Author: Mike Reichlin

  • Canelo vs. Crawford Nominated for  SBJ Event of the Year Award

    Canelo vs. Crawford Nominated for SBJ Event of the Year Award

    Canelo Crawford Netflix
    Netflix, Riyadh Season

    One of boxing’s biggest recent showdowns is getting its flowers from the broader sports business community.

    Sports Business Journal has nominated Canelo Álvarez vs. Terence Crawford for Sports Event of the Year at the 19th Annual Sports Business Awards.

    The bout competes in the category alongside the 2025 World Series, the NFL Draft at Titletown, NHL Stadium Series Tampa, and Fanatics Fest NYC — a testament to the fight’s crossover appeal and its status as one of the most commercially significant combat sports events of the past year.

    The winners will be determined by a panel of industry executives and revealed at a live event on May 20, 2026, at the New York Marriott Marquis Times Square.

    A nod in this category underscores boxing’s continued relevance on the national sports business stage.

  • Top Rank Nearing DAZN Deal Amid Matchroom Tensions

    Top Rank Nearing DAZN Deal Amid Matchroom Tensions

    Top Rank is closing in on a new broadcast home. Front Office Sports has confirmed that DAZN is finalizing a multiyear streaming deal with Bob Arum‘s promotion, with an official announcement expected later this week. The news was first reported by Ring Magazine, which has since deleted its original story.

    Update: Top Rank and DAZN’s new partnership is official

    DAZN declined to comment directly. “As company policy, we do not confirm, deny, or comment on market rumours or speculation regarding M&A, partnerships or rights deals,” a DAZN spokesperson told FOS.

    Per The Ring’s original reporting, the deal calls for eight to 10 events per year at license fees of $1 million to $1.25 million per card — a steep drop from the roughly $85 million annually ESPN paid Top Rank under their eight-year partnership, which ended in July 2025.

    DAZN Seeking More Content Amid Matchroom Frustrations

    The Top Rank pursuit isn’t just about adding fights. According to FOS sources, DAZN has grown frustrated with Eddie Hearn‘s Matchroom Boxing and is actively seeking to expand its events inventory as it plays defense against the rising threat of Zuffa Boxing.

    At the heart of the friction is a perception within DAZN that Hearn has been “double-dipping” — placing Matchroom fighters on outside cards while collecting nine figures annually from DAZN. Fighters including Anthony Joshua, Dmitry Bivol, Conor Benn, Jesse “Bam” Rodriguez, and Jai Opetaia have all competed on Riyadh Season and/or Ring cards. Katie Taylor fought Amanda Serrano twice on Netflix cards under Jake Paul’s MVP banner. Benn and Opetaia have since departed Matchroom for Zuffa.

    In a notable case, Hearn told Alalshikh’s Ring Magazine that a Callum Smith vs. David Morrell fight was expected in Saudi Arabia — only for it to later be announced as a Matchroom card in Liverpool on April 18. DAZN holds a 40% stake in Matchroom.

    A DAZN spokesperson pushed back on the friction narrative. “There’s absolutely no truth in the suggestion that DAZN is frustrated with Matchroom. We have just signed a new five-year deal with Matchroom, and we are very happy with our strong relationship and long-standing partnership.”

    The Broader War: DAZN vs. Zuffa

    The move for Top Rank comes as the boxing broadcast landscape grows increasingly combative. Zuffa Boxing — the joint venture between Saudi Arabia’s Sela and TKO Group Holdings, with leadership including Turki Alalshikh, WWE president Nick Khan, and UFC CEO Dana White — launched on Paramount+ in January and has been aggressively signing talent.

    Zuffa signed Opetaia away from Matchroom in January and made a move on Rodriguez before Matchroom exercised a matching clause. It then signed Benn on a one-fight deal reportedly worth $15 million that Hearn declined to match. The bidding war has spilled into public sniping: White said Hearn “works for his dad,” while Hearn fired back that White’s “dad for many years has been the Fertitta brothers, and now he’s got a new daddy called Turki Alalshikh.” Alalshikh himself weighed in on social media, writing to Hearn: “I am always here for you. And if you call me, unlike Conor Benn, I will answer the phone.”

