Author: Mike Reichlin

  • WBC Sanctions Usyk vs. Verhoeven as Official Title Fight

    WBC Sanctions Usyk vs. Verhoeven as Official Title Fight

    The WBC Board of Governors has officially sanctioned Oleksandr Usyk’s upcoming bout against kickboxing legend Rico Verhoeven as a legitimate WBC Heavyweight Championship defense, reversing an earlier position that had cast doubt on the title’s status heading into the crossover clash.

    The fight, billed as “Glory in Giza,” is set for Saturday, May 23, at the Pyramids of Giza in Egypt — the first professional boxing event ever staged at the ancient landmark — and will stream live and exclusively on DAZN PPV.

    WBC Statement on sanctioning Usyk voluntary defense

    The WBC’s green light stems from a voluntary defense allowance granted to Usyk at the organization’s 63rd Annual Convention in Bangkok, Thailand. Following a petition submitted to the Board, the governors voted in favor of recognizing the bout as a sanctioned title defense. However, the ruling comes with a condition: Usyk must face mandatory challenger Emanuel Kabayel next, without exception, following the Verhoeven fight.

    ​Usyk vs. Verhoeven

    Usyk (24-0, 15 KOs) enters the fight having last competed in July 2025, when he knocked out Daniel Dubois in the fifth round to reclaim the undisputed heavyweight championship. The 39-year-old Ukrainian made history in 2024 by becoming the first undisputed heavyweight champion of boxing’s four-belt era after defeating Tyson Fury twice.

    Verhoeven, 36, brings one of combat sports’ most decorated resumes to the ring — just not in boxing. The Dutch striker held the GLORY Heavyweight Kickboxing title for a staggering 4,220 days, registering 13 consecutive title defenses and a 27-fight winning streak under the GLORY banner. His professional boxing record, however, stands at just 1-0 (1 KO), a second-round knockout of Janos Finfera back in 2014. He also holds a 1-0 MMA record from a 2015 TKO win.


    The contrast with Tyson Fury’s 2023 crossover fight against Francis Ngannou is notable, as Ariel Helwani pointed out on X. That bout was explicitly not contested for Fury’s WBC belt, as the WBC ruled Ngannou unrated and ineligible — granting Fury only “special permission” to take the fight. Usyk’s arrangement is structurally different: the voluntary defense designation negotiated in Bangkok provided a sanctioned pathway for the title to be on the line against a non-ranked opponent.

    “Glory in Giza” is the latest high-profile event orchestrated by Saudi sports authority figure Turki Alalshikh, who has rapidly become one of the most influential figures in global boxing.

  • Logan Paul Claims Floyd Mayweather Still Owes Him $1.5M

    Logan Paul Claims Floyd Mayweather Still Owes Him $1.5M

    Logan Paul’s long-running financial beef with onetime boxing opponent Floyd “Money” Mayweather now has a specific price tag attached.

    The WWE Superstar and influencer appeared on The Iced Coffee Hour podcast and alleges the un-retired boxing legend still owes him $1.5 million stemming from a pre-fight agreement that predates their 2021 exhibition.

    The $110 Million “Dubai Dream”

    Mayweather vs Logan Paul

    The dispute traces back to the original plans for their bout. Before the fight landed at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium, Mayweather Promotions signed a deal with PAC Entertainment Worldwide to host the event in Dubai.

    PAC had projected profits exceeding $100 million and guaranteed a $110 million payout. However, the deal collapsed in March 2021 when the company failed to deliver an initial $30 million installment. Mayweather subsequently moved the event to Fanmio Boxing and Showtime PPV, but Paul claims some money had already changed hands behind the scenes.

    Paul’s 15% Stake

    Paul says Mayweather received a $10 million pre-sale payment from the Middle Eastern backers before the deal fell apart. Paul asserts his contract entitled him to 15% of that sum – admittedly not the best split, but he felt 15% was better than 0%.

    “I’m owed exactly $1.5 million,” Paul stated during the podcast.

    Turns out, he got 0% anyways, and doesn’t expect to collect due to Mayweather’s mounting legal troubles.

