

    “When we boxed in Mexico as amateurs, we went to the Plaza de Toros bullring to watch bullfighting. We hated it and walked out. I remember saying, ‘I’ll never go into a bullring again.’

    “Years later, my world title fight against Nápoles ended up taking place in that exact same arena.”

    If Stracey was to go and perform for the team, 7,500 feet above sea level, the question becomes how the nerves of the first notes stack up against those of a ring walk. He says there is no comparison.

    “Oh, singing’s much easier. You can forget the odd word, but you mustn’t forget the odd punch.”



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  • Carl Froch gives verdict on Moses Itauma vs Hrgovic: “He’s a force to be reckoned with”

    Carl Froch gives verdict on Moses Itauma vs Hrgovic: “He’s a force to be reckoned with”



    After comfortably beating Dave Allen, Croatia’s Filip Hrgovic has emerged as the frontrunner for a fight with Moses Itauma, who is searching for an opponent for his August fight date. Now, four-time super-middleweight world champion Carl Froch has offered his thoughts on the rumoured contest.

    Itauma halted Jermaine Franklin back in March, and in his post-fight interview, he revealed that he would have liked to face Hrgovic next, seemingly disappointed that the Rio 2016 Olympic bronze medallist was instead scheduled to fight Allen.

    However, Hrgovic outclassed Allen on Saturday night, closing the show within three rounds without hardly breaking a sweat, before unveiling that he would be willing to face Itauma in less than three months.

    Speaking on his YouTube channel, Froch heaped praise onto Hrgovic, believing that the away fighter did not get out of ‘second gear’ as he ran through Allen with ease.

    “He boxed really well, relaxed, probably didn’t get out of second gear and he is now being touted to potential face Moses Itauma. Now that, for me, is a juicy fight because Filip Hrgovic is a good, solid, all-round, real professional boxer in a sense that he does everything correct. 

    “He is like a [Marquess of] Queensberry Rules standard, with that Eastern European style about him, where all of his fundamentals are solid; good jab, good balance, good head movement, he reads the shots well.” 

    Froch then went on to warn Itauma that his chin will be tested if he dares to take on Hrgovic in his next fight.

    “Hrgovic is a force to be reckoned with. I don’t want to say that he is a stepping stone or a test before world level, but he is. If Moses Itauma can come through that fight against Hrgovic, that is going to answer a few questions that we need to find out about Itauma, if he is being dubbed as the future of heavyweight boxing. 

    “He is a fantastic fighter; fast hands, good combinations and highly skilful. Can he take a punch? I think that Hrgovic will test that chin because he can certainly punch a little bit, he is a big lump, a big unit. I will look forward to that one, when that one happens. Hrgovic-Itauma, let’s get ready for that!”

    The O2 Arena is booked for Saturday, August 8, for Itauma’s next outing, as he headlines in London for the first time before a planned U.S. debut at the end of the year. If Hrgovic is fit and the cut he suffered against Allen won’t pose problems, the fight is ready to be made, according to promoter George Warren.



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  • Conor Benn sums up Tyson Fury’s chances of KOing Anthony Joshua in mega fight

    Conor Benn sums up Tyson Fury’s chances of KOing Anthony Joshua in mega fight



    Later this year, Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury are set to meet in a long-awaited grudge match. Now, fellow British star Conor Benn has shared his thoughts on how he believes the bout will play out.

    Joshua and Fury look to end years of debate when they clash later this year, with an agreement now in place but still a few obstacles to clear.

    Before fans can get too excited, both men must come through warm-up contests unscathed, with ‘AJ’ scheduled to take on Kristian Pranga in two months’ time and Fury hoping to have another run out following his win over Arslanbek Makhmudov. Even with the ‘warm-up’ fights, Joshua-Fury is closer than ever to finally taking place.

    Speaking on a recent Kick stream, Benn revealed that he expects the fight to go one of two ways, ending with either a Fury decision or a Joshua knockout.

    “Probably Fury points. Fury points or AJ stoppage is what I would say, but then again, I am sitting on the fence.

    “But, that is how I see the fight panning out. It’ll have to be an AJ stoppage or Fury on points.”

    ‘The Gypsy King’ has promised fans a KO, believing himself to be much too good for his countryman. That would require him to produce his first stoppage since beating Derek Chisora inside the distance back in 2022.

    Joshua-Prenga takes place on Saturday, July 25, in Riyadh, as the Olympic Gold Medalist takes on his first recognised heavyweight boxer since partnering up with Team Oleksandr Usyk.



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  • Tyson Fury Says Beating Anthony Joshua “Does Nothing”

    Tyson Fury Says Beating Anthony Joshua “Does Nothing”


    Tyson Fury is already talking like the Anthony Joshua fight would add more to Joshua’s career than his own, even with the long-awaited heavyweight clash expected later this year.

