Category: News

  • John Fury Says ‘Everything’ Is Gone From Tyson After Wilder Wars

    John Fury Says ‘Everything’ Is Gone From Tyson After Wilder Wars

    John Fury delivered a scathing assessment of his son Tyson’s physical and tactical decline in a wide-ranging interview on Playbook Boxing, arguing the three-fight series with Deontay Wilder permanently diminished the heavyweight champion ahead of his April 11 return.

    Asked point-blank what is missing from Tyson now — technically and tactically — John’s answer was a single word.

    “Everything. When you fight one of the hardest punchers in boxing history three times, it takes something out. You can never fill that tank up like you had it before.”

    The Wilder Wars Left Permanent Damage

    John traced the root of his son’s decline directly to the Wilder trilogy, particularly the toll of going to the absolute limit in brutal heavyweight warfare. He recalled a conversation with Tyson that stayed with him.

    “He said afterward, ‘Dad, I was prepared to die.’ And when he got that knockout on Wilder, he had nothing left after that. He laid it all on the line.”

    His assessment of the two Oleksandr Usyk fights was blunt.

    “I watched the Usyk fight last time — power weren’t there. The moves was there, but after six or seven rounds, it was fading quick. The old Tyson would have knocked them out in five rounds before he met Wilder, because he’d have the engine standing in the middle of the ring and keep going. There’s no two-phased attacks. There’s nothing. When there is a handle, it’s labored. The legs ain’t there.”

    ‘You Only Find Out When the First Bell Rings’

    The most troubling element, John argued, is that the true state of Tyson’s legs cannot be evaluated in a gym — only under fire.

    “People don’t understand — it’s not in the training. It’s when the first bell rings. He’ll only find that out when the first bell rings.”

    He had begged Tyson to walk away after the second Usyk loss, a plea he now makes publicly.

    “I said to him: you’re out 18 months. Forget it. You’re not what you were. Leave it. Begged and prayed of him. Leave it. Your power’s not up to scratch.”

    Usyk Getting Smarter, Tyson Getting Older

    John also pointed to the contrasting career management of Usyk as evidence the scales are tilting further against any potential trilogy. While Tyson chose a difficult fight in Arslanbek Makhmudov for his April comeback, Usyk has taken a calculated route against Rico Verhoeven.

    “Nothing’s going to change because Tyson’s getting weaker and Usyk’s getting stronger, because Usyk’s smarter. He’s having the easier route. Father time waits for no one. He’ll let Fury do all the donkey work and it’ll make it easier for the trilogy.”

    John’s verdict on the fight choice itself was equally damning:

    “What he should have done is box clever. Let two men kill each other. But what’s he done? He’s being a hero. Ego has took over his brain power.”

    The Mental Health Dimension

    John also offered rare context for what was happening behind the scenes during Tyson’s well-documented mental health struggles — revealing that he was quietly fighting his own crisis at the same time, and that neither knew the other was equally broken.

    “I went for a walk with Tyson. He was ill at this time. But little did he know I was iller than him. We were both messed up in the head walking on that road. He’s saying, ‘This ain’t right now.’ I’m thinking, ‘I’m not on my own here.’”

    Most strikingly, John revealed that just two weeks before the first Usyk fight, Tyson broke down mid-sparring and John called for the bout to be pulled entirely.

    “Two weeks before the Usyk fight — two rounds sparring. He’s laid down in the ring and he’s crying his eyes out. I said, ‘Stop. Right. Pull the fight.’ My head’s gone. Yours is gone. We need time to rebuild our minds.”

    That Tyson fought on — and pushed through — speaks to the same quality John cited from the Wilder years. But it also raises questions about the judgment calls being made around him, and whether the people in his corner are giving him the honest counsel a fighter needs heading into another dangerous heavyweight assignment.

    The physical decline is only part of John’s concern. In the same interview, he confirmed the father-son relationship is effectively over and explained why he will not be present at ringside on April 11. He also addressed the Jake Paul rematch situation and a big upcoming fight for Tommy Fury.

