Author: Mike Reichlin

  • Katie Taylor Says September 5 Bout Will Be Her Last

    Katie Taylor Says September 5 Bout Will Be Her Last

    Katie Taylor has confirmed in her own words that her September 5 fight at Dublin’s Croke Park will be the last of her career, framing the homecoming as “the perfect way to end it.”

    The bout offers her the chance to retire as a three-time undisputed super lightweight champion in front of more than 80,000 fans at Ireland’s national stadium.

    With the event now official, Taylor will defend her WBO, WBA, IBF, and Ring Magazine super lightweight titles against undefeated French contender Flora Pili, according to Matchroom Boxing. The vacant WBC title is also on the line, giving Taylor the opportunity to become undisputed once again.

    “This seems like the perfect way to end it, by becoming Undisputed Champion again in our national stadium, which has such a special place in Irish hearts,” Taylor said. “I’m so grateful that it’s happening, and I can’t thank the people of this country enough for the support I have received over the years.”

    Taylor enters the bout with a 25-1 record. The event will stream live worldwide on DAZN.

    A Historic Night At Croke Park

    The September 5 card will mark the first professional boxing event staged at Croke Park since Muhammad Ali fought Alvin Lewis there in 1972. The venue has returned to prominence in major boxing circles, also serving as the reported site for Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua later this year.

    Taylor made clear she is not overlooking Pili, who brings an unbeaten 12-0 record into the biggest fight of her career.

    “I’m under no illusions that Flora will present a very tough challenge; she’s undefeated as a professional and has a good amateur pedigree, so I have the utmost respect for her,” Taylor said.

    The Icing On The Cake

    For Taylor, closing her career at Croke Park carries a meaning beyond titles.

    “I’ve been blessed to achieve more than I could ever have dreamed in this sport, but fighting at Croke Park really is the icing on the cake,” she said. “I hope it’s the kind of event that will inspire a whole new generation to take up sport and follow their passions.”

    Tickets go on sale June 12 through Ticketmaster, with pre-sale access beginning earlier in the week. The fight streams on DAZN, whose relationship with Matchroom has drawn recent attention across the broadcast landscape.

    If successful, Taylor would walk away as a three-time undisputed champion. Other women’s stars have circled her name, with Alycia Baumgardner among those calling for a superfight, though Taylor has set her sights firmly on a Dublin send-off.

  • Supernova Genesis Results: Flor Vigna Wins, Alana Retires

    Supernova Genesis Results: Flor Vigna Wins, Alana Retires

    Supernova: Genesis 2026 took place Sunday night at Arena Ciudad de Mexico, streaming live on Netflix across more than 190 countries. The celebrity influencer boxing event delivered several memorable moments, headlined by a retirement announcement that overshadowed the main event result itself.

    Main Event: Flor Vigna Defeats Alana Flores by Unanimous Decision

    Argentine content creator Flor Vigna won the main event over Mexican streamer Alana Flores by unanimous decision after four rounds, improving her record to 3-0. Vigna controlled the bout from the outset, using a 12-centimeter height advantage throughout. Flores was more aggressive in the early rounds but lost momentum heading into the championship rounds.

    Immediately after the decision, Flores announced her retirement from boxing.

    “This has been my last fight,” she told the crowd. “I leave with a full heart because I managed to prove to myself that I am capable of never giving up. If you have a goal, never give up.” The farewell speech drew significant attention, with many observers noting it overshadowed Vigna’s victory in the moment.

    Co-Main: Aaron Mercury Knocks Out Mario Bautista in One Round

    TikTok personality Aaron Mercury stopped musician and content creator Mario Bautista in one minute and 22 seconds of the first round, delivering one of the fastest finishes of the night.

    Mercury entered the arena alongside musician Oliver Tree. Bautista had previously been involved in a notable fight on the prior Supernova card against Westcol, who retired injured from that bout.

