Boxing
Boxing results: Jaron Ennis’s power for Stanionis in the union of clashes in Boardwalk Hall
Published
11 months agoon
IBF World Seriter Weighing, Jaron “Boots” Ennis stopped the Olympian in 2016, WBA WBA WELD WELTER WWWEGHT EIMANTAS STANIONIS after six rounds, adding a Ring magazine strap on Saturday evening in the fight of uniform in Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, Modern Jersey.
Ennis, 34-0 (30) knocked by Stanionis, 15-1 (9), in the sixth round. The fight was stopped after Eimantas returned to his corner.
In the first round, Ennis controlled Stanionis, which landed his first blow, the left hook. Ennis turned Southpaw in the last half minute, easily winning the round. In the middle of the second round they had their first exchange. Ennis, mainly in Southpaw, took the next round. Ennis went to the body in the last minute of the third round, wounding Stanionis.
Stanionis had abrasion under the right eye in the fourth round, losing the next round. In the middle of the fifth round, Stanionis landed a pair of left on the chin, opening Ennis, causing a stanionis bleeding.
In the last minute of the sixth round, Ennis landed four left mountains, dropping Stanionis on 8-hlagunks from judge David Fields. Between the rounds, Stanionis’s corner stopped the fight.
Former Master WBA WBA Feather weight Southpaw Raymond “Savage” Ford, 17-1-1 (8), defeated the former WBC Master Continental Americas Super Feather, the weight of Thomas “Gunna Man” Mattice, 22-4-1 (17), 10-Rund of a unanimous decision.
In the first minute of the first round Ford had wounded Mattice in a corner with a tow truck. In the last seconds Ford hurt Mattice again. Ford controlled Mattice from the land from the second to sixth round.
In the seventh round, Mattice had some swelling around her left eye, although he held his hands high with a diminutive picture. Ford still won every round and the fans were restless. In the eighth round, Ford landed two and three combinations.
In the ninth round, Mattice began to throw a few blows back withdrawing Ford, who won the next round. In the tenth and final round Ford continued to cut off.
Evaluates all 100-90. Earl Brown was a judge.
WBC Continental Americas Super Bantamweight, Arturo Cardenas, 16-0-1 (9) stopped tardy Sub Southpaw Edgar Cortes, 9-8-1 (1), at 1:30 round of 8 and final.
In the second round, Cardenas began quickly, chasing Cortes, who moved well on the ring, landing most. Cardenas got one good shot in the body.
In seventh place, Cardenas landed on a chin on a beard by a minute to the round, dropping Cortes on the 8th-Hrabia from judge Charlie Fitch. In the eighth and final round halfway from Cardenas, Cortes dropped, who was detained by judge Fitch after the east.
Silver Olympic medalist 2016 Shakhram “Wonder Boy” Giyasov, 17-0 (10) knocked out Franco “Cazador” Maximilliano Ocampo, 17-3 (8) at 1:57 fourth round of 10 rounds planned.
In the first round, at the last minute, the combination of Giyasova dropped Ocampa on 8-fasting from judge David Francii. In the fourth round from the right from Giyasov to Body, he dropped Ocamp from Count from Francii judge.
Super waddles 2024 bronze medalist Omari “Banger” Jones, 2-0 (2) defeated Willam “Action” Jackson, 13-6-2 (5), at 1:47 of the first round of the planned six rounds.
In the middle of the first round, Jones landed in a basic way on the body, dropping Jackson to the count from judge David Franciii.
Super Featheweight Southpaw Zaquin Moses, 3-0 (2) won the second round of Nokaut Alex Pallete, 1-4 (1) at 2:13 planned Fourour rounds.
In the second round, from a minute, Southpaw Moses had an advantage on the chin of the palette, and in the down he went to the 8th-hill from judge David Franciii. He got up, and Moses jumped on him before the judge called.
The featherlight Francisco “Sisco Kid” Rodriguez, 7-0 (7), stopped Naheem “The Dream” Parker, 5-2 (2), at the end of the third round of the planned six rounds.
