Jermall Charlo told Caleb today that he wants to fight him after his returning opponent, Thomas Lamanna, passed, on the May 31 card at Michelob Ultra Arena in Las Vegas.
(Credit: Michael Ham/Premier Boxing Champions)
The former world champion with two Charlo divisions (33-0, 22 KO) will apply Lamanna (39-5-1, 18 KO) as tuning to get Rust from two years of inactivity. If he wins, he could face the plant “Honey” (23-2, 14 Kos). The ephemeral champion of WBA 168-pound, 32, fights with Jose Armando Resendiz (15-2, 11 KO) in a 12-round headliner on PBC on the best video.
Go on?
Plant hopes to get a rematch with the undisputed master of super medium weight Canelo Alvarez after he was eliminated in the 11th round in November 2021. From this fight Plant lost 2-1, losing to David Benavidez and defeating Trevor McCumbby and Anthony Dirrell.
Fans in social media believe that the only reason why 34-year-old Jermall Charlo is coming back is that it smells of money. He wants to get part of this Canelo cake to get a sweet withdrawal of $ 10 million, like the one that Edgar Berlanga received in September last year and $ 10 million in 2021.
There is a petite possibility that Plant or Jermall may lose their fights on May 31, because none of them is near the elite level. They received something that seems to be gentle opponents, but they are now 30 years ancient and have a course on them.
The plant was dropped in its last fight by the dissatisfied Trevor McCumby. Jermell fought in the last two fights with Jose Benavidez Jr. and Juan Macias Montiel.
“It was a journey and it comes for a long time. I don’t like saying that I came back, but you will get it. You get a concept,” said Jermal Charlo during today Press conference in Los Angeles Promote your fight with Thomas Lamanna on May 31. “I’m going to 168 to make a statement.
“Thank you, Thomas [LaManna] for taking up a fight. I concentrated, I was closed. I want to break this fight and maybe take it in Caleb Plant if possible. I have substantial plans for works. “
Return to the ring
People are wondering why Jermall has not stayed in 160, where he has been for years, and the challenge of IBF and the middleweight champion WBO Janibek Alimkkula for his two lanes. The answer to this is that Charlo would probably have lost badly Janibek through Nokaut.
He was too lively to have a chance against the master. He is a guy with whom Jermall would have earnest problems, even when he was younger and still lively. Charlo collects until 168 for one reason – money.
In recent comments, Garcia said that Benn is the fight he wants. At the same time, he openly announced the emergency plan.
“If Conor doesn’t want it, we’ll go back to it with Rolly,” Ryan Garcia told Ring Magazine, referring to Rolando Romero.
That alone was revealing. Players who believe that an agreement is imminent tend to limit their message. When alternative opponents are publicly mentioned, it often means that there are still obstacles related to money, timing, broadcasters or promotional control.
Then another wrinkle appeared when Óscar De La Hoya publicly supported a completely different fight.
“I’m most interested in a rematch with Devin Haney,” De La Hoya said, adding that it could be massive enough to accommodate Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.
Now Garcia’s public trail includes three separate names: Benn, Romero and Devin Haney. Rarely does a finalized fight sound like this.
Benn’s matchup still makes sense on paper. Benn has become one of the more recognizable names in the UK and has now added to his profile after signing with Zuffa Boxing. Garcia remains one of boxing’s biggest social media attractions and continues to attract attention regardless of the results.
Put these names together and you have clear commercial value.
But picking a fight and liking the fight are two different things. Garcia has ties to the Golden Boy. Benn’s modern setting creates fresh business layers. Place also matters. An event in the US, an event in the UK, or support from Saudi Arabia would change the economy.
This helps explain why backup options are already provided.
A rematch with Haney also remains valuable as unfinished business continues to sell. Their first meeting generated headlines, controversy and debate. Whether fans loved the event or not, they remember it. In state-of-the-art boxing, remembered fights are often easier to sell than fresh ones.
Meanwhile, Romero proposes the simplest, practical way. It is known, accessible and connected to Garcia’s recent history.
Ryan may really prefer Benn, but preference doesn’t always dictate the schedule. This is usually what promoters, networks and time do.
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.
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.”
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.
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