Author: Mike Reichlin

  • De La Hoya Warns Ortiz Jr. Dispute Echoes Mikey Garcia, Andre Ward

    De La Hoya Warns Ortiz Jr. Dispute Echoes Mikey Garcia, Andre Ward

    Oscar De La Hoya is defending his contractual rights against Vergil Ortiz Jr. — and he’s placing the blame for the standoff squarely on Ortiz’s management team.

    De La Hoya, speaking on FightHype on March 12, 2026 — the same day he celebrated a legal victory in a separate case — said Ortiz has the talent and the time to rebuild his career under Golden Boy Promotions, but that bad advice is keeping him out of the ring.

    “Virgil Ortiz is 29, 30 years old. He has his own voice. He can choose whatever he wants to choose. So he doesn’t have to listen to his manager who’s giving him the wrong advice and his lawyer who’s just keeping him away from boxing. It’s crazy.”

    De La Hoya Standing Firm on His Contract

    With a judge already ruling in his favor on the contract’s validity, De La Hoya said he has no intention of walking away from his legal position — and framed it as a matter of principle, not just business.

    “I’m going to defend my rights because I have a contract that’s in place that the judge ruled on. Those are my rights as a fighter. You know what you’re signing.”

    He pushed back on any suggestion that Golden Boy’s terms are being forced on Ortiz, insisting his approach with fighters has always been one of full transparency.

    “Me as a fighter, I explain to the fighters everything that’s on the table. There’s nothing to hide.”

    ‘Are We Seeing Another Mikey Garcia Situation?’

    De La Hoya drew a historical parallel to fighters who stepped away from the sport in their prime due to promotional disputes, suggesting Ortiz is at risk of making the same mistake.

    “Are we seeing another Mikey Garcia situation? It’s pretty sad. Andre Ward, too.”

    Both Garcia and Ward were elite-level talents whose careers were complicated — and in Ward’s case effectively ended — by contractual and promotional disagreements.

    De La Hoya said Ortiz’s management appears to be steering him in a similar direction, keeping a prime fighter on the sidelines while the clock runs on his best years.

    “The fact that there’s a manager and a lawyer who’s giving you the wrong advice — maybe the fighter should stand up and say, ‘Oscar’s right. Let me continue my career and let me fight and let me continue making a lot of money.’”

    The Bigger Picture

    De La Hoya’s comments came as part of a broader conversation about fighter compensation and promoter-athlete dynamics across combat sports.

    He has positioned Golden Boy as a fighter-first operation, one that gives athletes a larger share of revenue compared to what he describes as an inverted financial structure in organizations like the UFC.

    Whether Ortiz ultimately returns to Golden Boy or the dispute escalates further remains to be seen, but De La Hoya made clear he isn’t blinking — and that the door remains open if Ortiz’s camp changes course.

  • Oscar De La Hoya: UFC Suppresses Fighters to Protect Its Brand

    Oscar De La Hoya: UFC Suppresses Fighters to Protect Its Brand

    Oscar De La Hoya says the UFC’s business model is built on keeping fighters small — and that Jon Jones requesting his release is proof the cracks are finally showing.

    Speaking on FightHype on March 12, 2026, De La Hoya weighed in on Jones seeking his UFC release after being lowballed for the White House card, offering a blunt take on the organization’s philosophy toward its own athletes.

    “Every fighter in the UFC is finally starting to realize,” De La Hoya said. “I’m glad he’s speaking up. I’m glad he’s in the right. Wish him all the best — he’s a great fighter. He’s their greatest fighter.”

    UFC Doesn’t Want Any Fighter Bigger Than the Brand

    De La Hoya argued the suppression isn’t accidental — it’s structural. The UFC, he said, has always prioritized the organization’s identity over any individual star, and that strategy is now backfiring.

    “They want to suppress other fighters. They don’t want any fighter to be bigger than the UFC. And that’s why the UFC is going tanking down.”

    He tied the UFC’s recent push into boxing directly to that instability, framing it as a financial lifeline rather than a strategic expansion.

    “That’s why they’re involved in boxing now — because they want to start a new entity to help their bottom line. That’s it.”

    Boxing Pays Fighters. The UFC Pays Executives.