In the first three rounds, Rodriguez defeated Parker, leading him to the ropes in the third round with a little return from Parker. In the corner of Parker they called to stop.
Charlie Fitch was a judge.
WADZKA HEALS TAHMIR “The Don” Smalls, 14-0 (10) destroyed Nikki Bascome, 13-2 (2) at 1:13 of the first round of planned eight rounds.
In the middle of the first round, the enlargement of diminutive blows fell in the seat of his trunks, where he took the count from judge Charlie Fitch.
The skiper was David Damante.
Last updated 04/13/2025
You may like
Boxing
IBF rules that force Jai Opetaia to lose his cruiserweight title again
Published
3 minutes agoon
March 8, 2026
The IBF rules, which will cost Jai Opetaia the cruiserweight title, are one of the clearest rules in boxing and have now impacted the Australian for the second time without him being defeated in the ring.
World Boxing News has already reported that the IBF has withdrawn sanctions for Opetaia’s defense against Brandon Glanton after it became clear that Zuffa’s World Cruiserweight title would still be a fight on March 8.
WBN also examined how Opetai’s quest for undisputed status left him without a belt.
After the sanctions were lifted, the fight became an unsanctioned fight under IBF rules. This is where Rule 5.H comes in.
“If a champion enters an unsanctioned fight within the designated weight limit, the title will be declared vacant regardless of whether the champion wins or loses the fight.”
Explanation of IBF Rule 5.H
The IBF defines an unsanctioned fight as a fight for which it has not been formally approved or which has later been withdrawn.
This distinction matters here because the Opetai fight was initially sanctioned before the IBF changed its stance.
After this consent was withdrawn, the fight automatically entered the unsanctioned category.
There were already signs of a turnaround earlier in fight week when no IBF belt appeared during the Opetaia-Glanton press events, with the Zuffa Championship taking center stage instead.
From this point on, the recipe leaves little room for interpretation. If the champion continues to fight at the division limit, the title will be considered vacant regardless of the outcome.
It doesn’t matter whether the champion wins, loses or draws. The belt may not remain attached to a fighter after participating in an unsanctioned championship fight.
This rule is intended to prevent champions from competing for rival world titles outside of the federation’s own sanctioning system.
Why sanctioning authorities enforce it
Rules like 5.H exist to protect the title structure. If a champion was free to challenge for external championships while also holding the IBF belt, the organization’s rankings, credentials and paths to title success would quickly become irrelevant.
The IBF made this philosophy clear in its statement, emphasizing that the rules are intended to provide structure and clarity not only to the champion, but also to challengers waiting for their chance.
Therefore, the federation returned to the customary four-lane route to undisputed status. According to the IBF, the recognized path remains to unify the IBF, WBA, WBC and WBO titles, rather than allowing separate championships to exist alongside them.
Opetaia and parallel 2023
This isn’t the first time IBF rules have stripped Opetaia of his belt.
This is the second time an undefeated cruiserweight has lost his title as a result of rule enforcement and politics rather than defeat.
The Australian gave up the same belt in 2023, opting for a lucrative fight in Saudi Arabia against Ellis Zorro rather than face mandatory challenger Mairis Briedis first.
At this stage, the IBF has already granted one exemption and refused to allow another. Opetaia moved forward anyway, taking advantage of Saudi Arabia’s opportunity, and the title was lost before he even stepped into the ring.
The current situation is based on a different clause but leads to the same result. Back then it was a mandatory defense rule. Now this is the rule of unsanctioned competitions.
Either way, Opetaia twice saw his IBF championship stripped away by strict application of the rules rather than by another cruiserweight defeating him.
The result is the same. Opetaia may still be viewed by many as the best cruiserweight in the world, but rules have twice prevented him from carrying the IBF belt forward.
If a fight with Glanton takes place under current conditions, the title will automatically be vacant.
For a fighter striving for full unification, it’s another reminder that in the cruiserweight division, Opetai’s biggest obstacles weren’t always on the opposite side.
