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For Benavidez, Crawford is a problem, not Canelo

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Image: Trainer Ronnie Shields Sees Benavidez-Bivol as 50-50, Citing Morrell Fight as Vital Experience for 'Mexican Monster'

David Benavidez was willing – or I have to say that a dream – aiming at Canelo Alvarez at the age of 168. Mexican monster chasing the Mexican king. If Canelo defeated Terenka Crawford, this fight was inevitable – payment, glory, throne.

Now he has an even bigger opportunity: to avenge the loss of Canelo and restore the pride of Mexican warriors. To continue the tradition of Sánchez, Chávez, Morales and Barrera. And let’s explain – Turki would give him the biggest purse of his career, much larger than Canelo.

Crawford, who first rejected this idea, will appear. He lives for history, for challenges. And it will not leave another mountain. Add a huge bag and the fight is to take.

But Benavidez looked at the board and did mathematics. He is already a large name with a real noise. If he makes wise moves in 175, the road can spotless him. Artur Beterbiev can retire. Bivol may not fight. Obstacles may disappear. He could rule.

In the face of Crawford, in 168 it would be a huge error-the buzz ending noise.

Like Crawford defeats Benavidez

Benavidez’s danger comes from three things: size, volume and engine. It does not turn off your lights with one shot – it will drown you with 80 with a round, relentless pressure and a gas tank, which empties opponents in the second half.

Crawford is built to break this exact style.

  • Size neutralized over time. Benavidez walks forward, vertically and opens in the middle. Crawford punishes the rush forward. Checking the hook when he bends. Uncomplicated left to the body. A miniature miner inside. Each advance costs it.
  • The volume neutralized by the breaks of the rhythm. Benavidez needs a flow to throw. Crawford never allows you to swim a warrior. It fers inside, binds, reset strength, and then makes you enter the trap. An avalanche becomes drip.
  • The engine is neutralized by patience. Benavidez wins delayed because others are disappearing. Crawford is the best in boxing. In round 7 Benavidez is slower, less crunchy. Then Crawford sharpens, increases production and finishes what he began.

And if you want to see how it takes place, here is the map:

  • Runds 1-3: Crawford remains a patient, circling, probing a stab. It makes Benavidez throw and the maiden, and then lands on pointed counterattacks – a hook of the check here, straight left to the body. Every step forward costs.
  • Rounds 4–6: Crawford changes Southpaw, begins to tear the body. Compact left to the liver, they slope when Benavidez is leaning. Cleverly subject to stewed combinations, breaking the rhythm. The volume slows down.
  • Rounds 7–9: The monster begins to fade. Crawford raises his power, throwing crunchy meters of three strokes. Benavidez shots lose their snap. Crawford’s precision means that the advantage of greatness does not matter.
  • Round 10-12: Crawford takes control. Benavidez enters the penalty meters, breaks his head and forces you to survive. Regardless of whether it is a delayed arrest or a wide decision, the story is the same: the monster drowned in its own pressure.

The Caleb plant had traffic, but there is no power. Demetrius Andrade had energy early, but he wasn’t delayed gas. Crawford has both. He can sting Benavidez enough to leisurely him down – and withstand long enough to break him.

Career crusher

Crawford finished the golden goose of PBC when he dismantled Errola Spence. The road map was clear: many fights, trilogy, PPV years. Crawford crashed him in nine rounds. Spence has not fought since then.

He ruined three Canelo fights in the amount of $ 400 million. The Mexican king was to pay, secure his heritage and go to the sunset. Crawford destroyed this plan in one night.

And if Benavidez takes him at 168, the same will happen. Hype will end. The road will close.

Even Bob Arum and Freddie Roach confessed to protecting Pacquiao against him. They knew their impressions. Bud is not a fight. He is a problem.

Excuses will come

If Benavidez lies with Crawford, the excuses come in. Fans will say that he was simplified, that he should stay in 175. Time was bad. They rationalize, deny, try to comfort themselves with words.

But none of them will remove the result. The Mexican monster will be tame. The aura will disappear. The truth will remain: Benavidez faced a warrior he could not overwhelm. And when Crawford defeats you, you’re never the same again.

The thrill has disappeared

That’s why Benavidez doesn’t want 168 anymore. He knows what is waiting for him. He knows what will happen when the building appears.

Canelo was a reward. Crawford is a problem. And if the fight ever occurs, Benavidez fans will understand the meaning of the venerable BB King song. The thrill disappeared.

Last updated 25/25/2025

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DiBella questions the long-term value of Berlanga and Hitchins

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Image: DiBella Questions Berlanga, Hitchins Long-Term Value

They can find a recent ponderous hitter who will knock out 15 players and call him “the next Berlanga.” They can find a hunky boxer and market him as “the next Hitchins.”

By doing it in-house, they control the narrative and, more importantly, the costs. DiBella argues that if Zuffa’s model works, the days of a fighter like Berlanga managing “overpaid” portfolios will be gone because the system will simply produce a cheaper version of the same “asset.”

“I have to be truthful with you, I don’t think it makes any difference. If that’s the case [Zuffa Boxing] doing things the right way, these guys are largely irrelevant,” DiBella said to Ariel Helwani.

“No offense to Richardson. He’s a good fighter. In five years, no one will care about Richardson Hitchins or Berlanga. It doesn’t matter.”