    Full Results

    As noted, the main events saw:

    • Flor Vigna defeated Alana Flores by unanimous decision, then announced her retirement.
    • Aaron Mercury had a highlight-reel first round KO on Mario Bautista.

    Supernova Genesis also saw:

    • Willito defeated Lonche in the third bout of the evening, also winning a $400,000 side bet between the two fighters.
    • Abraham stopped Nando by technical knockout in the second round after the referee determined Nando was not responding.
    • Milica defeated Kim Shantal by decision in the opening bout.
    • Karely Ruiz defeated Kim Shantal in a separate contest.
    • Shantal took on two fights after Ari Geli withdrew from the card at the last minute, accepting the emergency booking.

    Production Notes

    The event marked Netflix’s first live broadcast in Latin America, available on all plans without additional cost. The show ran in two blocks, with the early portion free via social media and the main card exclusively on Netflix.

    Singer Carin Leon’s musical performance was briefly disrupted when the production played the wrong track, though Leon continued performing with live musicians and received a standing ovation from the crowd. Ring announcer Jimmy Lennon Jr. was on hand for the event.

    The previous Supernova Strikers edition in August 2025 drew over 10 million viewers across digital platforms.

  • Anthony Joshua vs Kristian Prenga Set for July 25 in Riyadh

    Anthony Joshua vs Kristian Prenga Set for July 25 in Riyadh

    Anthony Joshua has his comeback opponent, and there is now a title at stake. The Olympic gold medallist and former two-time unified heavyweight champion will return to the ring on July 25 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, against unbeaten Albanian heavyweight Kristian Prenga, with the official press release billing the bout for the WBC World Heavyweight Championship.

    The fight, dubbed “The Comeback,” was confirmed Monday by His Excellency Turki Alalshikh, Chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority. It will headline a card at the Esports World Cup at Boulevard City and stream live worldwide on DAZN. The bout opens a new multi-fight Saudi deal for Joshua, and crucially, it is the warm-up that activates a long-rumored showdown with Tyson Fury reportedly targeted for late 2026.

    Anthony Joshua Comeback Poster

    The WBC Title Billing

    The official Matchroom Boxing press release describes the fight as being for the WBC World Heavyweight Championship. That billing carries some complications. Oleksandr Usyk currently holds the full WBC heavyweight title and is scheduled to make a voluntary defense against Rico Verhoeven on May 23 at the Pyramids of Giza, while Agit Kabayel holds the WBC interim title and has been waiting on a mandatory shot. Whether Joshua vs Prenga is sanctioned for a vacant version of the belt, a secondary WBC title, or pending further clarification from the sanctioning body, the press release does not specify. Further details from the WBC are expected.

    Joshua’s First Fight Since Tragedy

    This will be Joshua’s first appearance in the ring since his sixth-round stoppage of Jake Paul on December 19, 2025, in Miami. Ten days after that fight, Joshua was involved in a car crash in Lagos, Nigeria, that killed his close friends Sina Ghami and Latif Ayodele. He sustained only minor injuries, but at one point was reportedly believed to be retiring from the sport.

    Joshua, 36, broke his silence weeks later in an emotional video confirming his intent to fight on. The July 25 booking is the first concrete step on that road back. He enters with a professional record of 28-4 with 25 knockouts, his most recent win coming via knockout against Jake Paul.

    “It’s no secret I’ve taken some time to consolidate and rebuild to be ready for stepping back into the ring, and today is the next step on that journey,” Joshua said. “I’m delighted to have agreed a multi-fight deal starting with July 25th in the kingdom of Saudi Arabia. I’m looking forward to competing and picking up where I left off. As I said. The landlord will collect his rent. That is certain.”

    Joshua’s Heavyweight Résumé

    Matchroom’s release leaned hard on Joshua’s career résumé to frame the comeback. Over the past eight years, Joshua has been central to some of boxing’s biggest heavyweight events, with wins over Wladimir Klitschko, Joseph Parker, Kubrat Pulev, and Andy Ruiz Jr., and high-profile defeats against Oleksandr Usyk, Daniel Dubois, and a stoppage of Francis Ngannou. He has headlined stadium events at Wembley Stadium and Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

    Who Is Kristian Prenga?