    Mayweather’s Legal Defensive Line

    Mayweather’s upcoming fights with Mike Tyson (exhibition) and Manny Pacquiao will likely bring tens of millions into his coffers, the windfall is unlikely to trickle down to Paul. His The $1.5 million grievance is just one drop in a massive bucket of litigation currently surrounding Mayweather:

    • Showtime Lawsuit: In February 2026, Mayweather filed a massive $340 million suit against Showtime, claiming the network withheld earnings for years—including $20 million from his 2015 fight against Andre Berto.
    • PAC Counter-Claim: PAC Entertainment has filed a federal counter-claim, alleging it was actually Mayweather who breached their contract by abandoning the Dubai deal for a third party.

    From Combatant to Resigned

    Paul has spent years publicly bashing Mayweather, calling him a “weasel” in 2021 and threatening legal action via TMZ in 2022. Now, he’s resigned to the reality of the situation.

    After initially claiming he was owed between $2 million and $5 million, Paul now appears to have accepted the $1.5 million as a “write-off.”

    These comments add credence to the belief that the reason for Mayweather coming out of retirement is about more than just his love for the $weet science.

  • Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven Set for May 23 at Pyramids of Giza

    Oleksandr Usyk vs. Rico Verhoeven Set for May 23 at Pyramids of Giza

    In one of the most jaw-dropping crossover matchups in combat sports history, unified heavyweight boxing champion Oleksandr Usyk will defend his WBC Heavyweight title against kickboxing legend Rico Verhoeven on May 23, 2026, at the iconic Pyramids of Giza in Egypt in a bout officially dubbed “Glory in Giza.” The fight will be broadcast exclusively on DAZN.

    The Boxing Champion

    Usyk, 39, enters the bout with a flawless 24-0 (15 KOs) professional boxing record. The Ukrainian southpaw is a two-time undisputed heavyweight champion, currently holding the WBC, WBA, and IBF heavyweight titles, and is ranked No. 1 pound-for-pound in the world by The Ring magazine. His last outing was a dominant fifth-round KO of Daniel Dubois at Wembley Stadium in July 2025, cementing his status as the first two-time undisputed heavyweight king of the four-belt era.

    The Kickboxing King

    Verhoeven, 36, is widely regarded as one of the greatest heavyweight kickboxers of all time. The Dutch standout held the GLORY Heavyweight Championship for a staggering 4,220 days — over 11 years — making a record 13 consecutive title defenses. His kickboxing record stands at 66-10 (21 KOs), and this will be just his second professional boxing bout, having last boxed in 2014, when he won by second-round KO.

    Verhoeven spoke to his own motivation for the fight: “Usyk is the undisputed in boxing. That’s the kind of challenge that motivated me. Undisputed versus undisputed.”

    The Backdrop

    The bout marks the first world heavyweight title fight to be held in Egypt and will take place against the breathtaking backdrop of the ancient Pyramids of Giza. Usyk had been linked to a voluntary title defense against Deontay Wilder, but the American was instead paired with Derek Chisora, paving the way for this unprecedented crossover showdown.

    This fight is being closely watched across both the boxing and kickboxing worlds, as it pits two undefeated all-time greats in their respective disciplines on a global stage unlike any other.

    Usyk vs. Verhoeven — “Glory in Giza” | May 23, 2026 | Pyramids of Giza, Egypt | Live on DAZN

  • “Let’s Spar” – Ilia Topuria & Jake Paul Beef on Adin Ross Stream

    “Let’s Spar” – Ilia Topuria & Jake Paul Beef on Adin Ross Stream

    Ilia Topuria didn’t hold back when asked about Jake Paul on Adin Ross’ Kick stream Thursday, calling the YouTube-turned-boxer a “very bad boxer” who “sucks” — and Paul responded by calling into the stream live, igniting a chaotic 15-to-20-minute on-air confrontation.

    The two-division UFC champion, who holds featherweight and lightweight gold at 17-0, was a guest on the popular Kick stream when Ross asked him point-blank whether Paul is actually good at boxing. Topuria laughed and didn’t hold back.

    “As a boxer, you suck,” Topuria said flatly. While he acknowledged Paul’s hustle and the paydays he’s generated for the sport, he made clear that respect stops there.

    Topuria also took direct aim at Paul’s resume, singling out his 2021 win over Anderson Silva — who was 46 at the time — calling it a “disgrace” and labeling Paul a “joke” for counting it as a legitimate victory.

    Jake Paul Calls In Live

    Paul apparently caught wind of the comments in real time and called Adin Ross directly during the stream. What followed was an escalating back-and-forth packed with personal shots, challenges, and trash talk that kept the stream chat erupting.

