Boxing
Boxing results: Kevin Herrera stops Tom Welland to the WBO youth crown
Published
6 months agoon
Kevin Herrera (12-3, 5 Kos) knocked down Tom Welland (9-1, 5 KO) in the fourth round to win the WBO Youth title on Sunday evening at the Brentwood Center in Brentwood, England. Herrera dropped Welland before the competition was detained by judge Marcus McDonnell. Time was 2:13.
Super Bantamweight Frankie Storey (11-1, 2 KO) stopped Zachary Phee (7-1, 1 KO) after the seventh round with a corner retirement on a free BBBOFC Southern Area Super title.
In the last thirty seconds of the second round, the left counterattack hurt Phee, who was holding the bell. In the fourth point in the middle of Storey, a left hook landed, stopping Phee on his tracks, easily taking a circle, also causing cutting on the right side of the eye.
In the fifth floor on the left eyebrow was a cut in a close round. In seventh place Phee seemed to stay in the close round. Suddenly Phee’s corner called a stop between rounds.
Lee everyone was a judge.
Junior Middle Wweight Southpaw Muzamiru “The Real King Kong” Kakande (11-1-1, 7 Kos) scored the ninth round of the Kevin Reavell game (6-5-2, 2 Kos) at 0:54 ninth planned 10 rounds, too free of the title of silver universal health.
In the second round, Kakande early pulled blood from his nose Reavell, with a dominant left hand. In the third round Kakande went to the Orthodox to the last minute, winning close.
In the fifth and sixth round, Reavell did enough to win both rounds and the blood still comes from the nose; Kakande took away. In the seventh round, Reavell was dropped early by Kakande on the right, for 8-story from judge Marek Bates.
In the ninth round, after a minute, a combination of chin from Kakande dropped Reavel on 8-hlagunks from judge Bates, who waved when Reavell finished on his face.
Southpaw James “Ozzy” Osborne (11-1, 2 KO) knocked out Southpaw Alex Branson-Cole (8-2-1) at 2:06 The first round of the planned 10 rounds, for the free title of a super medium medium weight in the BBBOFC Southern region.
In the first round, the shorter Osborne landed on a stab, and then a compact left on the chin, and the Branson-Cole went and barely defeating the count from judge Lee in any form to continue.
Josh Babb (6-0) beat Harvey “King of Stining” Smith (5-1, 1 KO) Eight rounds of points to win the free title of Bantamweight youth WBC.
In the first two rounds of Smith, with lots of fans behind him, Outlanded Babb, who came to the vertical opponent. In the third round, Babb sometimes reversed Southpaw, getting better.
In the fifth place in half the way, Babb landed on the left hook, drawing blood from Smith’s nose, taking a round. In the sixth Babb he continued the advantage of Smith. In the eighth and final round she turned into a fight with grandmother from the front with swelling under the right eye at the end.
Judge Darren McCann shot him 77-75.
Jaser Al Ghena (14-0, 3 KO), BBBOFC BBBOFC BBBOFC English champion, knocked out Southpaw Les Uri (2-2-1) at 2:02 Rounds 6 and the final. Al Ghena was fallen in the second.
In the second round, Urra landed left and right on the chin, knocking alga to canvas to get an 8-story from judge Bernard Oyez. Al Ghena was nervous and punished with her body, returning to the ring after nine months. In the third round Al Ghena was warned so that she would not show up. He took a round against the opponent with only four fights.
In the sixth and final round of Al Ghena escaped from pushing and beating Urra, but the judge called Halt, not allowing Urry to end.
Ken Hissner is an experienced boxing journalist with over 20 years of experience covering the global fight scene. As an older writer Boxing News 24He is well known in the boxing community for its detailed results of results, in -depth historical works and reports on the main events.
During his career, Ken wrote about several main boxing points, building a reputation of accuracy, consistency and insight. His work often emphasizes both established masters and growing perspectives, ensuring a context that combines a luxurious history of boxing with today’s action.
When there is no ring, Ken still studies the past and present of sport, he ensures that its range reflects both deep knowledge and current meaning.
Last updated 09/07/2025
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Boxing
An overhaul of the Ali Act could push tiny boxing promoters out of business
Published
44 minutes agoon
March 12, 2026
Proposed changes to the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act are gaining attention in Washington, but some industry officials say the changes could make it more tough for smaller promoters to continue to host boxing events across the United States in many local markets across the country.
The legislation, known as the Muhammad Ali American Boxing Revival Act of 2026, includes several fresh provisions related to medical supervision and fighter protection. The proposal called for higher injury insurance, required ambulance and medical staff at events, expanded drug testing and a higher minimum pay for players.
Supporters say the changes will improve safety standards in boxing. Others believe the additional requirements could raise the costs of promoting fights.
Enormous promotional companies with powerful financial resources would probably be able to bear the higher costs. Smaller organizers who host club shows and prospect cards tend to make much less money, and their events depend on smaller venues and regional audiences to sustain them.
Under the proposal, promoters would be required to carry at least $50,000 in insurance against player injuries and $15,000 in the event of accidental death. The minimum fighter pay will also boost from $150 per round to $200 per round, and drug testing will boost for many fights.