    Prenga (20-1, 20 KOs) is a 35-year-old Albanian heavyweight based in New Jersey who carries a perfect knockout ratio. He turned professional in 2016, and his only loss came on points back in 2017. The July 25 bout will be the highest-profile fight of his career and his first major international main event. He has never been beyond eight rounds in a scheduled bout, and he has not faced anyone near world-level opposition.

    “Anthony Joshua is a great fighter, but he made a terrible miscalculation in picking me as his opponent,” Prenga said. “This is the kind of fight that changes everything in my life and his. I know they have big plans ahead after this fight. I know they are overlooking me. I’m happy about that. I will derail their plans and shock the world this July in Saudi Arabia.”

    The Fury Fight Is the Real Prize

    The subtext to Monday’s announcement is unmistakable. Promoter Eddie Hearn has openly said Joshua wanted a tune-up before facing Fury, and reporting from The Ring confirms that if Joshua comes through Prenga unscathed, he will finally meet Fury at the end of 2026 in what would be the most anticipated fight in British boxing history. That super-fight is expected to land on Netflix.

    Joshua and Fury have been on a collision course for more than a decade without sharing a ring. Tensions spiked earlier this month when Fury called Joshua out from the ring after beating Arslanbek Makhmudov, leading to Hearn confirming a two-fight structure built around a July warm-up and a Fury showdown later in the year.

    For now, the rent will be collected on July 25. The bigger payday is waiting on the other side.

  • Jarrell Miller Outworks Lenier Pero, Calls Out Deontay Wilder

    Jarrell Miller Outworks Lenier Pero, Calls Out Deontay Wilder

    Jarrell Miller outworked previously unbeaten Lenier Pero over 12 rounds to win a unanimous decision Saturday night in a WBA heavyweight title eliminator at Fontainebleau Las Vegas, then immediately turned his attention to Deontay Wilder.

    Two judges scored the bout 117-111 for Miller, with the third turning in a 115-113 card. Miller improved to 28-1-2 with 22 knockouts. Pero fell to 13-1, suffering the first loss of his professional career.

    The win positions Miller as the WBA mandatory challenger, putting him in line for a shot at unified heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk or, depending on how the picture shakes out, Daniel Dubois.

    Volume Carries the Night

    Miller and Pero combined to throw 1,652 punches in what ESPN described as a toe-to-toe slugfest. Miller alone threw 1,003, landing 290, per CompuBox. Pero was the more accurate man at 39 percent to Miller’s 29 percent, but he could not match the Brooklyn fighter’s pressure or volume.

    Pero started fast, using his southpaw jab and clean counters to outbox Miller from range through the early rounds. Miller, who weighed 305 pounds to Pero’s 251, turned the fight into a phonebooth brawl from the third round on, walking the Cuban down to the ropes and trading on the inside.

    By the 11th round, an exhausted Pero was barely able to come out of his corner. He tried to rally midway through the 12th, but Miller closed the fight strong, trading power shots until the final bell. No knockdowns were scored.

    Miller Wants Wilder Next

    Miller wasted little time once he had the microphone, naming Tyson Fury, Wilder, and Pero’s brother Dainier Pero as targets. Wilder, who returned this month with a controversial split decision over Derek Chisora, drew the most pointed words.

    “Deontay, he said a long time ago that he doesn’t want to fight ‘Big Baby’ because I hurt his feelings,” Miller told DAZN. “If you don’t shut your pie a** up and come fight me, boy, we’re going to see.”

    Promoter Eddie Hearn quickly endorsed the matchup.

    “For me, when I look at the fights in the division, as a promoter, you want a fight with great build-up, you want a fight with jeopardy,” Hearn said. “The American fight is Deontay Wilder against Jarrell Miller. Run it in New York.”