  • Usyk Training Alongside Former Rival Joshua Ahead of “Glory in Giza”

    Usyk Training Alongside Former Rival Joshua Ahead of “Glory in Giza”

    Oleksandr Usyk is deep in training camp for his May 23rd WBC Heavyweight Title defense, and he’s doing it alongside a familiar face — former two-time unified champion Anthony Joshua, the man he defeated twice.

    The two heavyweights, who waged a pair of memorable wars — first in September 2021 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and then in a rematch in August 2022 in Jeddah — are now sharing a gym as Usyk prepares for the biggest crossover event in recent boxing history.

    Joshua previously joined Team Usyk’s training base in Spain ahead of his December 2025 fight against Jake Paul, working closely with Usyk’s longtime coaches Yuri Tkachenko and Sergey Lapin, and that partnership has continued into Usyk’s current camp.

    A Historic Rivalry Turned Partnership

    The dynamic between Usyk and Joshua remains one of the most compelling storylines in modern heavyweight boxing. Usyk defeated Joshua by unanimous decision in their 2021 bout, stripping him of the IBF, WBA, and WBO titles, then retained those belts via split decision in their 2022 rematch.

    Now, rather than adversaries, the two are allies in camp — with Joshua drawing on the knowledge and environment of the team that beat him twice.

    Usyk, 39, last fought in July 2025, stopping Daniel Dubois in five rounds to reclaim the undisputed heavyweight crown, and enters “Glory in Giza” as a heavy favorite against the crossover challenger.


    Glory in Giza | May 23, 2026 | Pyramids of Giza, Egypt | Live & Exclusive on DAZN

  • Top Rank, DAZN Sign Landmark Multi-Year Streaming Deal

    Top Rank, DAZN Sign Landmark Multi-Year Streaming Deal

    Top Rank Boxing and DAZN have officially signed a landmark multi-year streaming partnership, the two companies announced Wednesday at an event in New York City, ending an eight-month stretch in which Top Rank operated without a major broadcast home.

    The deal will deliver between 8 and 10 live Top Rank fight cards annually to DAZN, with license fees ranging from $1 million to $1.25 million per event — putting the total package value at roughly $10 million per year. DAZN will serve as the exclusive global streaming home for events included in the agreement, with Top Rank also retaining the option to stage events on DAZN’s pay-per-view model.

    The arrangement is considerably smaller in scope than Top Rank’s previous deal with ESPN, which ran for eight years and reportedly paid in the neighborhood of $85 million annually for more than 30 events per year. That partnership concluded following Top Rank’s July 2025 card at The Theater at Madison Square Garden. Since then, promoter Bob Arum and company president Todd duBoef explored options including HBO Max before ultimately landing on DAZN.

    Top Rank’s roster includes Teofimo Lopez, Janibek Alimkhanuly, Keyshawn Davis, Abdullah Mason, Bruce Carrington, and Richard Torrez Jr., among others. First events under the new deal are expected to begin as early as May or June 2026.

    For DAZN, the addition of Top Rank further cements its position as a global boxing hub. The streamer already holds long-term deals with Matchroom Boxing — recently extended through 2031 — as well as Golden Boy Promotions and Queensberry Promotions.

    Top Rank’s arrival gives DAZN a significant inventory boost as it competes with new entrants including Zuffa Boxing, backed by UFC parent TKO and airing on Paramount+, and Netflix, which has increasingly staged high-profile one-off boxing events.

    The partnership carries a notable footnote: Arum once publicly dismissed DAZN as the “Dead Zone” back in 2022. The 94-year-old Hall of Fame promoter, who founded Top Rank in 1966, ultimately played a patient long game — and landed on the platform he once mocked.