Berlanga faced the harshest criticism. DiBella pointed out how his early series was structured and how it shaped perceptions.

“There may be no fighter in the history of boxing, and this is a tribute to Keith Connolly, a little tribute to Berlanga, and a little tribute to Top Rank, who understood that you can take an average fighter and feed him 15 ham sandwiches and knock him out. After 15 ham sandwiches, he’s 15-0 with 15 knockouts.”

When talking about Berlanga, Dibella describes a guy whose entire reputation was built on a padded board designed to look spectacular on paper.

“So a little tribute to everyone. Berlanga is the most overpaid fighter, one of the most overpaid fighters in the history of boxing,” DiBella said.

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Canelo reflects on the cause of Floyd Mayweather’s ‘disheartening’ defeat

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Canelo reflects on the reason behind ‘depressing’ Floyd Mayweather defeat

Saul “Canelo” Alvarez suffered the first defeat of his career thirteen years ago, defeating the great Floyd Mayweather.

The pair clashed on September 14, 2013 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas in a fight dubbed “The One”. Mayweather entered as the undefeated number one pound-for-pound and the biggest draw in the sport, while Canelo, then just 23, established an undefeated record and unified super welterweight titles. The competition was held at 152 pounds and generated huge commercial interest as a clash between an established king and boxing’s fastest rising star.

Mayweather put in an outstanding performance, using his trademark defense, footwork and timing to control distance across the court and repeatedly outplayed Canelo with sturdy counters and precise combinations. Alvarez had trouble cutting the ring and landing cleanly.

The American won by majority decision – referee CJ Ross’s draw was widely criticized – but the performance itself was unequivocal and cemented his status as the best player in the world.

Some believe this was shrewd matchmaking, as Mayweather added a gigantic name to his record before reaching the top. Others disagree, believing that Floyd would always be able to beat Alvarez.

In an interview with Grass BearAlvarez said he thought the deciding factor that night in Las Vegas was experience, not skill. The Mexican icon also revealed that the pain of his first defeat “hurt” him, but he managed to refocus by putting it into perspective.

“I was very frustrated, wasn’t I? Because I felt capable – at the age of 23 I felt I could beat the best in the world. And I was able to, I just didn’t have the experience and I realized that later.

“It hurt me a lot because whatever you want to call it, it hits your ego as a fighter – who you wanted to be, what you imagined, but it didn’t happen. And yes, it hurt a lot, it hit me really challenging and maybe I went through some level of depression. I don’t know if there are degrees of depression, but yes, maybe there is.”

“But then, thinking alone at home – because I like spending time alone – I thought: ‘Okay, I’ll snap out of it and think: I didn’t lose to just anyone, I lost to the best in the world. I’m 23 years senior and he practically didn’t do anything to me.’

“I told myself this wouldn’t stop me from being the best in the world one day.”

When asked what he lacked at the age of 23 and what he gained later, Canelo replied with confidence.

“Self-confidence. I think self-confidence more than anything else as a fighter = not mentally, because mentally I felt good – but self-confidence. Fighting more in these types of scenarios because it’s different. That would lend a hand me win.”

In 2026, Canelo will have to bounce back from defeat again. He is scheduled to return to the ring in September for the first time since losing his undisputed super middleweight title to Terence Crawford.

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Adrien Broner Flight Post leaves comeback hanging in the balance

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Adrien Broner talks at the press conference for his last fight.

Adrien Broner has sparked fresh concern after he shared a late-night post from a flight showing multiple drinks as questions continue to mount over his boxing future.

The former four-division world champion posted the clip with the caption, “I’m almost close to Denzel on this,” referring to the film – a comparison that raises its own questions.

The backlash was almost immediate, with comments ranging from mockery to concern as Broner’s latest appearance came days after a tumultuous run that had already cast doubt on his latest comeback attempt.

Some questioned whether the return rumors had died down, while others took a more direct assessment of the current state of affairs. A smaller number urged Broner to peaceful down, but the overall reaction pointed in one direction: uncertainty.

Same pattern, fresh moment

Fasting is not an isolated moment. It follows a pattern in which failures are quickly followed by promises of redemption.

This comes after a messy period in which Broner was already given a “last chance” opportunity to return to the game after admitting he had returned to street life and was asking for one last chance.

Since then, events have unfolded rapidly, from a 48-hour spiral that required intervention to prevent drinking and driving, to further fallout involving those around him. Each moment reinforced the same question: had anything actually changed?

Adrien Broner under pressure

Broner continues to beg, begging for another chance. The final comeback is already approaching the next evening’s moment, when the former champion reaches the age of 37 and is running out of time to make the same promises.

It seems that Don King has become another promoter who has failed to tame “The Problem” who is intent on chasing quick money while living the same lifestyle – it’s getting tiring to repeat it.

For a fighter once on the verge of becoming a superstar, the gap between promise and reality has never been greater.

What will happen next?

There are no longer concerns about whether Broner will be able to return to the ring.

It’s a question of whether he can stay on track long enough to get back on track.

The recording speaks for itself. The reaction was sobering. The question is now elementary – is it the same cycle again?


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. Since 2010, he has been interviewing world champions, breaking down international titles exclusively and reporting from the ring. His work is distributed on major platforms including Apple News. Read the full biography.

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