    De La Hoya drew a sharp contrast between how the two sports distribute revenue. In boxing, he said, fighters capture the largest share of earnings. In the UFC, the pyramid is flipped.

    “Fighters are starting to understand that when you have such a global company and presence making tons and tons of money — not for the fighters, but for the bottom line and for the executives — there’s something wrong there,” he said.

    “In boxing, it’s structured the other way around. The fighters make all the money. In the UFC, it’s the other way around. And that’s wrong.”

    He pointed to the ongoing uproar over UFC fighter pay as evidence of a systemic failure. When Conor Benn’s reported $15 million payday became a flashpoint across the roster, De La Hoya saw it as revealing — not about McGregor, but about everyone else.

    “Good for him, he’s getting his paycheck. It’s a one-off. But what about the UFC fighters who’ve been fighting all their lives, putting their lives on the line and getting a fraction of what the event totals for the night? It’s just not fair.

    The fact that every single UFC fighter is complaining about $15 million goes to show you that no UFC fighter has made $15 million — and they deserve way much more than what the UFC overall is taking in.”

    Ronda Rousey, the Antitrust Suit, and the Legal Tide Turning

    De La Hoya also validated Ronda Rousey’s recent comments framing Dana White as merely an “employee” with limited structural power. “She’s totally right,” he said. “She made the clap back in a positive way.”

    On the ongoing antitrust lawsuit brought by UFC fighters, De La Hoya expressed confidence that the legal momentum is on the athletes’ side. “It’s a great thing for the fighters’ league that is suing the UFC. They won one time, they’re probably going to win again.”

    For De La Hoya, the broader point is that the reckoning has been a long time coming — and the UFC’s expansion into boxing is a sign of an organization scrambling, not thriving.

  • Mike Tyson Talks Ali Boxing Reform Act, Dana White, Donald Trump

    Mike Tyson Talks Ali Boxing Reform Act, Dana White, Donald Trump

    Mike Tyson has always been more than just a fighter — he’s a cultural figure with strong opinions on food, power, loyalty, and the business of boxing. In a revealing interview with Ring Magazine’s Manouk Akopyan, Tyson spoke candidly on topics ranging from ultra-processed food to President Trump, Dana White, and his personal philosophy on fighter pay.

    On Dana White: “I’m Pro Boxing”

    Tyson pushed back on perceptions that he’s a Dana White loyalist, framing his support for the UFC president’s move into boxing with Zuffa Boxing as purely sport-driven advocacy.

    “Everybody thinks that I’m pro Dana. I’m just pro boxing.”

    Tyson said he believes White should be in boxing, but made clear the endorsement isn’t personal — it’s about bringing more competitive infrastructure and money into the sport.

    Open Markets Over Regulation

    On the subject of the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act and fighter protections, Tyson took a free-market stance, describing the legislation as being in its early stages during his career and advocating instead for open competition to drive up fighter pay.

    “I want to have open markets. Whoever’s going to pay me the highest bid.”

    For Tyson, the answer to boxing’s systemic problems isn’t more regulation — it’s more competition, more clubs, more fights, and more legitimate money flowing to the fighters who earn it.

    One Word on Trump: “Loyalty”

    Asked what makes President Donald Trump a unique figure in his life, Tyson kept it short: “Loyalty. Loyalty.”

    The two go back decades. Tyson recalled the heyday of Trump’s Atlantic City casino era as a golden period for boxing — and for both men personally. “The whole world focused in on us every time we fought in Atlantic City at Trump’s casino.”

    He offered a stark contrast when asked about Atlantic City today: “I went there to do a show. I was nervous. I thought I was going to get shot.”

    On what boxing might look like if Trump had stayed more directly involved in the sport, Tyson was straightforward: “Boxing would be a lot better, and most boxers would perhaps have more money as well.”

    The Fight Against Ultra-Processed Food

    Tyson, who appeared in a Super Bowl advertisement promoting healthier eating choices and once weighed 350 pounds himself, didn’t exempt himself from criticism on this front.

    “I’m guilty of it too. We have to stop ultra-processed foods. It tastes so good because it’s so addicting — it’s a narcotic. Everything the FDA [approves] is narcotics.

    It’s normal for us to eat it, especially if you’re in a low-income neighborhood. Processed, ultra-processed food is a necessity to us. We’re so happy to have that because it tastes good — and that’s how they get us.”

