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Age, Ring Rust and Canelo’s Power: obstacle for Crawford classes in Crawford class

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Image: Age, Ring Rust, and Canelo's Power: An Obstacle for Crawford's Two-Weight Class Jump

Coach Terenka Crawford, Brian “Bomac” McIntyre, says that he is more determined to prepare Crawford to fight with the unquestioned champion of the super medium weight Canelo Alvarez now, when fans doubt their warrior. McIntryre notes that fans are skeptical about the chances of a team of winning, because he moves two weight classes from 154 to 168 to challenge Canelo (63-2-2, 39 KO) for four titles September 12 at the Allegian Stadium in Las Vegas.

Crawford age factor

Why there are doubts about the terrain

  1. Age: Crawford will be nearly 38 before he will fight Canelo. His birthday is September 28. He looked elderly and feeble in his previous fight with Israil Madrimov. The physical decline in Crawford was noticeable in this fight and seemed to lose, but he made a dubious decision.
  2. Inaction: It will be 13 months since Terenka recently fought when he entered the ring against Alvarez. Earlier, Crawford was inactive for 13 months and looked rusty and slowly in his debut at the age of 154.
  3. Perception of the fight for money: People think that the main motivation of Crawford’s Buda to fight Canelo is $ 100 million, which he receives for this fight. They indicate that he did not show ambitions to go to 168 and go a board against the deadly vertex, David Benavidez, David Morrell and Oslesys Iglesias, to show that the focus on real competition was focused.
  4. Alvarez power: Canelo’s power is still powerful, even though he slowed down with age. The arrows that landed on his last two opponents, William Scull and Edgar Berlang, hit the holes through the brittle, reminiscent of Crawford’s frame. It was not designed to hit by a robust, Canelo truck.

“We are not looking for a knockout. We go there to try to play because such a name of the game. But if a knockout comes, we will be able to get it,” said Brian “Bomac” Mccintyre Millcity boxing About whether Crawford can knock out Canelo Alvarez on September 12.

Bomac releases a cat from the bag here, revealing that Bud comes to “box” Canelo instead of trying to get a knockout. He said in other interviews that he was studying Canelo’s losses towards Dmitry Bivol and Floyd Mayweather Jr., and that they would employ these two as a plan for employ against the Mexican star.

“The first great fight we had [against car crash-wrecked Errol Spence]They doubted us and we completed the task. Now we will augment two classes, and they say: “This is the stupidest thing to do.” Of course, we believe in ourselves because we are going to this challenge. If we didn’t do it, we wouldn’t do it. When people tell me that we can’t do work, it just makes me work harder. “

False era of boxing

What is Bomac talking about? Of course, Crawford would still fight Canelo, even if he didn’t think he could win. An inactive elderly lion is paid $ 100 million fight the Mexican star after a year outside the ring and a controversial decision against Israil Madrimov. It’s about money. If it wasn’t for green things, Crawford would already move to 168 Walking GuilotineDavid Benavidez, to get the title shot against the undisputed master of the super medium weight Canelo traditionally. This is what Alalshikh should do, instead of just giving him a fight.

The winning part is primarily the fight against Canelo, because it does not deserve it. This is just another of the circus fights that we see, and the box was transformed into a false sport.

Last updated 05/06/2025

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Ryan Garcia and Oscar De La Hoya disagree on who he should fight next

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Ryan Garcia and Oscar De La Hoya disagree on who he should fight next

Ryan Garcia and Oscar De La Hoya have offered conflicting perspectives on a potential rematch with Devin Haney, while rumors of a Conor Benn fight become more likely.

Garcia won the welterweight world title in February, dethroning Mario Barrios by unanimous decision following a first-round knockout.

Since then, his name has been most closely linked to Benn, the WBC No. 1 contender at 147 pounds, whose last fight was at 150 pounds against Regis Prograis.

In a recent interview with Fighting Hub TVGarcia confirmed that this is the fight he wants.

“Devin Haney never wanted this. He doesn’t want a rematch at all… [I’m going to return in] August. Can’t wait. I just want Conor [Benn]”

Unlike Garcia, said Golden Boy promoter De La Hoya Fight the noise that he “would like” to make a rematch with Haney a priority.

“I’m most interested in the rematch with Devin Haney. It could be a blockbuster event.

“I would love for this fight to take place in Las Vegas at Allegiant Stadium – it could be such a substantial fight.

“I believe this fight is the best fight that can be had right now.”

Garcia reached a majority decision against Haney in April 2024, but the result was declared a no contest after he tested positive twice for the banned substance Ostarine. It remains one of the most intriguing fights in boxing, especially considering the doubts surrounding the first result and the fact that it is currently a unification fight in the welterweight ranks.