    Adding Top Rank and its deep roster would give DAZN more leverage in that fight. Arum, 94, famously called DAZN a “Dead-Zone which nobody watches” back in 2022. By late 2024, he had softened considerably: “DAZN are doing a great job in boxing and the people who run DAZN are friends of ours.”

    Top Rank’s Roster Ready to Return

    Top Rank’s stable gives DAZN significant upside despite the modest license fees. Xander Zayas, Emanuel Navarrete, Keyshawn Davis, Bruce Carrington, Emiliano Vargas, and Abdullah Mason headline a roster that has been largely sidelined from consistent live streaming since ESPN’s exit. An official announcement from both sides is expected this week — BoxingWire will update this story when confirmed.

  • Jake Paul Teases Boxing Announcement for March 18

    Jake Paul Teases Boxing Announcement for March 18

    Jake Paul is back in the gym and wasting no time building hype. The YouTuber-turned-boxer posted a video on X showing himself shadowboxing and sparring, with “ANNOUNCEMENT MARCH 18TH” overlays splashed across the footage.

    The clip arrives just months after Paul suffered a jaw fracture in a December 2025 TKO loss to Anthony Joshua, a setback that sidelined him for much of the early part of 2026. The video emphasizes his physical condition and high-energy training, clearly designed to signal he’s healthy and ready to return.

    Paul described the upcoming announcement as “unexpected,” which has sent fans and media into speculation mode. Replies on the post quickly filled with guesses ranging from a Ryan Garcia fight to a rematch with Tommy Fury, though nothing has been confirmed.

    The announcement is set for Tuesday, March 18. BoxingWire will have full coverage once details are made official.

  • Overeem Backs Rico Verhoeven’s Boxing Debut vs. Usyk: ‘Your Legacy Is Cemented by These Fights’

    Overeem Backs Rico Verhoeven’s Boxing Debut vs. Usyk: ‘Your Legacy Is Cemented by These Fights’

    MMA legend and K-1 World Grand Prix champion Alistair Overeem has weighed in on one of combat sports’ most talked-about upcoming matchups: Rico Verhoeven’s boxing debut against unified heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk.

    Speaking with Bloody Elbow’s Kyle Dimond, Overeem was clear that his support isn’t contingent on Verhoeven winning.

    “I actually also love the matchup,” Overeem said. “Your legacy is cemented by these fights and you don’t even necessarily have to win, as long as you put on a great performance. So I can applaud him — and also Usyk, right, for accepting the fight. This excites me.”

    The Weight Advantage Factor

    Usyk vs. Verhoeven — “Glory in Giza” — is set for May 23 at the Pyramids of Giza and has been officially sanctioned by the WBC as a title defense. Overeem believes the size discrepancy between the two men is significant enough to keep the fight genuinely competitive.

    “You have a gentleman who wants to test himself. You have the absolute number one,” Overeem said. “Rico has the weight advantage — significant weight advantage, 15 kgs, maybe even 17, 18 kgs. Anything can happen.

    Rico is going to come up with a game plan because this is his chance. Are you that good or are you not that good? Hey, let’s go.”

    Why Rico’s Path Wasn’t MMA

    Overeem was asked to compare Verhoeven’s boxing crossover to what Alex Pereira accomplished in the cage, and he drew a clear distinction between the two scenarios.

    “What Pereira did [in MMA] is very special in the cage, but he never really faced that good a wrestler,” Overeem said. “Rico never really — that would have been tough for him, because it’s so wrestling-dominant. What Pereira did was very special, but I wouldn’t see Rico being able to do the same.”

    In other words, Verhoeven made the right call choosing the sport where his striking translates best.

    Boxing’s Bigger Picture

    Overeem’s enthusiasm for the fight sits against a backdrop he sees as a broader boxing renaissance. The rise of the Riyadh Season and Turki Alalshikh’s influence on heavyweight matchmaking — which directly produced the Usyk-Verhoeven spectacle — gets direct credit from Overeem.