Some boxing insiders say these extra expenses could make it more tough for smaller promoters to put on shows. Fewer local fight cards may reduce opportunities for youthful fighters trying to build their records early in their careers.
The proposal has already passed through committee in the House and is expected to go to a vote in the House soon. If the bill is approved there, it would still have to pass the Senate before reaching the president’s desk. Lawmakers continue to debate how the changes could impact boxing’s business structure while strengthening protections for fighters across the sport.
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Last update: 2026/03/12 at 3:18
Boxing
‘How can he ignore me?’: Usyk’s must-see challenger reacts to being left off the hit list
Published
3 hours agoon
March 12, 2026
Oleksandr Usyk listed his ideal last three fights, starting with Rico Verhoeven in May, then winner Fabio Wardley vs. Daniel Dubois, and ending with a trilogy fight with the returning Tyson Fury.
Only the fight against Verhoeven is certain – which is controversial for Usyk’s WBC heavyweight title – and the remaining fights are still to be negotiated, but interim champion and mandatory challenger Agit Kabayel seriously questions that list.
In a conversation on Instagram, the German heavyweight said:
“My parents always told me to stay humble and respectful. But I can no longer accept being ignored. I deserve to fight for the title.”
In an interview with RTL/ntv and sport.de, Kabayel expanded on this point, saying that Usyk’s plan proves that “he is only interested in money.”
“I always respected Usyk very much for his sporting achievements and I said: ‘Hey, he’s not afraid of challenges and he keeps his words.’ But he is only interested in money; everything else doesn’t interest him. Now I noticed it again very clearly.
“How can he not name the number one in the rankings, his mandatory challenger? It’s just melancholy that he would rather fight Dubois or Fury for a third time, even though he has already beaten them both twice.”
Kabayel – who himself came to a draw in his last fight against Daniel Knyba – fully deserves a chance to win the full world title by defeating Arslanbek Makhmudov, Frank Sanchez and Zhilei Zhang to claim the WBC interim belt. Usyk has been cleared by the sanctioning body to fight him after Verhoeven, but the Ukrainian appears likely to vacate the belt or lobby for an undisputed fight against the winner of Wardley and Dubois.
Usyk is in danger of losing not only the WBC belt, but also the IBF and WBA belts. Neither promotion has commented on the Verhoeven fight and could very well have opted to get rid of Usyk rather than follow the WBC route of putting their belt on the line, which was met with extreme fan backlash.
Boxing
Richard Torrez Jr is waiting because Frank Sanchez’s Eliminator is delayed
Published
5 hours agoon
March 12, 2026
Richard Torrez Jr’s road to a fight for the IBF heavyweight title was delayed after Frank Sanchez suffered a knee injury that forced their scheduled eliminator to withdraw from the March 28 event in Las Vegas. The fight was considered a key move in the IBF rankings, with the winner expected to move into mandatory challenger territory.
Top executive Carl Moretti confirmed that Torrez will not remain on the Fundora-Thurman card at MGM Grand after the eliminator is removed. The fight was scheduled to go live on pay-per-view, but our focus is now on setting a fresh date for when Sanchez can return to training.
Dan Rafael reported that the fight is currently scheduled for May 30 on the undercard of the proposed Devin Haney vs. Rolando Romero. This event has not yet been finalized and the heavyweight eliminator depends on both Sanchez’s recovery and confirmation of his planned appearance.
Torrez (14-0, 12 KO) last fought in November, defeating Tomas Salek in the first round in Mexico. The 26-year-old southpaw from Tulare, California, turned professional in 2022 after winning a silver medal at the Tokyo Olympics and has quickly risen through the ranks since signing with Top Rank.
Sanchez (25-1, 18 KO) is struggling with inflammation in his surgically repaired right knee. The 33-year-old Cuban heavyweight underwent arthroscopic surgery in June 2024 as a result of injuries suffered around the same year in his seventh-round knockout loss to Agit Kabayel.
The injury occurred during a long period of inactivity for Sanchez, who has fought only once since losing to Kabayel, defeating Ramon Olivas Echeverria in three rounds in February 2025.
The target date of May does not guarantee that the eliminator will move forward smoothly. Sanchez has only fought once since undergoing knee surgery in 2024, and now he is experiencing inflammation of the same joint again during training. If an injury prevents him from completing another camp, the IBF qualifier could face another delay, leaving Torrez waiting even longer for a fight that could move him into the must-see position.
The delay leaves the IBF eliminator question unresolved for now, and Torrez remains waiting for an opportunity that could bring him closer to a title fight.
Dan Ambrose is a boxing journalist at Boxing News 24, respected for his direct analysis and extensive coverage of the global fight landscape. His reports focus on the most significant fights, division development and the most discussed stories in sports.
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Last update: 2026/03/12 at 12:07
An overhaul of the Ali Act could push tiny boxing promoters out of business
‘How can he ignore me?’: Usyk’s must-see challenger reacts to being left off the hit list
Richard Torrez Jr is waiting because Frank Sanchez’s Eliminator is delayed
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