Boxing
Ryan Garcia needs to grow up after losing Romero
Published
6 months agoon
Analyst Sergio Mora defended promoter Oscar De La Hoya in response to Ryan Garcia’s social media attacks on him. Earlier this week, De La Hoya told Ryan in an interview on the AH Show that he needed to “wake up” and “grow up.”
Garcia responded by posting, “Fuck the golden boy.”
De La Hoya’s tough love
Former six-division world champion De La Hoya’s comments were intended to make Garcia take seriously his career, which is heading downhill. As Mora points out, Ryan’s record in his last four fights is 1-2-1, and he hasn’t fought since his upset 12-round unanimous decision loss to Rolando “Rolly” Romero on May 2, 2025 in Modern York.
“Ryan Garcia lost to Rolly Romero in a fight he shouldn’t have lost. He’s 1-2-1 in his last four fights,” analyst Sergio Mora told DAZN Boxing about Ryan Garcia not working out. “He’s not a winner now. He hasn’t even won the championship.
Training in the living room
Instead of Garcia in the gym preparing for her next fight in 2025, she posts training videos of herself working out in her living room. This led to comparisons between him and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., who did the same when his career began to decline in September 2012.
“Oscar De La Hoya, yes, he has a lot of skeletons in his closet. Why you?” [Ryan] do you have to keep mentioning it? You haven’t achieved anything this man has achieved in boxing. Until you get your first belt, let alone six or seven divisions like Oscar did, you should stay composed, work tough in the gym and get back to where you belong. This is the highest place.”
Strenuous reality
The problem is that Garcia “isn’t among the top.” Outside of his upset 12-round majority decision victory over Devin Haney on April 20, 2024, he has never shown that he belongs among the best. Now that he’s been reduced to a lounge-school athlete, it doesn’t seem like he’s going anywhere in the sport.
Garcia doesn’t have the talent of 1992 Olympic gold medalist and former six-division world champion De La Hoya. He will never do it. The enormous amounts of money Kingry has made in his miniature career – $50 million – act as an anchor, stifling his hunger for constant improvement.
Ryan’s contract with Golden Boy Promotions is believed to expire in 2026. At this point, it may not matter much to De La Hoya that he loses Garcia. He turned into a YouTuber-style warrior. He doesn’t seem to be able to beat any of the top fighters at 147 pounds, and the situation is the same at 140.
While Ryan is useful in gaining fans due to his immense social media following, his performance against Rolly and loss to Gervonta Davis show that he lacks the talent to become a world champion.
“Ryan Garcia is a top contender, but he’s going in the wrong direction right now and he’s not winning,” Mora said.
Tom Galm has been covering the global boxing scene since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, business trends and fighter psychology.
Last update: 24/10/2025
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Boxing
43-0 is followed by Floyd Mayweather’s 50-0 – still no improvement despite the agreement with PBC
Published
49 minutes agoon
April 28, 2026
Abel Mendoza’s undefeated streak will resume on May 16, and the fight against Javier Rodriguez will lead the Texan to 44-0.
The number is rising – the credibility is not.
On paper, the trajectory is clear and he is on track to have one of the most vital resumes in sports. But the deeper into the rabbit hole Mendoza goes, the more questions this recording begins to raise.
Mendoza is seven fights shy of Floyd Mayweather’s 50-0 mark that defined the perfect newfangled boxing record.
However, as has been the case throughout his career, the details of this unique character tell a more complicated story.
World Boxing News has previously documented discrepancies in Mendoza’s record as fights were reviewed and added over time, including Colombia’s July 2025 result that officially moved him to 43-0.
The figure is now standing after being briefly removed, but tracking its depth has been with him the entire time.
Record vs reality
After signing a recent endorsement deal, Mendoza promised to step up. It must be admitted that Rodriguez is unique compared to some of the events he has attended in Colombia.
Premier Boxing Champions saw enough in Mendoza to bring him onto their roster. He was expected to make a evident leap in class, not just a marginal one.
When a boxer partners with PBC and Al Haymon, one of the top promoters in the United States, and then promises tougher tests, it’s difficult to consider this the Texan’s 44th fight.
Over the past few months, Mendoza has been calling out Isaac Cruz and targeting fights with Ryan Garcia and Rolando Romero. The expectations were clear – but that’s not it.
But when it comes to naming opponents, it’s the same consistent story for Mendoza. Therefore, this latest venture does not provide the expected progress.
Score 43-0
Exceeding Terence Crawford’s 43-0 mark, which Mendoza achieved last year and can better next month at The Bomb Factory in Dallas, should have come with some sort of warning label.
The number itself has significance when compared to when Crawford retired, but context shows how much it actually means in the frigid lithe of day.