  • Report: Munguia vs. Resendiz Set for Benavidez-Zurdo Undercard

    Report: Munguia vs. Resendiz Set for Benavidez-Zurdo Undercard

    The undercard of David Benavidez vs. Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez on May 2 may look different than initially reported. Veteran boxing journalist Dan Rafael said Tuesday that Jaime Munguia will face WBA super middleweight champion Jose Armando Resendiz (16-2, 11 KOs) on the undercard of the Cinco de Mayo weekend PPV — per a source directly involved — and that the deal wrapped up on Tuesday.

    The report directly contradicts an earlier ESPN story from the same day, which cited sources confirming that Jermall Charlo (34-0, 23 KOs) had been signed to challenge Resendiz on the card.

    The confusion reflects how fluid the situation around Resendiz’s first title defense has been. Munguia was originally the frontrunner for the fight, but BoxingScene reported last month that those talks collapsed after Munguia reportedly priced himself out. Charlo then emerged as the replacement option, with both fighters operating under the Premier Boxing Champions banner.

    If Rafael’s report holds, Munguia has since come back to the table and gotten a deal done — leapfrogging Charlo for the title shot at the eleventh hour.

    A Crowded Cinco de Mayo Card

    The main event features undefeated two-division world champion David Benavidez (31-0, 25 KOs) moving up to challenge unified WBA and WBO cruiserweight champion Zurdo Ramirez (48-1, 30 KOs) at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, live on Prime Video.

    Oscar Duarte has also been confirmed on the undercard. The Resendiz title fight — whoever ends up in it — is expected to serve as the co-main event.

    As of Tuesday evening, neither PBC nor either fighter’s camp had issued an official announcement. This story will be updated as the situation is confirmed.

  • MVPW-02 Full Card Revealed: Baumgardner vs. Shin Headlines MSG

    MVPW-02 Full Card Revealed: Baumgardner vs. Shin Headlines MSG

    Most Valuable Promotions has revealed the complete fight card for MVPW02, the inaugural U.S. event under Jake Paul and Nakisa Bidarian’s new all-women’s boxing platform. The card goes down Friday, April 17 at the Infosys Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City, live on ESPN and the ESPN App.

    MVPW02 Full Fight Card

    Main Card

    • Alycia Baumgardner (c) vs. Bo Mi Re Shin – Unified WBA/WBO/IBF Super Featherweight Titles
    • Shadasia Green (c) vs. Lani Daniels – Unified Super Middleweight Titles
    • Tamm Thibeault vs. Nadja Jesus
    • Krystal Rosado vs. Fernanda Reyes

    Undercard

    • Jahmal Harvey vs. Leandro Medina
    • Elon De Jesus vs. Connor Adaway
    • Wanna Walton vs. Dionne Ruvalcaba
    • Nat Dove vs. Maria Micheo
    • Raquel Miller vs. Adriana Araújo
    • Alex Vargas vs. Ryan O’Rourke

    MVPW02 Preview

    Headlining is unified super featherweight champion Alycia “The Bomb” Baumgardner (17-1, 7 KOs) putting her WBA, WBO, and IBF titles on the line against South Korea’s Bo Mi Re Shin (19-3-3, 10 KOs) in a 10-round contest fought under men’s standard three-minute rounds.

    Shin comes in fresh off a narrow majority decision loss to WBC lightweight champion Caroline Dubois in March 2025, making her one of the more dangerous challengers in the junior lightweight division.

    “New York sets the tone for boxing’s biggest nights,” Baumgardner said. “I’m here to dominate and continue building something that lasts beyond belts. ESPN is where greatness is documented, and I’m ready to perform at that level.”

    In the co-main event, unified super middleweight champion Shadasia “The Sweet Terminator” Green (16-1, 11 KOs) makes a title defense against former light heavyweight champion Lani Daniels (11-4-2, 1 KO) in a 10-round bout at 168 lbs.

    MVPW02 serves as the U.S. linear debut for the newly launched MVPW platform, which secured a multi-year broadcast deal with ESPN through 2028. The event also marks the first boxing on ESPN since the network’s long-running partnership with Top Rank expired in July 2025. MVP has additionally locked in a three-year relationship with Madison Square Garden Entertainment to stage annual MVPW events at the iconic venue.