    The remarks aligned Tyson with a broader national conversation about food policy and the health impacts of the modern American diet, particularly in underserved communities.

  • Zuffa Boxing Moved on Anthony Joshua, AJ Staying Loyal to Matchroom

    Zuffa Boxing Moved on Anthony Joshua, AJ Staying Loyal to Matchroom

    Dana White’s Zuffa Boxing allegedly approached Anthony Joshua about leaving Matchroom Boxing, but the former two-time unified heavyweight champion shut it down immediately — forwarding the message to promoter Eddie Hearn within seconds of receiving it.

    Hearn revealed the approach during an appearance on The Ariel Helwani Show, saying:

    “AJ had an approach about a couple of weeks ago. Do you know how quickly he sent me the message, the screenshot? Seconds. ‘Let me know what you want to reply.’”

    The move came shortly after Conor Benn made a high-profile defection from Matchroom to Zuffa Boxing in February, signing on to co-headline the April 11 Tyson Fury vs. Arslanbek Makhmudov card at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. The Benn signing was described as a painful blow for Hearn, who had financially backed Benn through a two-year doping suspension.

    White has made clear that Zuffa’s ambitions go well beyond Benn, telling reporters at a recent press conference that he’s “in the market to sign everyone” and predicting the promotion will look “impressive” by year’s end. Zuffa — co-owned by TKO Group (which also owns UFC and WWE) and Saudi entertainment company Sela — has 12 shows scheduled for 2026 with deals in place on both Paramount+ and Netflix.

    Despite the aggressive push, Joshua remains under a career-long promotional agreement with Matchroom signed in 2021. Hearn noted the two are firmly aligned: “We’re a team, mate. Until the wheels come off, we are a team. And I’ve got your back, always.”

  • Claressa Shields Defends Claim She Can Outbox Rolly Romero

    Claressa Shields Defends Claim She Can Outbox Rolly Romero

    Undisputed heavyweight champion Claressa Shields appeared on Nightcap with Shannon Sharpe and Chad “Ochocinco” Johnson to defend her viral claim that she could defeat WBA welterweight champion Rolando “Rolly” Romero in a sanctioned boxing match — and the conversation got heated fast.

    The Viral Claim That Started It All

    The controversy ignited after a clip from Shields’ appearance on the #RESPECTFULLY podcast with Justin Laboy went viral, in which Shields stated she could beat Romero based on her size advantage and superior boxing skills.

    “I didn’t say I’mma go in there and knock Rolly out. I didn’t say I can overpower him. I said I can outbox him,” Shields clarified.

    Shields also pointed to her physical edge, noting she walks around at 185 lbs while Romero competes at 140–147 lbs.

    Sharpe Pushes Back Hard

    Shannon Sharpe wasn’t buying it. The Hall of Fame tight end stood firm on the position that testosterone and raw physicality give male fighters an insurmountable advantage, regardless of skill level.

    Sharpe also called out Shields for what he viewed as a cheap shot online, setting a combative tone for the episode. He argued that skill cannot fully compensate for natural physical disparities between men and women in combat sports .

    Shields’ Case: Two Decades Sparring Men

    Shields leaned heavily on her experience training alongside men throughout her career. She detailed how she has sparred with men for two decades as part of her fight preparation, including for her bout against Franchon Crews-Dezurn, arguing that her technical proficiency and fight IQ translate across gender lines.

    “Boxing is not MMA,” she explained. “I get off on men and piece them up… because I’m a very serious boxer.”

    She also addressed the one time she was dropped in sparring, alleging her opponent used gloves with inadequate padding — a claim that added fuel to the ongoing debate.​

    Romero’s Response

    Rolly Romero himself chimed in, delivering a response that was equal parts diplomacy and shade.

    “I believe her. I believe she can beat me,” Romero said calmly, before adding that she’d knock him out, because he doesn’t hit women.

    Shields vs. Cyborg: Another Beef Surfaces

    The episode also surfaced a brewing conflict between Shields and MMA legend Cris Cyborg. Shields took aim at Cyborg for publicly challenging her to a boxing match while simultaneously using gym facilities that Shields herself had provided — a move Shields characterized as disrespectful and opportunistic.