Crawford’s tally to 43-0 came against elite competition in multiple weight classes, which resulted in an undisputed success. In contrast, Mendoza’s track was built on activity and volume, often against the backdrop of padded slab opposition.
Several opponents came into this heat with lost records or constrained experience, which reinforced this pattern.
This vulnerability largely explains the reaction to the latest adversary.
The enemy is under the microscope
As it turns out, Rodriguez, who ironically shares the same “Pitbull” name as Cruz, arrives in impoverished shape after struggling through a six-year career that stalled in 2017.
He returned seven years later but failed to impress, and Mendoza would be only his third fight in nine years.
Rodriguez enters with a 17-3-3 record, but his inactivity and lack of progress leave grave questions about what he brings to the competition.
Less like a Pitbull and more like a Miniature Bull Terrier when it comes to its place in the grand scheme of the sport.
Finishes 50-0
Mendoza is getting closer to Mayweather’s 50-0 mark, but without the kind of decisive fights that gave the record any significance.
Previous WBN analysis has already shown how threats to Mayweather’s benchmark have come and gone, with fighters like Jaime Munguia and Gilberto Ramirez underperforming in the promotions and others failing to maintain the activity required to reach that number.
Mendoza is now in a different category – one where records continue to climb but questions remain.
Going 44-0 keeps him on track mathematically. Credibility is still not satisfactory.
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
Tim Bradley questions 12-round test fight against Xander
Published
2 hours agoon
April 28, 2026
Bradley said experience could prove to be a factor as Boots did not spend enough time in the final innings.
There is definitely some truth to the notion that we haven’t seen Ennis in a fight to the death, but there is also the risk of punishing a fighter for being too dominant.
“Yeah, I think experience might be a factor here, but I mean Boots isn’t used to going 12 rounds. Boots isn’t used to going 12 rounds either. He usually knocks these guys out before he goes 12 rounds,” Bradley told YSM Sports Media.
Bradley is right that Ennis didn’t spend a lot of time overdue in rounds, but that’s mostly because his shot selection and pocket awareness are so high that opponents tend to crack before they can test his engine.
While we didn’t see Ennis lose any strength, we also didn’t see him be the least bit winded or depressed. “An unanswered question” is not necessarily a sign of weakness; there is simply a lack of data because it was so effective.
Bradley also questioned the level of opposition Boots has faced, saying there is little material in the reports to provide evidence of elite level.
“When you look at the competition he faced, nothing jumped out as crazy.”
This matters because Ennis is moving to a stronger division where size, pace and resistance are more tough than at welterweight. Xander is younger, naturally bigger and at 154 years venerable he has already won titles.
Bradley still thinks Boots has a higher ceiling. He called him “extremely talented” and said he expected Ennis to come in and want to make a statement.
“I’ve got Boots. I just think he’s incredibly talented,” Tim said.
One thing that often gets overlooked in the 12-round experience debate is Ennis’ extensive amateur experience. While professional rounds are different, elite amateurs are accustomed to high-intensity, high-pressure environments. To most observers, Ennis doesn’t strike me as a fighter who panics, which usually causes a fighter to burn through his gas tank in the overdue rounds.
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.
Boxing
The Shakur Stevenson vs. Devin Haney fight is in the works, but there is one major issue standing in the way
Published
4 hours agoon
April 28, 2026
Shakur Stevenson and Devin Haney are reportedly in talks for an all-American superfight.
Haney won titles in three weight classes and was undisputed at lightweight. Most recently he defeated Brian Norman Jr. for the WBO welterweight world title.
Both men have impressed in their recent wins and are widely considered two of the most technically elite fighters in the sport today. A fight between the two has been discussed for a long time, and The Ring’s Mike Coppinger reported that it could now become a reality if one key hurdle can be overcome – an agreed weight limit.
Devin Haney and Shakur Stevenson are in preliminary talks to fight @MikeCoppinger revealed on @InsideRingShow.
Weight agreements are currently holding up discussions.#InsideTheRing | The latest episode available on DAZN 📺 pic.twitter.com/eb1fG2269a
— InsideRingShow (@InsideRingShow) April 27, 2026
This problem is not effortless to solve and may prove too stern for negotiations to overcome. Haney said he felt best at welterweight and looked exhausted at super lightweight. Stevenson argues that his opponent faced Jose Ramirez at the 144-pound catchweight last year and could do the same again. While Haney handled the weight well and performed well on the night, there is no doubt he would have been at a disadvantage.
Stevenson, however, argued that he is still a natural lightweight – even though he looks comfortable against Lopez at 140 pounds – and that a meeting under the welterweight limit creates a more even playing field.
Time will tell whether this can be agreed behind the scenes. A significant amount could assist move things forward, but given their undefeated records, pound-for-pound status and position as the face of American boxing, both Stevenson and Haney will be cautious in making decisions.
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