    Fury returned from a 16-month layoff in April and defeated Arslanbek Makhmudov in front of more than 60,000 fans at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Joshua was seated ringside that night, but chose not to enter the ring afterward for a face-off despite months of public discussion about the two finally meeting.


    Fury is also planning another fight in August before facing Joshua, and admitted there is always a risk the mega-fight could disappear if things go wrong.

    “So here’s the facts of this fight. Yeah. Me beating Anthony Joshua doesn’t do anything for my career. Nothing doesn’t enhance me. Doesn’t everyone expects me to beat him anyway. I’m an odds-on favorite heavily. The world expects me to beat this guy,” Fury said to FurociTV.

    “So me beating him doesn’t do anything. But if ever he could beat me, he’s changed. He’s the way people think of him. So the cloud chaser is him.”

    The former heavyweight champion also revealed that he expects to fight once more in August before the Joshua bout is finalized for October or November.

    “So my fight plan this year with three fights. So it will be April, August, and whenever the big fights announced either October, November. We haven’t got an opponent yet. But again, it’s never about the opponent. It’s just about me versus me always,” said Fury.

    “So, whoever the opponent is, if it’s Joe Blogs or if it’s Mike Tyson, it’s all important to me. It’s just the run out for me. Like, just to get sharper for the big one.”

    He also acknowledged that the Joshua fight is not guaranteed to survive the extra tune-up.

    “Listen, I might get knocked out my next fight in August. So then it’s all over it. So I got to take one fight at a time, and they’re all deadly serious fights,” said Tyson.

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    Last Updated on 2026/05/18 at 2:12 PM



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  • Ryan Garcia Floats Shakur Stevenson Fight At 140

    Ryan Garcia Floats Shakur Stevenson Fight At 140


    “If that opportunity presents itself, I would love to fight Shakur Stevenson, or we could bring Gervonta back, you know, from wherever he’s at. You know what I mean? Like, let’s go. I want that,” Ryan said to ESPN’s First Take.

    “I just want boxing to be at the top. I want to make these fights happen, and I know I could beat these guys.”

    Ryan made it clear he is not planning to stay locked into one division despite now campaigning at 147.

    “Well, my intent, look at my strength and conditioning coach, he said that he believes that I can make 140 comfortably. I trust the people around me,” Garcia said.

    The comments came during an appearance on ESPN’s First Take after Garcia was asked about a possible fight with Conor Benn, who has been calling him out publicly.

    Ryan said Benn had been targeting him long before the recent exchanges.

    “He’s been talking for some time. It hasn’t even just been recently. It’s been maybe a year, two years,” Garcia said.

    “He actually pulled up on me in London and tried to fight me, started some trouble at an award show. Ever since then, he’s been on my radar.”

    Garcia also revisited his loss to Gervonta Davis and claimed he was the fighter willing to accept difficult terms to make that bout happen at a time when major names were avoiding each other.

    “Nobody was fighting each other. Everybody was scared of each other. Everybody was ducking each other. Everybody was trying to protect the O,” Garcia said.

    “I went and took all the clauses that Gervonta Davis put on me and I’m the one that made that fight happen.”

    Later in the interview, Garcia again mentioned Tank while questioning why the former lightweight champion remains such a major topic in boxing discussions.

    “I’m a world champion now. What has he been doing? Why are we talking about him? He hasn’t been doing nothing,” said Ryan.

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  • Tyson Fury confirms August ‘runout’ fight: “Then it’s the big one”

    Tyson Fury confirms August ‘runout’ fight: “Then it’s the big one”



    With a long-awaited battle with Anthony Joshua looming, Tyson Fury has revealed when he will be fighting once before.

    Fury defeated Arslanbek Makhmudov by unanimous decision in April in what was the first ring appearance for ‘The Gypsy King’ since suffering back-to-back defeats to Oleksandr Usyk in 2024.

    After that win, Fury was involved in a back and forth with long-term rival Joshua, with it since confirmed that the pair will finally square off later this year.

    That is dependent on Joshua first coming through a warm-up bout against Kristian Prenga in July, while Fury also confirmed plans to compete again before the showdown with his countryman.

    ‘The Gypsy King’ has now revealed when that is expected to be, telling FurociTV that he is set to compete in August before then meeting Joshua a few months later.

    “My fight plan this year is three fights. April, August, and whenever the big fight is announced; either October or November.”

    Fury also gave an update on his opponent, but insists that it doesn’t matter who he shares the ring with.

    “We haven’t got an opponent yet, but it’s never about the opponent. It’s just about me versus me always. Whoever the opponent is whether it’s Joe Bloggs or Mike Tyson. It’s unimportant to me, it’s just a runout to get sharper for the big one.”

    Boxing fans will be hoping that both Fury and Joshua can come through their interim bouts unscathed, before then turning their attention to the contest that really matters later this year.



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