    “Boxing came back. With Riyadh [Season], with Turki Alalshikh, also now Sauerland boxing going in that space,” he said. “Kickboxing [is] a little bit in decline — something needs to happen there. But boxing has been very interesting lately.”

    The fight is scheduled for May 23, 2026, at the Pyramids of Giza, live on DAZN.

  • Fatimah Mayweather Set to Make Boxing Debut on April 25

    Fatimah Mayweather Set to Make Boxing Debut on April 25

    The Mayweather family name is set to grow even larger in boxing. Fatimah “Trouble Time” Mayweather, daughter of Floyd Mayweather Sr. and sister of Floyd Mayweather Jr., will make her professional boxing debut on Saturday, April 25, 2026, at Harrah’s Philadelphia Casino & Racetrack in Chester, Pennsylvania.

    Fatimah Mayweather Boxing Debut

    Fatimah is slated to co-headline an XRumble Fighting Championships event promoted by Damon Feldman, facing MMA fighter “Vicious” Venus Marcial.

    The night’s main event features rapper Chrisean “Holy Hands” Rock taking on pro wrestler Zenith Zion, with the full card set to stream live via TrillerTV PPV and the XRumble Celebrity Boxing App.

    Adding a unique twist to the occasion, Fatimah’s debut lands on the same day her brother Floyd Mayweather Jr. is tentatively expected to return to the ring against Mike Tyson in Congo.

    The sibling scheduling rarity has already drawn comparisons to 2008 when all of the Alvarez brothers, including Canelo, appeared on the same card.

    In a recent interview with AllHipHop, Fatimah opened up about always living in her brother’s shadow and her lifelong desire to compete.

    “I’m always going to live behind that shadow, no matter what it is. So I’m trying to put my own name out there,” she said.

    She had previously been discouraged from boxing by her grandmother and father, who felt the sport wasn’t financially worthwhile for his daughter, but she ultimately decided to pursue it professionally.

    Doors open at 7 PM ET, with the fight-week press conference scheduled for Thursday, April 23 and weigh-ins on Friday, April 24.

  • Gervonta Davis in Advanced Talks for Isaac Cruz Rematch

    Gervonta Davis in Advanced Talks for Isaac Cruz Rematch

    Gervonta “Tank” Davis is in advanced talks for a summer 2026 rematch against Isaac Cruz at super lightweight (140 lbs), according to Ring Magazine’s Mike Coppinger. “I expect it to happen,” Coppinger reported this week, signaling genuine momentum behind the matchup.

    Davis, 31, has not fought since a controversial draw with Lamont Roach in March 2025 — a result many observers believed should have gone in Roach’s favor.

    The prolonged absence has mounted pressure on the Baltimore star to return, and a rematch with Cruz carries the kind of unfinished-business appeal that could drive significant interest.

    Cruz Provided One of Tank’s Toughest Tests

    Davis first defeated Cruz by unanimous decision in 2021, but the fight was one of the most difficult nights of Tank’s career, with the rugged Mexican brawler bringing relentless pressure throughout.

    A second fight at 140 pounds — rather than the weight of their first meeting — sets up a different tactical challenge and gives Cruz an opening to make a different argument on the scorecards.

    If the fight gets finalized, it would slot Davis into what promises to be an active summer on the boxing calendar.

  • Anthony Cacace Becomes Two-Time World Champion Over Dickens

    Anthony Cacace Becomes Two-Time World Champion Over Dickens

    Anthony Cacace became a two-time world champion Saturday night, outpointing Jazza Dickens by unanimous decision in Dublin to claim the WBA super featherweight title on St. Patrick’s Day weekend.

    Judges scored the competitive 12-round contest 116-112, 116-113, and 115-113 in Cacace’s favor. Dickens, the Liverpool southpaw, had periods of success and pressed the action throughout — but Cacace’s precision and output proved decisive on all three cards.

    Cacace “On Cloud Nine” After Second World Title

    Cacace described himself as “on cloud nine” following the victory, having now claimed world championships on two separate occasions. The result opens the door to several attractive matchups at 130 pounds, where the super featherweight division remains competitive across all four major sanctioning bodies.

