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Teofimo Lopez advises Shakur Stevenson to return to lower weight classes

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Image: Teofimo Lopez Advises Shakur Stevenson to Return to Lower Weight Classes

Teofimo Lopez says WBC lightweight champion Shakur Stevenson should drop down to 130 or 126, where he could become undisputed in those weight classes.

According to Teofimo, Shakur ate a lot between camps, which caused him to gain weight and reach a weight of 135, where he is no longer as good as he once was.

Stevenson has to kick himself now that he’s no longer at featherweight as his division is gaining momentum.

Shakur’s weight class history:

  • Lightweight: 2022 to present
  • Super Featherweight: 2020–2022
  • Featherweight: 2017–2020

Naoya Inoue could soon move up to 126 pounds, and it would be a big-money fight for Shakur if he continued to compete in that weight class.

Shakur lacks the punching power he had when he started his career at 126, and that won’t change if he stays at 135 or moves up to 140 to chase that bag.

Stevenson’s weight gain and performance decline

When Shakur was fighting at 126 pounds, he looked like pure gold, like a future can’t-miss star, but then he moved up and didn’t look the same at 130 or 135.

Lopez says Shakur (21-0, 10 KO) was in his best shape while fighting in the lighter, featherweight and super featherweight divisions.

If Shakur eats like Teofimo says, he won’t get back to 130 or 126 pounds and probably won’t last very long at 135. He already looks gentle in the midsection, which signals he’s eating well between fights.

“Shakur Stevenson, we will never lace up gloves. I do not care. Shakur Stevenson is a guy, if they want to call him ‘Sugar’, he has a lot of sugar,” said Teofimo Lopez Danza project about WBC lightweight champion Shakur Stevenson.

Teofimo isn’t the only one who isn’t interested in fighting Shakur. All the top names at 135 years aged want nothing to do with him and that won’t change. He is in a position where there is no possibility of a promotion in the lightweight division, which is likely to be constant.

In any job, if you are not liked enough for your boss to promote you, you must quit, stagnate, or be fired. Shakur, at 135, is not liked enough to take part in fights with Gervonta Davis and Vasily Lomachenko. William Zepeda, the only guy who wants to fight Shakur, is bad for him and the fight would be a nightmare.

Call to return to 130 or 126

“He’s actually in his best shape and he’s in his best shape at his lowest weight, but the kid eats a lot between camps and now weighs up to 135. My father was right about a lot of things about these kids. Haney and them,” Teofimo said.

Lopez is right about Shakur. When he wrestled at 126 pounds, he looked great, like a future Hall of Famer and a guy destined for greatness. However, going from 9 pounds to 135, Shakur is underweight for the division and forced to move more than when he fought at 126.

“You have to have pop and chin,” Teofimo said. “Shakur, you should go back to 130 or probably try to get to 126 because then you will become undisputed and people will really be talking about you.”

Super Featherweight Currently, the division is stagnant

130 is a dead division, so there’s no point in Shakur returning there. He should return to 126 where he can fight these assassins:

  • Bruce Carrington
  • Nick Ball
  • Rafael Espinoza
  • Naoya Inoue: *We will be promoted soon
  • Stephen Fulton
  • King Vargas
  • Robeisy Ramirez
  • Luis Lopez

– Really, you will be significant on this list. But do you know something? You appeal to investors. You try to facilitate yourself in the backfield and it’s not like that,” Teofimo said.

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Hearn Frigid v Canelo v Eubank Jr., pushes for Berlanga fight

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Image: Hearn Cool to Canelo vs. Eubank Jr., Pushes for Berlanga Fight

Matchroom promoter Eddie Hearn is sceptical about the idea of ​​Canelo Alvarez defending his undisputed super middleweight title against Chris Eubank Jr. in September.

Hearn’s Case for Berlanga

Hearn doesn’t like the fight for Canelo (61-2-2, 39 KOs) and wants him to fight WBA 168-pound mandatory Edgar Berlanga, whom he promotes. He believes a fight between Canelo and Berlanga (22-0, 17 KOs) would sell well in the U.S. because of the Mexico vs. Puerto Rico rivalry.

Hearn fails to see the problem that Berlanga has fought only lower-level opponents throughout his career and is unknown outside of the die-hard fan community.

Many die-hard fans believe Berlanga is just an advertisement with no real substance, and Hearn’s careful selection of fighters for the Recent Yorker has not helped since signing him.

If Canelo fought Berlanga, he would be criticized in the States all the time and it wouldn’t be worth fighting him because it would never end. Hearn isn’t aware of that because he lives in the UK, but that’s the chilly, brutal reality.

When Hearn signed Berlanga, he should have paired him with these fighters to boost his popularity in the US:

-David Morrell
-Caleb Plant
-David Benavides
-Christian Mbilli
-Diego Pacheco

Instead of putting Berlanga in the fight with those fighters, Hearn gave him two effortless fights against British fighters Padraig McCrory and Jason Quigley, which did nothing to improve his popularity in the U.S.