    Paul defended his boxing record and pushed hard to establish his credentials. He challenged Topuria to spar:

    “Let’s spar. When I beat your ass in sparring, what are you gonna say?”

    Topuria didn’t flinch — and immediately went for the throat with a reference to Paul’s broken jaw, which required a second surgery just last week:

    “Whenever you get your jaw healed, let’s do it. Just get ready because you’ll need another period of time to recover your jaw.”

    Paul fired back by calling Topuria a “little guy” and declaring that “all MMA fighters are trash” when it comes to pure boxing. Topuria’s response quickly became the clip of the night:

    “Maybe I’m not the highest guy in the room but I’m gonna give you a combo that’s gonna put you at the height of my balls.”

    No Fight Confirmed, But the Heat Is Real

    No official spar or boxing match has been confirmed — this is combat sports trash talk operating at full volume. But the timing adds genuine edge. Paul is currently sidelined after suffering a broken jaw in two places during his sixth-round knockout loss to Anthony Joshua on December 19, 2025, and underwent a second jaw surgery on February 20 after hardware complications.

    Topuria, meanwhile, is expected back in the Octagon in the second quarter of 2026, with the UFC White House card on June 14 frequently mentioned as a target date. He was also discussing potential lightweight title defenses against Arman Tsarukyan during the stream before the Jake Paul segment took over entirely.

    Clips from the confrontation spread quickly across X and TikTok on Thursday, with lines like the “height of my balls” threat already generating heavy meme traffic. Whether it leads anywhere real remains to be seen, but Topuria just made sure everyone is talking about it.

  • Muhammad Ali Boxing Revival Act Advances to Full House Vote

    Muhammad Ali Boxing Revival Act Advances to Full House Vote

    The Muhammad Ali American Boxing Revival Act (H.R. 4624) has cleared its committee hurdles and is now on the Union Calendar as of February 25, 2026, setting the stage for a full vote on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives.

    The bill, first introduced in July 2025 by Rep. Brian Jack (R-GA), would update federal boxing law for the first time in 25 years by amending both the Professional Boxing Safety Act of 1996 and the original Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act of 2000. It passed the House Education and Workforce Committee by a 30-4 margin, reflecting strong bipartisan support.

    Central to the legislation is the creation of “Unified Boxing Organizations” (UBOs) — integrated entities that could handle promotion, rankings, titles, and sanctioning under one roof. Fighters would have the choice of operating within either the traditional sanctioning body system or the new UBO framework.

    What the Bill Would Do

    Ali Act

    If passed, the law would establish federal minimum standards across the sport, including a $200 per-round minimum purse, contracts capped at six years, mandatory anti-doping programs, and enhanced medical requirements for fighters over 40. UBOs would also be required to provide training facilities and injury insurance, while fighters would not be charged sanctioning fees.

    TKO Group — the parent company of both the UFC and WWE — lobbied in support of the measure. The California State Athletic Commission voted unanimously in favor of it last October, and Lonnie Ali, widow of Muhammad Ali, has also backed the bill publicly.

    Critics Remain Vocal

    Opposition has been steady since the bill’s introduction. The WBC, independent promoters, and fighter advocates have raised concerns that allowing a single entity to control promotion and sanctioning removes the conflict-of-interest firewalls that were a cornerstone of the original Ali Act. Critics argue the UBO structure could allow TKO to dominate boxing the way the UFC controls MMA, consolidating matchmaking power and limiting competition.

    The MMA Fighters Association previously circulated a petition urging athletes to oppose the bill, calling it an extension of the UFC’s monopoly model rather than a genuine fighter protection measure.

    With the bill now calendared for a House floor vote, the next step is determining when leadership schedules the measure for debate. If it clears the House, it would then move to the Senate before reaching the President’s desk.

  • Conor Benn vs. Regis Prograis Official for Fury-Makhmudov Netflix Card April 11

    Conor Benn vs. Regis Prograis Official for Fury-Makhmudov Netflix Card April 11

    Conor Benn vs. Regis Prograis has been officially confirmed as the co-main event of the Tyson Fury vs. Arslanbek Makhmudov card on April 11 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, streaming live on Netflix.

    Benn enters with a record of 24-1 (14 KOs). Prograis, a former two-time world champion at super-lightweight with titles from both the WBA and WBC, comes in at 30-3 (24 KOs). The fight marks a weight class jump for Prograis, who is moving up from 140 lbs to welterweight.