    The Belfast boxer’s performance in Dublin — in front of a partisan crowd on one of the city’s biggest weekends — represents the peak of a career built on consistent progress and a willingness to take difficult fights.

  • Arnold Barboza Jr. Dominates Sims, Calls Out Garcia and Haney

    Arnold Barboza Jr. Dominates Sims, Calls Out Garcia and Haney

    Arnold Barboza Jr. (33-1, 11 KOs) delivered a commanding welterweight debut Saturday night in Anaheim, outboxing Kenneth Sims Jr. (22-4-1, 8 KOs) over 12 rounds by unanimous decision — with judges scoring it 120-108, 118-110, and 117-111 — while capturing the WBO Global welterweight belt in the process.

    Barboza controlled the fight throughout with a sharp jab, building visible damage on Sims and dictating the pace from open to close. An accidental head clash in round 11 opened a cut along Barboza’s hairline, but he closed the 12th confidently and left no doubt on the scorecards.

    Barboza Names Garcia, Haney, and Lopez as Targets

    Barboza made his ambitions immediately clear after the final bell. On a potential fight with Ryan Garcia, he said: “I think it’s the perfect fight for him. That fight was supposed to happen in February. We were negotiating that fight.” He also named Devin Haney as a target in the welterweight division.

    His most personal callout was reserved for Teofimo Lopez — the only blemish on Barboza’s record. “Of course I’d love to get my lick back. It’s my only loss,” he said. Barboza added that he would accept Alexis Rocha if a bigger fight doesn’t materialize, and addressed Keyshawn Davis directly, indicating he’d welcome the matchup if Davis moves to 147.

  • Ryan Garcia Calls Out Keyshawn Davis at Miami Party

    Ryan Garcia Calls Out Keyshawn Davis at Miami Party

    Ryan Garcia confronted Keyshawn Davis at a Miami afterparty Saturday night, stepping face-to-face with the undefeated contender and demanding he “face up” in an exchange that immediately went viral across boxing social media.

    No physical altercation occurred, but the confrontation served as a loud statement of intent. Garcia, the WBC welterweight champion, has been seeking marquee matchups amid ongoing promotional uncertainty.

    Davis, the 27-year-old former WBO lightweight champion, has been publicly targeting the sport’s biggest names since returning from nearly a year-long absence with a win over Jamaine Ortiz in January.

    Davis Eyeing a Move to Welterweight

    Davis, promoted by Top Rank, has made no secret of his desire to challenge either Garcia or Devin Haney at 147 pounds.

    The Miami confrontation gave that ambition a highly public exclamation point. Whether it becomes an actual bout depends on the two fighters’ competing promotional situations — Garcia’s remains unsettled — but the bad blood now has a face and a setting.

    Also complicating the picture: Arnold Barboza Jr., who made a dominant welterweight debut of his own Saturday night in Anaheim, addressed Davis in his post-fight interview and indicated he’d welcome the matchup if Davis makes the move up from lightweight.

    The welterweight division suddenly has no shortage of fighters calling each other out.

  • Riku Masuda Stops Nonito Donaire in 8th Round of WBA Eliminator

    Riku Masuda Stops Nonito Donaire in 8th Round of WBA Eliminator

    Riku Masuda (10-1, 9 KOs) stopped Nonito “The Filipino Flash” Donaire in the eighth round Saturday, with Donaire’s corner throwing in the towel to hand Masuda a decisive victory in their WBA bantamweight eliminator and a clear path toward a mandatory world title shot.

    The fight turned in the fifth round when an accidental head clash opened a cut over Donaire’s right eye, allowing Masuda to intensify his pressure on the veteran. The younger fighter dominated from that point forward, landing sustained punishment that convinced Donaire’s corner to end the contest midway through the eighth.

    Masuda Positions Himself for World Title Shot

    The stoppage win positions Masuda as the WBA bantamweight mandatory challenger. At 10-1 with nine stoppages, he has now made a significant statement against one of the most decorated bantamweights in boxing history.

    For Donaire, a four-time world champion who has shown extraordinary longevity in the sport, the stoppage loss raises difficult questions about the future of his career. The 43-year-old now faces a harder road back to another title shot following Saturday’s result.