    Miller, 37, has now strung together back-to-back wins for the first time since 2022, building on the form he showed in Saturday’s WBA eliminator main event. Asked about his trimmer appearance, he kept it light: “Every time I drop five pounds, I get to eat a cheesesteak.”

    His preferred next move, he said, is a slot on the Xander Zayas vs. Jaron Ennis card on June 27 in Brooklyn.

  • Crowd Storms Ring After Controversial Boxing Finish in Turkey

    Crowd Storms Ring After Controversial Boxing Finish in Turkey

    A boxing event in Trabzon, Turkey, ended in disorder after a light heavyweight bout between Russia’s Sergey Gorokhov and hometown fighter Emirhan Kalkan broke down into a mass brawl inside and around the ring. The incident occurred at a sports hall in the Beşirli district.

    Turkish outlet Haberler reported that tensions spilled over during the contest, forcing officials to step in. Cumhuriyet, citing footage from the scene, reported that dozens of people became involved and that chairs, punches and kicks were seen during the chaos before the match was abandoned.

    What Sparked the Brawl

    Reports in Turkish media place the flashpoint around the third round, though the exact trigger is being described differently depending on the source. Haberler said an argument between the sides continued instead of cooling off as the fighters moved toward their corners, after which trainers and officials became involved and the ring quickly turned into a melee.

    Cumhuriyet and other Turkish reports said the tension rose after what was described as a disrespectful act from the Russian side. Russian-language coverage quickly picked up the story, though most of it appears to rely on Turkish reporting rather than firsthand statements from sanctioning bodies or promoters.

    At the time of writing, there does not appear to be a widely circulated official English-language statement from the UBO, the local commission, or the fighters’ camps giving a full account of what happened. The core facts are clear: Gorokhov, Kalkan, team members and spectators were caught up in a violent brawl that forced the event to be abandoned.

  • Miller vs. Pero Preview: WBA Heavyweight Eliminator, Full Card, How to Watch

    Miller vs. Pero Preview: WBA Heavyweight Eliminator, Full Card, How to Watch

    Miller vs Pero

    Jarrell “Big Baby” Miller and Lenier Pero meet in a 12-round WBA heavyweight title eliminator on Saturday, April 25, 2026, at BleauLive Theater inside Fontainebleau Las Vegas, live worldwide on DAZN starting at 8 PM ET.

    The winner earns mandatory challenger status for the WBA world heavyweight title currently held by Oleksandr Usyk. Miller (27-1-2, 22 KOs) is trying to resurrect a career that stalled after a 2019 failed drug test cost him a shot at Anthony Joshua. Pero (13-0, 8 KOs), an unbeaten Cuban southpaw, is trying to turn a WBA #2 ranking into his first legitimate contender test. Here’s everything you need to know.

    Key Points

    • Main Event: Jarrell Miller (27-1-2, 22 KOs) vs. Lenier Pero (13-0, 8 KOs), 12 rounds, WBA heavyweight title eliminator
    • Co-Main: Alan Abel Chaves (21-0, 18 KOs) vs. Miguel Madueno, 10 rounds, lightweight
    • How to Watch: Live on DAZN worldwide, 8 PM ET main card start. Main event ringwalks approximately 10:45 PM ET / 11 PM ET

    What’s at Stake

    A WBA eliminator at heavyweight is genuinely meaningful in 2026. Usyk holds the Ring, IBF, and WBC belts alongside the WBA strap, and he’s set to defend against Rico Verhoeven on May 23 in Egypt. The mandatory queue behind Usyk is where a young contender can either step into a life-changing payday or watch a veteran reclaim relevance. Moses Itauma is the WBA’s current No. 1 contender, so whoever wins Saturday isn’t leapfrogging straight to the title, but they’re one fight away.