    Conor Benn vs. Regis Prograis Poster

    Benn’s Zuffa Boxing Debut

    The bout represents Benn’s first fight under the Zuffa Boxing banner — a one-fight deal reportedly worth $15 million. It comes just weeks after his high-profile split from Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom Boxing, a departure that drew criticism from multiple figures in the sport. Benn also returns to familiar territory, having fought twice at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in his bouts against Chris Eubank Jr.

    Despite the Zuffa branding, this card sits outside the promotion’s standard Paramount+ series. The event is a Saudi-backed, Netflix-distributed stadium show promoted under The Ring banner with Turki Alalshikh’s involvement. Zuffa is the promoter of record for Benn, but his deal is a one-off arrangement — similar to how the company has handled individual mega-fight deals rather than locking fighters into its regular rotation.

    About Prograis

    At 37 years old, Prograis is stepping up in weight following recent losses to Devin Haney and Jack Catterall. He did pick up a win over Joseph Diaz last August and is already in trash-talk mode ahead of the fight. Prograis has pointed out that the last time he fought in London, Benn was on his undercard — calling the rematch a “full-circle moment” and promising to “teach him a lesson.”

    Some critics have questioned whether a former super-lightweight stepping up in weight justifies the $15 million price tag attached to the co-main slot, but the matchup adds a compelling welterweight storyline to an already stacked card.

    The Main Event

    The card is headlined by Fury’s long-awaited comeback — his first fight since losing to Oleksandr Usyk in December 2024 — against unbeaten Russian knockout artist Arslanbek Makhmudov (21-2, 19 KOs). The event also marks Netflix’s first live boxing broadcast from the UK.

  • Max Kellerman Defends Zuffa Boxing, Fires Back at Eddie Hearn and Oscar De La Hoya

    Max Kellerman Defends Zuffa Boxing, Fires Back at Eddie Hearn and Oscar De La Hoya

    Max Kellerman used his Game Over podcast to fire back at boxing promoters Eddie Hearn and Oscar De La Hoya, delivering a lengthy defense of Zuffa Boxing and warning both men that their resistance to the new venture is a fight they have already lost.

    Kellerman, who serves as an analyst on Zuffa Boxing’s broadcast team alongside Joe Tessitore and Andre Ward, said Hearn and De La Hoya had been publicly criticizing Zuffa and targeting him by name — and he had heard enough.

    “They have been going at Zuffa and mentioning me by name,” Kellerman said on the podcast. “They have been going after Zuffa and talking wild about me.”

    The Conor Benn Signing Was the Breaking Point

    The rant was triggered in part by the recent signing of British welterweight Conor Benn to a reported one-fight, $15 million deal with Zuffa — a move that came shortly after Hearn had been publicly dismissive of the promotion. Kellerman made no effort to hide the irony.

    “One day after Eddie Hearn was talking wild, one of his big fighters, Conor Benn, signed with Zuffa,” Kellerman said. “And literally the next day after he’s talking all this stuff about Zuffa is nothing, the next day he’s literally choking back tears.”

    Hearn confirmed the sting of the loss in an interview with iFL TV, saying he was “pretty devastated” and that the move was “very surprising” and “very, very painful.” Kellerman had little sympathy.

    “You can’t talk wild on a Monday and be crying on a Tuesday,” he said. “Don’t talk a mess on a Monday and cry on a Tuesday when you take a loss.”

    A History Lesson on Boxing and Broadcast

    From there, Kellerman built what amounted to a sweeping historical argument for why Zuffa’s arrival is not just significant — but inevitable.

    His case: boxing has expanded alongside every major shift in media. The printing press brought boxing to newspapers. Radio filled its airwaves with fights. Television brought the sport to millions. Each time a new broadcast medium emerged, boxing rode it to wider audiences.

    Then came cable, and the dynamic flipped. Boxing became more niche, not less. Premium pay cable — most notably HBO — gave the sport a prestige platform but pushed it further from the mainstream. The business model shifted accordingly.

    “Who are the hardcore fans? Let’s milk them for everything they have,” Kellerman said, describing how boxing’s power brokers responded to their shrinking audience. “That’s the business model.”

    The result, he argued, was a sport that collapsed in on itself — an explosion of sanctioning bodies, invented weight divisions, and championship belts so numerous that nobody knows who the real champion is in any given division.