Wrong assessment

“I don’t think it would be in the UK. It would be in the US, but I don’t know,” Eddie Hearn told Charlie Parsons Youtube channel, reacting to reports of a potential Canelo Alvarez vs. Chris Eubank Jr. fight in September.

“No, not really,” Hearn said when asked if he thought Canelo vs. Eubank Jr. would be a “substantial” fight in the U.S. “Eubank got stopped by Liam Smith. He came back. For me, Conor Benn, welterweight, vs. Chris Eubank Jr. is a 50-50 fight.”

Canelo needs an opponent to toasty up to for his next fight in September to prepare for his fight with Terence Crawford in early 2025. While Hearn thinks Berlanga is a great idea, he fights nothing like Crawford and looks like a airy heavyweight after rehydrating for his 168 fights.

The fight with Berlanga would be preparation for the fight with David Benavidez, but even in this case he would be a feeble opponent because he is average.

“Chris Eubank Jr. against 168-pound Canelo Alvarez is not. So I think I understand that, but no. I prefer Edgar Berlanga. He is [WBA 168-lb] mandatory challenger. He’s a substantial, robust 168-pounder who can really pack a punch Mexico vs. Puerto Rico. It’s a substantial fight that puts in substantial numbers,” Hearn said.

Canelo-Berlanga wouldn’t do much in the US, as Berlanga is known on the East Coast in Recent York, and even there he’s popular in parts, not the entire state. That’s not enough to make a fight between them a huge deal.

“Only with a hat,” Hearn said when asked where he was with Edgar Berlanga. “You’ve got [Jermall] Charlo. You’ve got Berlanga. You’ve got Eubank, if I understand correctly, so we’ll see. No, not really. He’s been inactive and not competitive. What’s the point?” Hearn said when asked if Jermall would be a good fight for Canelo.

A better path for Berlanga

Hearn should match Berlanga with David Morrell to improve his popularity. If Berlanga gets wiped out by Morrell, Hearn should end his contract with the Recent Yorker, return to match him with the low-level fighters he paired him with, and wash his hands of his experiment.

“Ultimately he’ll make a decision and it’ll be a decision based on money and who he wants to fight. I think he would enjoy the fight with Edgar Berlanga because Edgar Berlanga would get in front of him, trade with him and make it stimulating. So yeah, that would be the right choice,” Hearn said of who Canelo should fight in September.

Whoever Canelo fights in September will be criticized, unless he faces someone tough like Morrell or airy heavyweight David Benavidez. If he fights Benavidez, someone will have to meet his $200 million asking price, and he will have to strictly limit his hydration to 10 pounds.

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O’Shaquie Foster’s talent was always there, says former opponent

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O’SHAQUIE Foster steps into the ring at the Prudential Center tomorrow night to defend his WBC super featherweight title against Robson Conceição. The fight with the former Olympic gold medalist will be the co-main event to Shakur Stevenson’s fight with Artem Harutyunyan.

While a fighter like Stevenson (actually a three-division world champion) might take these opportunities for granted, it’s taken a long time for a fighter like Foster to earn such a high profile and now be considered for immediate unification fights with contenders at 130 pounds.

“I just have to go in there and be myself. That’s the most critical thing. I’m fully hearty. So everyone will see a different player than the one they saw last time I went out,” the 30-year-old Texan said.

Foster is preparing for a stronger performance, clearly still disappointed with his performance in February when he defeated top contender Abraham Nova on points (below).

“I couldn’t do what I wanted to do in that fight with Abraham Nova. I couldn’t move my legs the way I wanted to. But there are no excuses. I’m going to go out and show the world that I’m a level above that guy,” he told “Ice Water” before discussing Conceição’s next opponent.

“I had a long amateur career, so I’ve seen his style a few times. We had great sparring partners who emulated him. I’ve always prided myself on my defense, so we’ll figure that out when we get in there.”

Though he’s always had talent, Foster has had to overcome personal demons and get his life in order both in and out of the ring. Before O’Shaquie hit the gigantic time, he fought hard-hitting Spaniard Jon Fernandez in Oklahoma in 2018. Foster won that night by a score of 98-92. Is Fernandez surprised by what his slayer has accomplished, or did he always see that kind of potential bubbling away before it surfaced?

“When I fought O’Shaquie Foster, he wasn’t as well-known as he is now. But as soon as the fight was over, I knew he was a very, very good operator and that he would fight for world honours and become world champion,” explained Fernandez, who will next fight Dalton Smith for the European title.

“And also O’Shaquie Foster himself told me after the fight that he had problems with the team before, so he had a fresh team and that he was making progress and would start improving his game. And that’s obvious what happened.”

As quickly as Foster has turned his career around, his opponent tomorrow night, Robson Conceição, simply can’t catch a professional break. World title defeats to star Stevenson, as well as a previous controversy with Oscar Valdez, have stung.