    Ocho Steps Up

    In a lighter moment, Chad “Ochocinco” Johnson proposed a sparring session between himself and Shields — which Shields promptly accepted.

    The debate over Claressa Shields and male opponents goes back to 2019, when she name-dropped Keith Thurman, Shawn Porter, and Gennady Golovkin as fighters she felt she could beat.

  • Zuffa Boxing 04 Results: Opetaia Wins Cruiserweight Title

    Zuffa Boxing 04 Results: Opetaia Wins Cruiserweight Title

    Jai Opetaia dominated Brandon Glanton across 12 rounds to win the inaugural Zuffa Boxing Cruiserweight Championship by unanimous decision Sunday night at Zuffa Boxing 04 in Las Vegas. All three judges scored the fight 119-106 in favor of Opetaia, who also defended The Ring cruiserweight championship in the process.

    Quick Results

    • Jai Opetaia def. Brandon Glanton — Unanimous decision (119-106 x3) — Inaugural Zuffa Boxing Cruiserweight Title / The Ring Cruiserweight Championship
    • Ricardo Salas def. Jesus Saracho — TKO, Round 8 (2:05)
    • Vlad Panin def. Shinard Bunch — TKO, Round 9 (2:29)
    • Pablo Rubio Jr. def. Adan Palma — Unanimous decision (77-73, 77-73, 76-74)
    • Joshua Juarez def. Jardae Anderson — Unanimous decision (79-73, 78-74, 77-75)
    • Jaycob Ramos vs. Ethan Perez — Majority draw (57-55, 56-56, 56-56)
    • Brady Ochoa vs. Adrian Serrano — Majority draw (58-56, 57-57, 57-57)
    • Emiliano Alvarado def. Erick Rosado — Unanimous decision (59-54 x3)

    Cruiserweight Title: Jai Opetaia def. Brandon Glanton (c)

    The main event was one-sided from start to finish. Opetaia controlled the distance throughout, landing the cleaner and harder shots while Glanton struggled to mount any sustained offense. The identical 119-106 scorecards from all three judges reflected the lopsided nature of the bout.

    With the win, Opetaia becomes the first-ever Zuffa Boxing cruiserweight champion. He also retained The Ring Magazine cruiserweight title, cementing his status as the division’s top fighter heading into 2026.

    Salas and Panin Deliver Late Stoppages

    Ricardo Salas stopped Jesus Saracho in Round 8 at the 2:05 mark in one of the night’s more exciting undercard fights. Both men had moments, but Salas was able to close the show emphatically in the championship rounds.

    Vlad Panin added another stoppage to the card, finishing Shinard Bunch via TKO in Round 9 at 2:29. Like Salas, Panin was patient before landing the finishing sequence late in the fight.

    What’s Next

    Opetaia’s dominant title-winning performance figures to draw significant attention at cruiserweight. With the Zuffa Boxing belt now established and The Ring title in his possession, the Australian champion will be in line for high-profile matchups as the promotion continues to build its roster of champions.

  • Dana White Shockingly Credits Jake Paul’s Toughness Despite Brutal KO Loss To Anthony Joshua

    Dana White Shockingly Credits Jake Paul’s Toughness Despite Brutal KO Loss To Anthony Joshua

    Dana White recently offered a rare compliment to Jake Paul.

    White and Paul have spent the last few years trading shots in a very public feud. “The Problem Child” has repeatedly taken aim at the UFC CEO over fighter pay, while White has routinely brushed off Paul’s boxing run as little more than a spectacle built on crossover matchups.

    However, in a surprising turn, the UFC head honcho had words of praise for Paul. Speaking during a recent appearance on Piers Morgan Uncensored, White shared his thoughts on the YouTuber-turned-boxer’s bout against former heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua, which took place last December in Miami.

    White acknowledged Paul’s resilience and the success he has managed to carve out in combat sports through his boxing ventures.

    Once he got hit with that shot, and he went down, broke his jaw, ‘AJ’ didn’t knock him out… If I give Jake Paul any credit, I’ll give him that and that he’s built himself a business and he’s made a lot of money,” White said.

    After a largely calculated fight, Paul was ultimately stopped by Joshua in the sixth round. However, the power of “AJ’s” strikes proved too much for the 29-year-old Ohio native, and it was later revealed that he had suffered a double broken jaw in the bout.