    “No one knows who the champion is,” Kellerman said. “Sometimes a so-called champion of a sanctioning body is really the eighth best fighter in the division.”

    The endgame of that spiral, he said, was boxing disappearing from U.S. broadcast television entirely — something he called unprecedented in the sport’s history.

    “For the first time ever, before Zuffa Boxing got on the air, boxing was completely off broadcast TV in the United States,” Kellerman said. “None of the big streamers, no one had boxing in the US. You can’t find boxing on TV for the first time ever. That’s how pushed to the margins it became.”

    Streaming Is the Next Wave — and Zuffa Is Riding It

    Kellerman’s argument culminated with streaming as the logical next step in the broadcast expansion cycle — and Zuffa, in his view, as the entity smart enough to recognize it.

    “That bill that you pay for streaming, for almost everyone nowadays, is like your electric bill or your water bill,” he said. “It’s a utility. Netflix has literally hundreds of millions of subscribers — you’re approaching half a billion subscribers.”

    With boxing now back on growing streaming platforms, Kellerman said Hearn and De La Hoya are protecting a status quo that was never good for the sport or its fans to begin with. And rather than adapt, they are lashing out.

    “Zuffa steps in and says this status quo that has been benefiting a few promoters and a few fighters, but really has marginalized boxing — that’s not working. Here’s the new game,” he said. “What they haven’t understood is the game is already over. They just don’t know it.”

    His advice to both men was blunt:

    “A rising tide lifts all boats. Don’t flail around and have your boat sink. Get with the program.”

    The Problem With Taking Kellerman at His Word

    It is worth noting that Kellerman himself acknowledged his stake in the outcome, introducing the topic on the same episode by saying Zuffa Boxing is a venture “which I’m a part of.” That caveat matters.

    Since joining Zuffa’s broadcast team, Kellerman has drawn sharp criticism from across boxing media — criticism that is difficult to dismiss, and that cuts directly at the credibility of the argument he is now making.

    Ariel Helwani, who has cited Kellerman as a career inspiration, was direct in his assessment after Zuffa’s debut broadcast. “Max Kellerman was the biggest truth-teller in boxing,” Helwani said. “He weeded through all the BS. He never showed any kind of bias toward any promoter.” The broadcaster Helwani saw on that debut, he said, felt like a different person — one “more concerned with pleasing the people who hired him than serving the audience that once trusted him.” Helwani described the performance as “over the top” and, in a word he did not walk back, “unlistenable.”

    Helwani specifically pointed to Kellerman’s habit of working references to TKO, Dana White, and Nick Khan into the broadcast — people, Helwani noted, that Kellerman has close personal relationships with. “There’s a way to hype it up without shilling and going over the top,” Helwani said.

    De La Hoya has been less measured. In a recent shot at both Kellerman and Zuffa, De La Hoya declared that “The Ring brand is officially dead with Zuffa tied to its ballsack, drowning at the bottom of Lake Erie, next to Max Kellerman’s career.”

    That kind of criticism has followed Kellerman throughout Zuffa’s early run. He has been widely accused of abandoning objectivity in favor of promotion, drawing particular scrutiny for comparing unproven Zuffa fighters to all-time greats during broadcasts.

    The tension is real. The historical argument Kellerman laid out on Game Over is, on its face, a coherent one — and not obviously wrong. But it is being made by a man on the payroll of the company he is defending, about competitors who are directly threatening that company’s business. Whether his argument carries the weight it once would have from the sport’s foremost truth-teller is a question only the audience can answer.

    A War of Words With No End in Sight

    Hearn, meanwhile, has not gone quietly. He recently dismissed Zuffa’s vision altogether, questioning what the promotion actually stands for beyond “control” — and mispronouncing the company’s name in the process.

    With Benn now signed, the promoter wars show no signs of cooling. Zuffa is building its roster and expanding its footprint. Hearn and De La Hoya are pushing back harder. And Kellerman is in the middle of all of it — no longer just a commentator, but a combatant.

    Whether the game is truly over for boxing’s old guard remains to be seen. But the fight is very much on.

  • Eddie Hearn Walks Back Anthony Joshua July Return Talk

    Eddie Hearn Walks Back Anthony Joshua July Return Talk

    Eddie Hearn is walking back the buzz around Anthony Joshua potentially returning to the ring in July, clarifying that his earlier comments were speculative and that nothing has been decided.