    Main Event: Miller vs. Pero

    Miller’s career is a story of wasted opportunity. The 37-year-old Brooklyn native built genuine momentum from 2017 to 2018 with stoppage wins over Gerald Washington, Mariusz Wach, Johann Duhaupas, Tomasz Adamek, and Bogdan Dinu. He was scheduled to fight Anthony Joshua in 2019 when he tested positive for multiple banned substances, killing the biggest opportunity of his career. The ensuing suspension erased his prime. He’s fought just six times in the six years since, including a 10th-round TKO loss to Daniel Dubois in December 2023, a majority draw with Andy Ruiz Jr. in August 2024, and a split decision win over Kingsley Ibeh at Madison Square Garden in January, memorably marred by his hairpiece coming loose mid-fight.

    Miller is currently WBA #9. His style is pressure and volume at close range, relying on his frame and hand speed for a man his size, though he’s routinely tipped the scales north of 300 pounds in recent outings. Ring rust and conditioning over 12 rounds are the live questions.

    Pero’s path is different. The 33-year-old southpaw competed for Cuba in the 2016 Olympics, reaching the super heavyweight quarterfinals before losing to eventual bronze medalist Filip Hrgovic. He sought asylum shortly after, was banned by Cuba for defecting, and didn’t turn pro until 2019. His first five pro fights were in Germany, Argentina, and Colombia before he settled in Florida.

    Pero is 6’4″ with a 79-inch reach and Cuban amateur technical foundations. He’s won his last two by decision over Jordan Thompson and Detrailous Webster, and critics have questioned whether he’s done enough to justify his WBA #2 ranking. This is his first genuine step-up against a ranked, experienced opponent. His last stoppage win of note was a 2023 halting of then-unbeaten Viktor Vykhryst in eight rounds.

    The odds reflect the uncertainty. Miller is around -160 at most books, with Pero at +120 to +130. Miller has the power advantage on paper. Pero has the craft, the conditioning, and the southpaw geometry.

    Co-Main: Chaves vs. Madueno

    Undefeated Argentinian knockout artist Alan Abel Chaves (21-0, 18 KOs) takes on Mexican veteran Miguel Madueno in a 10-round lightweight bout. Chaves has stopped his last four opponents, including a four-round TKO of Freddy Fonseca in July and a 57-second finish of Pablo Vicente in October. Matchroom signed him this spring and is fast-tracking him against genuine opposition. Madueno is the tough out Chaves needs to beat to justify the hype.

    Full Fight Card

    FightWeight Class / Stakes
    Jarrell Miller vs. Lenier PeroHeavyweight, 12 rounds, WBA title eliminator
    Alan Abel Chaves vs. Miguel MaduenoLightweight, 10 rounds
    Freudis Rojas vs. Damian SosaLight Middleweight
    Angel Barrientes vs. Isaac Rojas GarciaSuper Bantamweight

    How to Watch Miller vs. Pero

    • Date: Saturday, April 25, 2026
    • Venue: BleauLive Theater, Fontainebleau Las Vegas, Nevada
    • Main Card: 8:00 PM ET on DAZN
    • Main Event Ringwalks: Approximately 10:45 to 11:00 PM ET
    • UK Broadcast: DAZN, 1:00 AM BST (Sunday)
    • Price: Included with DAZN subscription

    Follow BoxingWire for results and post-fight analysis from Miller vs. Pero.

  • Ali Act Reform Hits Senate as Nick Khan, De La Hoya Face Off

    Ali Act Reform Hits Senate as Nick Khan, De La Hoya Face Off

    The U.S. Senate heard sharply divided testimony on Tuesday as lawmakers weighed whether to overhaul federal boxing law for the first time in over two decades. The hearing before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, chaired by Senator Ted Cruz, put TKO president Nick Khan and Golden Boy Promotions CEO Oscar De La Hoya on opposite sides of a debate that could reshape the sport’s power structure.

    At issue is the Muhammad Ali American Boxing Revival Act (H.R. 4624), which passed the House by voice vote in March and now faces its first Senate scrutiny. The bill would create a new legal category called a Unified Boxing Organization, allowing a single entity to handle promotion, rankings, titles, and sanctioning under one roof. It is the first piece of boxing legislation to clear the House in 26 years.