    White’s recent comments marked a noticeable shift from his interview with Morgan in January, when he remarked that Paul was “lucky he isn’t eating out of a feeding tube” after the punishment he absorbed from Joshua.

    The bout proved to be a massive success, drawing an average of 33 million viewers worldwide and becoming one of the biggest boxing audiences for a live event on Netflix in 2025.

    The slow-motion clip of Joshua’s finishing blow alone racked up 214 million impressions across Netflix’s social media channels, making it the most-viewed clip from any live event streamed by the platform. The event also set a new record for the highest-grossing boxing gate in the history of the Kaseya Center.

  • Jake Paul’s MVP Announces MSG Press Conference, Zurdo Title Fight Expected

    Jake Paul’s MVP Announces MSG Press Conference, Zurdo Title Fight Expected

    Most Valuable Promotions (MVP) has announced a press conference at Madison Square Garden in New York City for Friday, March 6, 2026, at 11:00 AM EST, live-streamed on MVP’s YouTube channel. The cryptic tagline “Anything Is Possible…” accompanying the announcement has fueled widespread speculation about Jake Paul‘s next boxing move. Impact-Site-Verification: 4c466866-01c0-40c3-a8a7-3c68c5c40cbe

    The press conference comes as Paul works back from a jaw fracture suffered in his knockout loss to Anthony Joshua in December 2025, during which he also required a second surgery due to hardware complications. MVP CEO Nakisa Bidarian has confirmed Paul will return to the ring in 2026.

    Zurdo Ramirez Title Shot in Focus

    Speculation has centered on a potential cruiserweight world title shot against unified WBO/WBA champion Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez (48-1, 30 KOs). Paul entered the WBA cruiserweight rankings at No. 14 in January 2026 following his win over Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., making him eligible to challenge Ramirez. The two previously crossed paths at a post-fight press conference, with Paul calling Ramirez “easy work.”

    Ramirez last defended his unified belts against Yuniel Dorticos on June 28, 2025, via unanimous decision, and has been linked to a unification bout with IBF titleholder Jai Opetaia. However, a Paul matchup represents a significantly more lucrative opportunity given Paul’s massive social media footprint and pay-per-view drawing power.

    Fan speculation has also included dream-matchup names like Conor McGregor and Manny Pacquiao, though no credible reports link either to a Paul fight at this stage.

    Whatever is announced, Paul’s ability to generate viewership and disrupt boxing’s traditional promotional structure remains his biggest asset heading into a crucial comeback year.

  • Zuffa Boxing 04 Preview: Opetaia vs. Glanton, Card, How to Watch

    Zuffa Boxing 04 Preview: Opetaia vs. Glanton, Card, How to Watch

    Zuffa Boxing 04 goes down this Sunday, March 8, 2026, at the Meta APEX in Las Vegas, and the promotion is set to crown its first-ever world champion. Jai Opetaia puts his perfect record on the line against Brandon Glanton in the main event, with the main card streaming live on Paramount+ at 9 PM ET / 6 PM PT.

    Zuffa Boxing is just four events old, but Sunday represents a significant milestone: the crowning of the promotion’s first world championship. The event is presented by Riyadh Season and the Meta APEX, the same venue that has hosted some of the UFC’s most memorable Fight Night cards.

    With a stacked card headlined by one of boxing’s top pound-for-pound cruiserweights, Zuffa is making a clear statement about where it intends to position itself in the sport.

    How to Watch Zuffa Boxing: Z04

    • Date: Sunday, March 8, 2026
    • Venue: Meta APEX, Las Vegas, Nevada
    • Prelims: Paramount+ | 6 PM ET / 3 PM PT
    • Main Card: Paramount+ | 9 PM ET / 6 PM PT
    • Presented by: Riyadh Season & Meta APEX

    Full Fight Card

    Fight Division
    Jai Opetaia vs. Brandon Glanton Cruiserweight World Championship (12 Rounds)
    Ricardo Salas vs. Jesus Saracho Welterweight (10 Rounds)
    Adan Palma vs. Pablo Rubio Jr. Featherweight (8 Rounds)
    Vlad Panin vs. Shinard Bunch Welterweight (Prelim)
    Joshua Juarez vs. Jardae Anderson Heavyweight (Prelim)
    Jaycob Ramos vs. Ethan Perez Featherweight (Prelim)
    Brady Ochoa vs. Adrian Serrano Lightweight (Prelim)
    Emiliano Alvarado vs. Erick Rosado Featherweight (Prelim)
    Zuffa Boxing Z04 Poster