    Speaking to BoxingScene, Hearn explained that the chatter about a summer comeback stemmed from discussions about Joshua simply returning to the gym — not committing to a fight.

    “I think he’s thinking about going back to [training] camp. I don’t think he’s thinking about fighting,” Hearn said. “He’s just thinking about, at some point, returning to training camp because I think he likes doing that, and that’s going to give him the answers as to ‘if’ and ‘when’ [he fights again].”

    Hearn noted that Joshua could be heading back into camp within the next two to three weeks, which would then open the door for more concrete conversations about timing and opponents.

    “Only then can there be a conversation about what’s realistic time wise and opponent wise, and that’s why we said July-ish could be a potential return,” Hearn said. “No decisions made yet.”

    The promoter acknowledged the speculation had taken on a life of its own, but stressed that multiple outcomes remain on the table. Joshua could return in July, push a fight to the end of the year, or step away from the sport entirely.

    “He could also go back to training camp and determine he’s not ready yet, and fight at the end of the year, or decide his heart isn’t in it anymore,” Hearn said. “I think training camp is a good place for him, because it’s a place that he feels very happy and motivated, and hopefully physically, he’ll feel like he’s ready to return.”

    Joshua’s most recent ring appearance was a sixth-round knockout victory over Jake Paul on Netflix in December 2025 — a performance that had reignited talk of a serious comeback. But just 10 days after the fight, a fatal car accident in Nigeria cast a shadow over those plans, claiming the lives of two members of his inner circle — personal trainer Latif Ayodele and strength and conditioning coach Sina Ghami — and leaving Joshua to reflect on his future in the sport. Whether he laces up again remains an open question for now.

  • Joe George Jr. Released From Hospital With No Injuries

    Joe George Jr. Released From Hospital With No Injuries

    Joe George Jr. has been released from the hospital with no reported injuries, delivering welcome news following a frightening scene at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit on Sunday night (February 22).

    Promoter Dmitriy Salita confirmed the update Monday to Boxing Scene, saying George “was released last night with no reported injuries.” Salita added that his coach indicated George “gets real nervous before fights and this time did not eat all day” — pointing to extreme pre-fight anxiety and not eating as the likely explanation behind the collapse, rather than any fight-related injury.

    What Happened Sunday Night

    George (13-2) was fighting Atif Oberlton on the undercard of Claressa Shields vs. Franchon Crews-Dezurn 2 when the two fighters accidentally clashed heads late in the first round.

    After the round ended, George returned to his corner, sat on his stool, and was being hydrated by his team when he suddenly slumped over, fell off the stool, and stiffened onto the canvas.

    He remained motionless for several minutes before regaining consciousness. Medical personnel responded immediately, and the fight was halted.

    George eventually walked out of the ring under his own power before being placed on a stretcher and transported to a Detroit hospital for evaluation, including an MRI.

    Oberlton was declared the winner by TKO, improving to 15-0. He went to George in the ring immediately after the fight and expressed concern, even offering a rematch. “I’m just glad that you’re safe,” Oberlton said.

    Cleared and Discharged

    George underwent the necessary testing at the hospital, was cleared, and was discharged Monday morning, per ESPN. The 36-year-old Houston-based fighter had entered the bout off a TKO win over Robert Burwell in March 2025, following a two-year layoff.

    Outside of boxing, George runs Be Phenomenal Clothing and Be Phenomenal Movers, and is also pursuing a rap career.

  • Floyd Mayweather Opens as -225 Favorite vs. Manny Pacquiao on Netflix

    Floyd Mayweather Opens as -225 Favorite vs. Manny Pacquiao on Netflix

    With the Mayweather-Pacquiao rematch officially on the books, the oddsmakers have already weighed in.

    Per BetOnline, Floyd Mayweather Jr. has opened as a significant favorite at -225, with Manny Pacquiao coming in as a +171 underdog.

    The fight is scheduled for September 19 and will stream on Netflix. The numbers aren’t surprising given Mayweather’s dominant unanimous decision win in their 2015 original — but Pacquiao has been far more active recently, fighting to a draw against Mario Barrios last summer.

    Whether that ring rust works against Mayweather or Pacquiao’s age catches up to him remains to be seen, but bettors currently side heavily with “Money.”

    https://x.com/teddyatlasreal/status/2026052353254989834?s=46