    Khan Makes TKO’s Case for Centralized Boxing

    Khan, testifying on behalf of TKO Group Holdings and its Zuffa Boxing venture, argued that boxing’s current structure is failing fighters and fans alike. He pointed to the WBC recognizing 163 champions across 18 weight classes as evidence of a fragmented, bloated system with inconsistent standards and insufficient support for both professional fighters and the amateur pipeline.

    Khan framed the UBO model as an opt-in alternative, not a replacement for the existing system. The bill, he stressed, does not alter or weaken the original Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act’s protections. It simply adds a second path for fighters and promoters who want a more centralized, league-style structure, similar to how other major professional sports operate.

    The TKO president pointed to Zuffa Boxing’s partnership with Paramount+, which reaches roughly 80 million subscribers worldwide with a CBS network tie-in, as proof of what a centralized model can deliver. When asked what he would say to a young boxer about how a UBO could benefit the next generation, Khan laid out the pitch directly.

    “If you want a chance to be something bigger over a shorter period of time on a platform, we were able to secure a deal with Paramount, as I said on a platform that has almost 80 million subscribers worldwide and has a network partner in CBS. If you want that exposure, if you want trading card deals, if you want merchandise deals, if you want video game deals, of which the fighters would all participate financially. If you want all of that, plus some more, come this way. If you don’t, that’s your choice,” Khan said.

    Video of Khan’s testimony was shared by Jedi Goodman on X.

    Khan also addressed what he sees as a broken grassroots pipeline, arguing that the professional side of the sport does not invest enough in developing the next generation of fighters.

    “The amateur system is something that the professionals do not support sufficiently. That’s the pipeline. We have to make it easy fighters, just like we have a performance institute for UFC. We have a performance center for WWE. If you want to try to do one of those things, come our way and check it out. You don’t have to sign anything with us. Same thing in boxing, grassroots system,” Khan said.

    The clip was again shared by Jedi Goodman on X.

    De La Hoya Fires Back, Cites UFC Lawsuits and Saudi Ties

    Oscar De La Hoya pushed back forcefully in his own testimony, warning senators that the UBO model risks concentrating too much power in a single promoter. The Golden Boy CEO has been vocal in his opposition for months, arguing that TKO needs the Ali Act changed specifically so it can operate in boxing the same way it does in the UFC, where a single organization controls matchmaking, rankings, contracts, and championships simultaneously.

    De La Hoya went further during the hearing, pointing to existing UFC lawsuits as evidence of what happens when a single entity consolidates that level of control over a combat sport. He also raised the involvement of Saudi Arabia’s funding in the Zuffa Boxing venture as a concern, questioning whether handing a foreign-backed entity the legal framework to serve as promoter, sanctioning body, and ranking authority all at once is in the best interest of American fighters.

    Video of De La Hoya’s testimony was shared by @boxingnbbq on X.

    Ali Walsh Tells Senate to Strip His Grandfather’s Name From the Bill

    Nico Ali Walsh, Muhammad Ali’s grandson and a professional boxer, delivered some of the hearing’s most pointed testimony. Ali Walsh told senators directly that if they pass the “Revival” Act, they should remove Muhammad Ali’s name from it, because the bill destroys the very protections his grandfather fought for.

    Walsh, who co-founded the Ali Act Preservation Alliance alongside De La Hoya, WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman, and retired MMA fighter Carlos Newton, argued that the original Ali Act is an anti-monopoly law and that the Revival Act would gut that purpose entirely. He framed the bill as serving corporate interests over fighters.

    “This new law is designed for billionaires, not boxers,” Walsh said.

    The alliance has called on the Senate to reject the Revival Act outright, characterizing it as anti-labor legislation that serves promoter interests at the expense of fighter protections. Timothy Shipman, president of the Association of Boxing Commissions and Combative Sports, also testified at the hearing.