About the author
Phil Jay is the editor-in-chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a boxing veteran with over 15 years of experience. Read the full biography.
Boxing
Dana White: ‘No problems’ with Hearn after business deal with Aspinall
Published
2 hours agoon
March 8, 2026
Dana White “has no problems with it.” Tom Aspinall signing a business deal with Eddie Hearn and denying he ever questioned his champion’s eye injury.
UFC heavyweight champion Aspinall (15-3) has signed with Matchroom Talent Agency, a modern initiative run by boxing promoter Hearn.
Aspinall remains under contract to fight in the UFC, but can now count on professional advice from Hearn, who has emerged as a rival to White’s Zuffa Boxing.
Zuffa signed Conor Benn, who had spent his entire professional boxing career at Matchroom, leaving Hearn disappointed.
White reacted to Aspinall welcoming Hearn into his inner circle, saying at the UFC 326 press conference: “We have no issues with Eddie.
“They can hire whoever they want to represent them. Tito Ortiz [the ex-UFC fighter whom White feuded with] he represented the people and we managed to do that.”
Dana White denies questioning Tom Aspinall’s injury
Aspinall spent 14 months away from fighting in the hope of meeting Jon Jones, which never materialized.
His interim heavyweight title was elevated to full status outside the Octagon when Jones retired, but his return to fight Ciril Gane ended in disaster.
The fight was declared a no-contest when Aspinall was unable to continue due to accidental pokes to the eyes.
White has not spoken to Aspinall since he underwent surgery on both eyes last month, but he denied ever questioning the severity of his injuries.
“The company has talked to him. I haven’t talked to him. Tom and I clearly need to talk,” White told Piers Morgan Uncensored. “Tom recently came out, his dad did too. They felt like I was their s–t when I talked about his eye injury, which absolutely wasn’t the case.
“Tom Aspinall is a guy I respect. He’s great to work with. I never once questioned his injury or talked negatively about him. I said, ‘I think he’s OK, I think he’ll be fine.’ And they came out and said, “No, it’s not like that.” He said, “I haven’t talked to Dan, I don’t know why he said that.” But of course my medical team is talking to him. That’s what I thought.
“They thought I kicked him in some way, which I absolutely didn’t and wouldn’t do. I like him a lot and I respect him a lot. I’ve never had a problem with Tom Aspinall. I have. He’s still struggling with what’s going on with his eyes. In the last 30 years in this business, I’ve seen injuries where I doubted guys could come back. And I always have. Including the eye pokes.”
“If you ask me, ‘Do I think Tom Aspinall will fight again?’ I would say, “Yes.”
Aspinall has no timetable for his return. He has previously expressed interest in a rematch with Gane.
Boxing
Keyshawn Davis says his next fight at 147 pounds could be a title shot
Published
4 hours agoon
March 7, 2026
“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.
IBF rules that force Jai Opetaia to lose his cruiserweight title again
Dana White: ‘No problems’ with Hearn after business deal with Aspinall
Leigh Wood vs. Josh Warrington 2 • FULL WEIGH IN & FINAL FACE OFF | DAZN Boxing
Trending
-
Opinions & Features1 year agoPacquiao vs marquez competition: History of violence
-
MMA1 year agoDmitry Menshikov statement in the February fight
-
Results1 year agoStephen Fulton Jr. becomes world champion in two weight by means of a decision
-
Results1 year agoKeyshawn Davis Ko’s Berinchyk, when Xander Zayas moves to 21-0
-
Video1 year agoFrank Warren on Derek Chisora vs Otto Wallin – ‘I THOUGHT OTTO WOULD GIVE DEREK PROBLEMS!’
-
Analysis11 months agoRobert Garcia discusses the debate on the greatest Mexican warrior in history
-
Video1 year ago‘DEREK CHISORA RETIRE TONIGHT!’ – Anthony Yarde PLEADS for retirement after WALLIN
-
Results1 year agoLive: Catterall vs Barboza results and results card