    Tickets are on sale now via Ticketmaster and here at Boxing Wire Tickets.

  • Roy Jones Jr: One Boxer Can Defeat Shakur Stevenson

    Roy Jones Jr: One Boxer Can Defeat Shakur Stevenson

    Roy Jones Jr. believes that there is one boxer who possesses the necessary skills to defeat Shakur Stevenson. Stevenson holds an undefeated record of 25-0 with 11 KOs. He is the current WBO and The Ring junior welterweight champion. ‘Sugar’ dethroned Teofimo Lopez for the WBO super-lightweight title in January,

    He picked up a unanimous decision victory over Lopez. Stevenson has progressed through multiple weight divisions, including featherweight, super featherweight, and lightweight.

    Roy Jones Jr.’s Analysis

    In an interview with FightHype, Roy Jones Jr. explained that, should Gervonta Davis drag Stevenson into a war, he has what it takes to hand him his first defeat.

    “Yep, [I agree that Davis is the only man that can beat Stevenson]. For Tank [Davis] to win it, he would need it to be Hagler-Hearns but for Shakur to win it, it would need to be [Salvador] Sanchez vs. [Wilfredo] Gomez.”

    Davis is yet to win a fight since June 2024 and he was also recently stripped of his WBA lightweight world title. 

    Jones Jr.’s opinion carries significant weight in the boxing world, given his legendary status as a former multi-division world champion.

    Possible Davis vs Stevenson?

    A dangerous puncher like Gervonta Davis could pose a serious threat if he turns the bout into a firefight but Stevenson’s composure and defensive mastery remain his biggest strengths.

    Ultimately, the outcome would likely depend on whether Stevenson can dictate the pace and keep the fight on his terms. If he does, there’s every reason to believe he can continue his dominant run and protect his undefeated record.

  • Jarrell Miller vs Lenier Pero: Heavyweights Clash in Las Vegas on April 25

    Jarrell Miller vs Lenier Pero: Heavyweights Clash in Las Vegas on April 25

    Jarrell Miller and Lenier Pero are set to face off on April 25th in Las Vegas. The bout will headline a Matchroom Boxing event at Fontainebleau.

    Miller (27-1-2, 22 KOs) returns to the ring after a points win over Kingsley Ibeh in January. Pero (13-0, 8 KOs), an undefeated Cuban fighter ranked No. 2 by the WBA, looks to continue his ascent in the heavyweight division.

    Pero is coming off a UD 10th victory over Jordan Thompson on November 1, 2025, in Orlando, Florida, where he won the WBA Continental Latin America heavyweight title.

    Miller aims to re-establish himself in the heavyweight ranks after a controversial past. Eddie Hearn alluded to a change of heart regarding working with Miller again.

    Pero’s Opportunity

    Pero seeks a signature win against a well-known opponent. His previous notable victory came in 2023 when he stopped then-unbeaten Viktor Vykhryst in eight rounds.

    It has been reported that light heavyweight Ben Whittaker was rumored to be on the undercard, though it seems more likely he will instead appear in Liverpool, England, on April 18th when Matchroom’s Callum Smith takes on David Morrell.

  • Oscar De La Hoya Wants Ryan Garcia To Face World Champion Next

    Oscar De La Hoya Wants Ryan Garcia To Face World Champion Next

    Ryan Garcia is being targeted for a fight against a world champion by Oscar De La Hoya after Garcia’s recent victory over Mario Barrios. Garcia defeated Barrios by unanimous decision on February 20th, 2026, in Las Vegas to win the WBC welterweight title.

    De La Hoya’s ambitious plans aim to solidify Garcia’s position in boxing. Garcia is the current WBC welterweight champion and is ranked #6 in the WBA welterweight rankings as of December 2025. No mandatory challenger is currently in place for Garcia’s WBC title, giving him flexibility for his first title defense.