    What the Bill Actually Changes

    Beyond the UBO framework, H.R. 4624 includes provisions that apply to all of professional boxing regardless of organizational structure. Those include a $200 per round minimum payment for all professional boxers, $50,000 in medical coverage per bout, $15,000 in accidental death coverage, certified ringside physicians, and anti-doping requirements. Supporters argue these universal protections strengthen the original Ali Act rather than weaken it.

    The original Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act, signed into law in 2000, was designed to protect fighters from exploitative practices by separating the business interests of promoters from the sanctioning bodies that control rankings and title shots. Critics of the Revival Act say the UBO model is a direct contradiction of that principle.

    What Comes Next

    The bill’s path forward now rests with Cruz’s committee. TKO’s broader ambitions are well documented. Zuffa Boxing, which is 40% owned by TKO with the remaining 60% held by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund through Sela, has been actively building out its roster and infrastructure while the legislative process plays out. Industry voices remain split on whether the centralized model represents boxing’s future or its undoing.

    Tuesday’s hearing made clear that the Senate fight will be at least as contentious as the House debate that preceded it.

    The full hearing, titled “Return to Your Corners: Have Federal Boxing Laws Gone the Distance or Slipped the Jab?”, is available via the Senate Commerce Committee. Additional coverage via Luke Thomas on Substack.

  • Details on Conor Benn’s 5-Fight Deal with Zuffa Boxing

    Details on Conor Benn’s 5-Fight Deal with Zuffa Boxing

    Conor Benn Re-Signs with Zuffa Boxing

    Conor Benn is staying with Zuffa Boxing. Dana White’s promotion announced Friday that Benn has signed a five-fight deal covering the next two and a half years, with the news breaking as both men sat down with Stephen A. Smith on ESPN’s First Take live from Las Vegas.

    The deal ends a week of speculation after Benn’s April 11 unanimous decision over Regis Prograis at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. That fight, the co-feature to Tyson Fury’s Netflix comeback against Arslanbek Makhmudov, was a one-off. Benn (25-1, 14 KOs) emerged from it a free agent with every major promoter circling.

    He picked Zuffa. And his reasoning on First Take pointed straight at the parent company’s track record.

    “You look at what they’ve done with UFC. Look what they’ve done with WWE. They plan on taking over and we all share the same vision,” Benn said. “It’s a different audience, a massive platform, and something I’m really excited about. It wasn’t an easy decision, but I’ve made the right decision and it feels right in my heart.”

    Team Approach and Long-Term Vision

    Benn, who split with long-time promoter Eddie Hearn and Matchroom Boxing earlier this year, framed the signing as a collective decision rather than a solo business move.

    “There’s no ‘I’ in team. I don’t do things on my own, I do things with my team. We all share the same vision; that’s a must,” Benn said. “We’ve got a long-term plan and no doubt we’ll execute it. My job is to stay in the gym, give 100% in training, and let the team allow me to fully focus on being the best fighter I can be and deliver entertainment to the public.”

    Five fights across 30 months works out to roughly one appearance every six months, a cadence consistent with Zuffa’s repeated emphasis on keeping its boxers active rather than letting them disappear between paydays.

    White’s Global Platform Pitch

    White made clear the selling point for Zuffa’s roster is distribution as much as money. TKO’s pending Warner Bros. merger is projected to add 200 million homes. The recently announced Sky deal expands European reach, and Zuffa is already airing in more than 90 countries less than six months into its boxing operation.

    “When you’re a professional fighter, obviously making as much money as you can during your short window of opportunity is important, but you want as many people around the world to see the things that you’ve done, too,” White said. “That’s just as important as the money.”

    Benn now joins a growing Zuffa Boxing roster that already includes Richardson Hitchins and Edgar Berlanga on multi-fight deals. He remains the WBC mandatory challenger at welterweight, with Ryan Garcia the clear target for his next outing.

  • Conor Benn Re-Signs With Zuffa Boxing

    Conor Benn Re-Signs With Zuffa Boxing

    Conor Benn Zuffa Boxing

    Conor Benn is back with Zuffa Boxing.