But it appears Benn will take his shot despite recently signing a contract with Zuffa Boxing, the latest major promotion of the sport whose frontman Dana White has no interest in working with the four customary sanctioning bodies.

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Tim Bradley wonders if Inoue is tired of fighting

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Image: Tim Bradley Wonders if Inoue Is Becoming Battle-Worn

Tim Bradley raised modern questions about Naoya Inoue ahead of a possible fight with Junto Nakatani, saying the undisputed champion has been hit too tough recently and could be he’s starting to get tired of fighting.

“I was hesitant on what to choose,” Bradley said on his channel while talking about Saturday’s Inoue vs. Nakatani fight. “I don’t know who I’m going to favor yet. I’ll let you know later, man. I don’t know. I really don’t know.”

Bradley explained that Nakatani’s length, timing and counters give him the tools to give Inoue more trouble than recent opponents. “Nakatani got a chance to bat,” Bradley said. “In any case, she needs to close the distance from him. The question is, will she do it safely?”


He also pointed out a recurring error in Inoue’s style, noting moments where the undisputed champion can be caught stepping in.

“He’s defenseless. He’s getting hit. That’s what it is,” Bradley said. “Like Nakatani.”

Bradley praised the way Nakatani uses his range and setup play, saying it all starts with his lead hand.

“It all depends on the leading hand and whether he can get his opponent into the action,” Bradley said. “He wants you to reach so he can teach.”

Still, Bradley sees Inoue as a more adaptable player and therefore can’t fully engage in an upset conversation.

“You can never predict. You look at Inoue’s fights and you see this guy doesn’t fight the same,” Bradley said. “He always adapts his game to the style he is dealing with.”

Bradley also questioned whether years of activity could compensate Inoue after his recent struggles.

“He was hit too tough,” Bradley said. “I wonder if he’s getting tired of fighting?”

Even with these concerns, Bradley expects both men to be in top shape should the fight happen.

“It’s going to be a hell of a fight, man,” Bradley said. “These guys are going to beat the living [expletive] from each other.”

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Categories Naoya Inoue

Last updated: 26/04/2026 at 17:17

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Doubts are growing about Floyd Mayweather’s rematch with Manny Pacquiao

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Mayweather vs Pacquiao 2 doubts clouds no word

Floyd Mayweather still has not confirmed his rematch with Manny Pacquiao, and his silence now raises grave doubts whether this fight will take place at all.

While Pacquiao and his team continue to push the idea that a second fight has been agreed, Mayweather has said nothing beyond suggesting that any return would be an exhibition and that his undefeated record is not in jeopardy.

This gap between the two sides has only widened, resulting in one version being shared publicly while the other remains absent.

Pacquiao insists the deal is done

Pacquiao has repeatedly said the contract is for a fully sanctioned professional fight, not an exhibition.

“The contract we signed is a real fight,” Pacquiao said. “It’s either a real fight or nothing.”

His team went further, maintaining that contracts had been signed and financial commitments made, and Manny Pacquiao Promotions CEO Jas Mathur provided those details in multiple interviews, including with World Boxing News.

At this stage, the message was clear – the fight had begun and it would be fought on fully professional terms.

Mayweather’s silence tells a different story

Mayweather’s position does not match this certainty.

The former five-weight world champion has not yet officially confirmed the rematch and only referred to the exhibition conditions when discussing a possible return to the professional ranks.

There has been no announcement from Mayweather Promotions, no official launch of the event, and no confirmation from any broadcaster despite reports linking Netflix to the project.

Even that element has gone silent, with no evident promotion or support to suggest that a major fight announcement is imminent.

Mathur, who spoke out during the initial rollout, has also withdrawn from public comments in recent weeks.

The famed Mayweather pattern

The situation mirrors previous instances where reports of fighting have gained popularity without ever being confirmed.

Earlier this year, a proposed exhibition featuring Mike Tyson followed a similar path, with a reported date circulating ahead of his departure, with neither man formally mentioning its status.

Mayweather has long maintained a consistent stance in situations like this.

“Nothing is confirmed unless you hear it here first,” he said throughout his career, a standard he maintained until the exhibition era.

Until confirmation comes directly from Mayweather, speculation alone will not be enough to make the fight real.

Unresolved, not imminent

Pacquiao’s position remains unchanged, and there is an expectation in his camp that the rematch will be conducted as a truly professional fight.

But without Mayweather publicly responding to these conditions, the situation remains unresolved – and increasingly questionable.

At this point the direction becomes clear.

Throughout the discussion surrounding the second meeting, only one side is actively driving the narrative, while the other has yet to take any action.

Until Floyd Mayweather says it himself, there is no fight – just one-sided noise.


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.

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