    De La Hoya’s Vision

    De La Hoya’s statement emphasizes his determination to secure a high-profile fight for Garcia. Speaking to DAZN, he said:

    “I actually like the rematch with Devin Haney. There’s a lot of talk, a lot of chatter right now. I think Devin Haney actually does deserve the rematch, just because he’s been talking a lot and his last performance was a really good performance.

    “What Ryan did in his last fight with Barrios, obviously a world champion, [it means] he’s back, better than ever mentally, physically. I’d love to see that rematch, Haney vs Ryan Garcia.”

    De La Hoya then urged Haney not to take a bout with WBA champion Rolly Romero and instead face Garcia.

    “Ryan Garcia-Devin Haney makes all the sense in the world, do not take a tune up, let’s make this fight happen.”

    Potential opponents discussed include Shakur Stevenson, Devin Haney, and Conor Benn. Josh Kelly has also called out Garcia for a super welterweight title fight.

    Garcia previously lost a unanimous decision to Rolando Romero for the WBA welterweight title last year. Immediately after defeating Barrios, Garcia had also called out Shakur Stevenson.

  • Eddie Hearn Denies Anthony Joshua vs. Tyson Fury Is Agreed

    Eddie Hearn Denies Anthony Joshua vs. Tyson Fury Is Agreed

    Eddie Hearn has pushed back hard on reports that Anthony Joshua has agreed to fight Tyson Fury, calling the claim “completely untrue” and confirming no deal is in place for the long-awaited all-British heavyweight showdown.

    The denial came after talkSPORT’s Gareth A Davies reported over the weekend that the fight is “agreed” and set to stream on Netflix — a claim that also clashed with Joshua’s existing broadcast partnership with DAZN.

    “Completely untrue. There is absolutely nothing signed with Anthony Joshua to fight Tyson Fury next. There is nothing agreed,” Hearn told The Stomping Ground. “There have been conversations — deep conversations prior to the accident — but since then, there have been no real conversations about that fight.”

    Car Crash Derailed 2026 Plans

    The original roadmap had Joshua returning in March before facing Fury later in the year. Those plans collapsed after Joshua was involved in a fatal car crash in Lagos, Nigeria, on December 29, which claimed the lives of two of his close friends and teammates, Sina Ghami and Latif “Latz” Ayodele.

    Hearn confirmed to Boxing Scene that the revised plan has Joshua targeting a comeback in July or late summer, though he cautioned that a return date depends on when “AJ” gets back into training camp.

    “Physically he’s not yet in a position to return to camp,” Hearn said. “We’ll only know if July is a real possibility when he returns to camp, which will hopefully be in the next couple of weeks or a month.”

    The promoter has also walked back the certainty around a Fury fight happening at all. Speaking to Yahoo Sport, Hearn admitted there are “no guarantees” Joshua fights again, and acknowledged he doesn’t know whether Joshua vs. Fury will “ever happen right now” — a marked shift from the confident timeline he was projecting before the accident.

    Fury Fights April 11, Joshua Door Still Open

    Fury, meanwhile, returns on April 11 at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium against hard-hitting contender Arslanbek Makhmudov (21-2, 19 KOs), live on Netflix. The fight marks Fury’s first bout on British soil in nearly four years and his comeback from a self-declared retirement.

    Hearn stopped short of closing the door on Joshua-Fury entirely.

    “We’re open to the Fury fight,” he said, “but probably more likely end of the year — maybe early 2027.”

    He also noted that Saudi Arabia’s Turki Alalshikh remains the key figure in brokering any deal, saying Joshua’s side has accepted a framework but that the Fury negotiations are out of their hands.

    “It’s Turki Alalshikh’s responsibility to talk to Tyson Fury and try to make the deal,” Hearn said. “Is the fight made? No. Because I don’t know where he’s at with Tyson Fury.”

  • 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.