    Match Previews

    Cruiserweight World Championship: Jai Opetaia vs. Brandon Glanton

    Jai Opetaia is the real deal. The 30-year-old Australian southpaw enters at 29-0 with 23 knockouts, standing 6’3″ with a 76-inch reach. He holds the IBF and Ring Magazine cruiserweight titles and has stopped four straight opponents, including wins over David Nyika, Claudio Squeo, and Huseyin Cinkara throughout 2025. There is a legitimate argument to be made that Opetaia is the best cruiserweight on the planet right now.

    Glanton, known as “Bulletproof,” is no pushover. The 33-year-old Atlanta native carries an 85% knockout rate and a 21-3 record with 18 stoppages. He has been knocking on the door of a world title for years, and this is unquestionably the biggest stage of his career. Glanton’s power makes him dangerous to anyone in the division.

    The main storyline heading into Sunday is whether Opetaia’s IBF belt will also be at stake. Zuffa’s promotional materials list only the Zuffa Boxing Cruiserweight World Championship, and neither the promotion nor the IBF has officially confirmed the status of the IBF title as of fight week. Regardless, Opetaia enters as a heavy favorite and looks to make history as Zuffa Boxing’s first world champion.

    Zuffa Boxing Championship Belt

    Welterweight Co-Main: Ricardo Salas vs. Jesus Saracho

    An all-Mexican welterweight matchup rounds out the main card in a 10-round contest. Both Salas and Saracho carry championship aspirations and should make for an entertaining co-main event for the growing Zuffa platform.

    Featherweight Main Card Opener: Adan Palma vs. Pablo Rubio Jr.

    Mexico’s Adan Palma squares off against American Pablo Rubio Jr. in an 8-round featherweight bout to open main card action. This is the kind of competitive matchmaking at 126 lbs. that could produce a breakout performance for either fighter.

    Stay tuned to MMA News for live results, round-by-round coverage, and full post-event recaps from Zuffa Boxing 04 on Sunday night.

  • Mayweather Confirms Exhibition vs. Kickboxer Mike Zambidis in Athens

    Mayweather Confirms Exhibition vs. Kickboxer Mike Zambidis in Athens

    Floyd Mayweather Jr. has confirmed a third fight for his packed 2026 schedule — an exhibition bout against Greek kickboxing legend Mike Zambidis on June 27 at the Telekom Center in Athens, Greece.

    Mayweather announced the fight himself on Instagram, writing that “June is the month where history will be made at the Telekom Center. Different energy. Different level.”

    The Athens exhibition slots neatly between Mayweather’s two other confirmed bouts this year: an exhibition against Mike Tyson reportedly set for April in the Congo, and a professional rematch with Manny Pacquiao scheduled for September 19 at the Sphere in Las Vegas, streaming live on Netflix.

    Who Is Mike Zambidis?

    Battle of the Legends

    Zambidis, 45, is a Greek kickboxer nicknamed “Iron Mike” who is widely regarded as one of the greatest fighters in K-1 history. He holds 18 world titles with a career record of 157 wins (87 by knockout) and 24 losses, and competed multiple times in K-1 MAX tournaments, finishing third in both 2010 and 2012.

    His last professional fight was in 2015 in Athens, where he defeated Australia’s Steve Moxon by decision before retiring.

    Staying Sharp Ahead of Pacquiao

    The Zambidis matchup appears designed to keep Mayweather active and sharp ahead of his marquee professional return against Pacquiao, which marks his first sanctioned bout since the 2017 knockout of Conor McGregor that capped his perfect 50-0 record.

    Financial motivations are also likely at play. Mayweather has been consistently taking unconventional exhibition matchups post-retirement, with previous opponents including Logan Paul, Deji, and John Gotti III. The bout against Zambidis will be an exhibition and not a sanctioned professional contest.

    Mayweather’s 2026 is shaping up as one of the busiest stretches of his post-retirement career, with three fights booked across three continents in a six-month span.

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