Robson, who refuses to give up and drew a boxing fight with Emanuel Navarreta in overdue 2023, believes all good things come to those who wait and O’Shaquie Foster, who had to stage a overdue fight to take the WBC world title from Eduardo Hernandez in 2023, will be out of luck this time.

“Things in my career haven’t necessarily been effortless. As an amateur, I had three opportunities to become a gold medalist. I see a similar path as a professional. And on Saturday, I’ll be ready,” Conceição said.

“I don’t see these challenges as pressure. I see them as motivation. So I’m motivated and I’m looking forward to this fight on Saturday. I’m going to be the fresh world champion. No pressure. Just motivation.”

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Ryan Garcia ‘expelled’ by WBC after racist comments against African Americans and Muslims

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Ryan Garcia has become too demanding for even one of his biggest supporters.

The now-suspended boxer is no longer allowed to compete in any WBC-sanctioned events, both boxing and non-boxing. WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman took a firm stance following Garcia’s recent online meltdown, which included racist and Islamophobic remarks directed at African-Americans and Muslims.

“Using my authority as president of the WBC, I hereby bar Ryan Garcia from any activity within our organization,” Sulaiman said Thursday via social media. “We reject any form of discrimination.

“I’m afraid of [Ryan’s] well-being, as he has repeatedly rejected our attempts to get lend a hand for his mental health and substance abuse issues.”

The reaction came hours after Garcia (24-1, 20 knockouts, 1 win) spent much of the July 4 holiday spewing hate.

“I hate n***as, I’m anti-black, I’m KKK,” Garcia insisted during a live performance at X Space. “Yo, let’s go bring George Floyd back to life and kill that n***a again.”

George Floyd was an African American man murdered by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in May 2020. The incident sparked riots that began locally and spread across the United States. Chauvin was sentenced to 22 1/2 years in prison for two counts of murder and one count of manslaughter.

The hosted space was where, as Garcia stated in X’s now-deleted post, “Fuck all the niggas and all the muslims.”

Garcia can no longer fight anywhere in the U.S. until next April.

The 25-year-old Victorville, California native tested positive for the banned substance Ostarine during his April 20 fight with Devin Haney (31-0, 15 KOs; 1 NC) in Brooklyn, Fresh York. Garcia earned a majority decision victory that night, although it was marred by the fact that he was significantly over the 140-pound weight limit. It was changed to a No-Contest following a decision in June.

Golden Boy Promotions, Garcia’s promoter, has yet to comment on the matter. The topic will undoubtedly come up during the events of William Zepeda and Giovanni Cabrera’s fight week. The weigh-ins will take place on the Friday before Saturday’s fight night on DAZN at the Toyota Arena in Ontario, California.

Ryan’s parents addressed the matter immediately following Sulaiman’s statement.

“Our son has recently made statements that are not true to his character or the beliefs of our family,” Henry and Lisa Garcia said in a joint statement released by WBC. “Our family unequivocally does not support any of his statements regarding race or religion—they do not reflect who Ryan is or how he was raised.

“Those who know Ryan can attest to this fact. Ryan has been open about his ongoing struggle with mental health over the years and as a family we are committed to ensuring and supporting him to receive the lend a hand he needs to navigate this very tough time and address both his immediate and long-term well-being. We appreciate your continued support, prayers and compassion.”

The request for lend a hand was met with a mix of sympathy and acceptance. Henry Garcia was criticized by Haney during a March 1 press conference after repeatedly calling Bill Haney, Devin’s father, trainer and manager, a “dumb son of a bitch.”

Henry Garcia also asked his son for lend a hand with alcohol abuse, recent interview with Fight Hub TV.

Ryan downplayed the gesture, claiming he had already stopped drinking.

Garcia can no longer fight anywhere in the U.S. until next April.

The 25-year-old Victorville, California native tested positive for the banned substance Ostarine during his April 20 fight with Devin Haney (31-0, 15 KOs; 1 ND) in Brooklyn, Fresh York. Garcia was declared the winner by a majority decision that night, although it meant he fell far brief of the 140-pound weight limit.

At this point, Garcia began exhibiting disturbing behavior, raising concerns about whether the DAZN Pay-Per-View event would go ahead.

Things got much worse after multiple positive drug test results were revealed, at which point Garcia sank even deeper. He has since fired his longtime aide, Guadalupe “Lupe” Valencia. Garcia called the high-profile attorney “Al Haymon’s puppet” during interview with FightHype.com.

In early June, a settlement was reached with the Fresh York State Athletic Commission after Garcia unsuccessfully argued that contamination was the cause of the Ostarine in his system. In fact, his efforts to prove it only raised more questions about whether the opened containers of supplements had been tampered with before being sent to the lab. Under the agreement, Garcia was suspended for a year from his April 20 fight, fined $10,000 and forced to forfeit his contracted purse of $1.1 million.

Follow @JakeNDaBox

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