    Dana White’s boxing promotion announced Friday that the British welterweight has signed a new deal with the company. The announcement was accompanied by a video showing White and Benn shaking hands over a contract.

    “CONOR BENN IS BACK 🥊,” Zuffa Boxing wrote in a post on X. “It’s official! @ConorNigel has signed a NEW deal with Zuffa Boxing! Big things on the horizon‼️”

    Benn had been a free agent since April 11, when he defeated Regis Prograis via unanimous decision (98-92 on all three cards) on the undercard of Tyson Fury vs. Arslanbek Makhmudov at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London. That bout closed out Benn’s original one-fight agreement with Zuffa.

    Benn had signaled earlier this month that a continued partnership with Zuffa was the likely outcome once his initial contract expired.

    “After Saturday, I will be a completely free agent. Clearly, Zuffa is in the driving seat because of the way they’ve looked after me so well,” Benn told the PA News Agency before the Prograis fight.

    Benn originally split from Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom Boxing in February after a decade-long partnership, a move Hearn described as a “dagger in the heart”

    Terms of the new deal were not disclosed in Friday’s announcement.

  • Usyk Demands Billion Dollars from Fury for Heavyweight Trilogy

    Usyk Demands Billion Dollars from Fury for Heavyweight Trilogy

    Oleksandr Usyk has named his price for a third fight with Tyson Fury, and it isn’t cheap. The unified heavyweight champion told The Stomping Ground in London that “Greedy Belly” will need to back up his talk with a nine-zero payday.

    “Listen. Greedy belly. Give me billion dollars. You take trilogy,” Usyk said.

    The number is a direct shot at Fury’s own history of floating massive purse demands for big fights. Usyk delivered it with a smile, but the message landed: if Fury wants a third crack, he can fund it himself.

    Usyk Unbothered by the “Blown-Up Cruiserweight” Talk

    Fury’s camp has leaned on the “blown-up cruiserweight” line throughout both fight weeks. Usyk, now 24-0 with 15 knockouts and holding The Ring, WBC, WBA, and IBF titles, doesn’t appear to be losing sleep over it.

    “Maybe I don’t know. Listen, it’s now it’s my opponent, but I not feel bad. Okay. Listen, I happy,” Usyk said.

    The composure tracks with how he’s handled every round of Fury-camp shots, before, during, and after their two fights in Riyadh.

    Backing Anthony Joshua to Beat “Greedy Belly”

    The warmth Usyk showed toward Anthony Joshua, a man he’s also beaten twice, was the other headline. Joshua has been training alongside Usyk in camp, and the Ukrainian sees a future undisputed champion in him.

    “AJ, it’s a future undisputed champion. My Bratton, you know Bratton? Bro, your brother, your bro.”

    Asked directly who wins if Joshua and Fury finally share a ring, Usyk didn’t hedge.

    “I don’t know who wins the fight. AJ. Really? Yes, of course. AJ win.”

    The endorsement carries weight. Eddie Hearn has already confirmed a two-fight deal on the table for Joshua that includes a July warmup and Fury in November.

    On Fury vs. Makhmudov

    Fury returned from a 16-month layoff on April 11 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, taking a wide unanimous decision over Arslanbek Makhmudov on scores of 120-108, 120-108, and 119-109. Usyk watched the same fight most fans did, one where the finish never came.

    “Tyson win. It’s a good. Listen, it’s win. It’s not lost. But maybe a lot of people want to do Tyson knock him out. I’m too.”

    Fury used his post-fight mic time to call out Joshua for a Battle of Britain later this year. Joshua refused to step in the ring for the face-off and stared him down instead.

    Style Points

    The interview opened with Usyk getting a compliment on his outfit. The reply was pure Usyk.

    “Stone Island, it’s a style.”

    Usyk, 39, returns to the ring on May 23 in Egypt to defend his WBC title against Dutch kickboxer Rico Verhoeven at the Pyramids of Giza. Anything with Fury, if it ever materializes, waits until after that.