This one has some everything: the glory of the city, bulky Hurek and two vast boys who do not mess. Fabio Wardley finally lands in the fight to return home, for which he fought from the day of the dot – and does not return home for CUPP. He draws Jarrell “Gigantic Baby” Miller to Ipswich for the right tear, with a momentary heavyweight belt WBA on the line.
Wardyk
Fabio is undefeated in 19, with 17 knockouts – not entirely shy from his hands. Last time he immediately flattened Clarke’s Frazer in one round, as if it was a buffer of a pub, rejecting their crazy fate Fight of the year. He has already cleaned the decent part of the national scene – Gorman, Adelye, you call it – collecting belts such as stickers along the way.
Now he is the best from WBA and smelled after a shot of the world title like a bacon dog. This night Portman Road? This is personal. His words:
“Not only I appear to wave the crowd. I’m here to go to war. And believe me, I will go deep if I have to – Blood, sweat, whatever. It’s all for me.”
Gigantic baby back – and still clamorous as always
Jarrell Miller may be 36 years elderly, but he still has a brick chin and a guy’s mouth who had ten red bulls before breakfast. He persecuted Lucas Browne last year, he was decent against Dubois until his legs went, and then almost threw his decision over Andy Ruiz – although the judges developed him and called a draw.
Spencer Brown, who supports Miller like dad in the Sunday league, believes:
“If I didn’t think he would beat Fabio, we wouldn’t get on the plane. Wardley is good, but he will find out what more than you can expose.”
Portman Road turns into a war zone
This is not just boxing. This is Ipswich’s answer to Glastonbury – but instead of guitars, it’s gloves and rubber. Frank Warren, who finally made this crazy idea happen, preferably:
“Fabio has sneaked about this fight with Portman Road since we signed it. He has what he wanted, but now he has to deliver – and Miller has the size of the fridge with his fists.”
Mark Ashton, president of Ipswich Town, also buzzed:
“We talked about it for four years. It is finally happening. Fabio is one of ours, and this is a night that will fall in the club’s history … if he wins.”
The scrap: June 7 – Dazn has it, the city is behind it
The program is called Running towards adversityWhich is a kind way to say “yes, it will be rugged.” Dazn will send a stream, live and exclusive, and they think it could be a breakthrough moment of Wardley. Michael Ridout from Dazn has noted nicely:
“Fabio was burning, Miller never closes – it’s the perfect TV.”
Tickets fall on seasonal ticket owners in Ipswich on April 7. General sale goes on April 9.
“My next fight will definitely be under a credible name, bigger than Jamaine Ortiz,” Keyshawn told Fight Hub TV.
Since stopping Jamaine Ortiz in the 12th round on January 31 at Madison Square Garden, Keyshawn has been openly calling for bigger fights. He has mentioned names from junior welterweights and welterweights in interviews and on social media, including Devin Haney, Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz, Richardson Hitchins, Lewis Crocker and Lamont Roach Jr.
These challenges followed a performance that Keyshawn pointed to as evidence that he was among the top contenders. He dropped and stopped Ortiz in a fight where several previous opponents had gone the distance against a hard-wearing opponent. Now Keyshawn says the next step will take him to a welterweight title shot.
“I think I’m on the rise,” Keyshawn said when asked about the importance of his next fight, confirming plans to compete at 147 pounds and indicating the fight will be for the world championship.
Keyshawn did not name his opponent, but hinted that the fight would be a step up from his last fight. He also said that discussions about this fight have already taken place and that his return could come sooner than many expect.
A move up to welterweight would place Keyshawn in one of boxing’s most competitive divisions, with several established fighters already competing for title opportunities and championship fights receiving constant attention.
One possible opponent at 147 pounds is IBF champion Lewis Crocker, who Keyshawn mentioned when discussing future fights. Keyshawn has previously said he would be willing to head to the UK to challenge Crocker if a title opportunity arises. No agreement has been announced, but a fight has emerged as one potential path if the fighter wins the welterweight title outright.
For now, Keyshawn says preparations for his return are already underway as talks continue for a world title fight.
Robert Segal is a boxing reporter at Boxing News 24 with over a decade of experience covering fight news, previews and analysis. Known for his first-hand reporting and in-ring perspective, he delivers authoritative coverage of champions, challengers and emerging talent from around the world.
Canelo Alvarez talked about how long he could stay in the sport before hanging up his gloves and opting for a decorated career.
The 35-year-old is already destined for a place in the Hall of Fame, as he became a four-division world champion, but he still wants to compete at the highest level.
Since his professional debut in 2005, the Mexican has made 68 appearances and has twice become the undisputed king of the 168-pound division, scoring notable victories over the likes of Callum Smith and Caleb Plant.
More controversial was their first meeting a year earlier, when many felt Golovkin had done enough to claim a convincing victory and the Kazakhstan ended in a draw.
Still, Canelo received plenty of credit for his follow-up triumph before dethroning Sergei Kovalev to capture the WBO featherlight heavyweight title over a year later.
Alvarez’s second undisputed super middleweight reign came to an end last September when Terence Crawford moved up two weight classes and won a unanimous decision.
But Canelo explained anyway Froch About the fight that he can still compete for another two years, maybe even longer, depending on how often his opportunities come along.
“I don’t know. I think maybe two years. I don’t need it, [but] I still enjoy it. If I [fight] maybe once a year [I can go on] a little bit [longer].
“Once a year to rest my body, I think I can fight more [than two years]”
Although an official announcement has not yet been made, Canelo is scheduled to fight in Riyad, Saudi Arabia this September, and Turki Alalshikh has promised to fight for the world title.
Boxing’s worst kept secret has now been confirmed – Naoya Inoue (32-0, 27 KO) and Junto Nakatani (32-0, 24 KO) will meet on May 2 at the Tokyo Dome for Inoue’s undisputed junior featherweight championship.
The all-Japan clash was formally announced at a press conference in Japan. The fight will be broadcast live on Lemino pay-per-view; US distribution rights have not yet been announced.
Inoue – ESPN’s No. 2 pound-for-pound boxer – is coming off an impressive 2025 in which he competed four times, defeating Kim Ye-Joon, Ramon Cardenas, Murodjon Akhmadaliev and David Picasso. Thanks to Inoue’s unanimous decision victory over Picasso in December, Nakatani defeated Sebastian Hernandez in the second fight of the night in a tougher-than-expected fight. Their victories set up a long-awaited clash between two of Japan’s best players.
Nakatani is ranked No. 6 pound-for-pound by ESPN and will look to become a four-division champion after winning world titles at bantamweight, junior bantamweight and flyweight. Although Nakatani narrowly won his junior featherweight debut in a grueling fight against Hernandez, Nakatani proved he was one of the best fighters in the world and had a powerful showing in 2025, winning 3-0.
The Undercard will feature Inoue’s younger brother Takuma defending his WBC bantamweight title against former four-division titleholder Kazuto Ioka.
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