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Golovkin, Tarver and Benn headline the 2026 Boxing Hall of Fame class

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Gennady Golovkin, the power puncher who defended his middleweight title a record 20 consecutive times, was elected to the International Boxing Hall of Fame on Thursday.

Former champions Antonio Tarver and Nigel Benn are the next top names in the class to be placed in the museum in Canastota, Fresh York. The ceremony is scheduled for June 14.

Golovkin was elected in his first year in a vote by members of the American Boxing Writers Association and a panel of international boxing historians.

The Kazakh native has a record of 42-2-1 and 37 KOs. After winning his first title in 2010 in his 19th fight, he remained the 160-pound champion until Canelo Alvarez defeated him in his second fight in 2018. The 20 consecutive saves broke the league record set by Hall of Famer Bernard Hopkins.

“This is the greatest honor in boxing and the final piece of the puzzle of my career. I’m proud to have a legacy in boxing,” Golovkin said after being informed of his induction by Hall.

Triple G drew Alvarez in his first fight and lost to him for the super middleweight title in his final fight in 2022 after reclaiming the middleweight crown.

Golovkin, a silver medalist at the 2004 Olympics, was last month elected president of World Boxing, the organization that will organize Olympic tournaments at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

Tarver (31-6-1, 22 KO) has won multiple lightweight heavyweight titles, one of which he won by knocking out Roy Jones Jr. in the second round of their 2004 fight. He won two of three bouts with Jones, who has long been considered boxing’s top contender. Tarver, a 1996 Olympic lightweight heavyweight bronze medalist, also played heavyweight champion Mason Dixon in “Rocky Balboa.”

Benn won the middleweight and super middleweight titles, holding the latter belt for four years, and went 42-5-1 with 35 KOs. The British fighter’s son, Conor, recently defeated Chris Eubank Jr. after their fathers fought twice in the 1990s, with the elder Eubank winning and drawing with Nigel Benn.

Also selected were Jimmy Clabby, who had a record of 86-21-23 with 46 KOs before retiring in 1923, and women’s boxers Naoko Fujioka and Jackie Nava. Fujioka was Japan’s first five-division champion and went 19-3-1 with 7 KOs. Nava won the bantamweight and super bantamweight titles in back-to-back fights in 2005, highlighting her 40-4-4 career with 16 KOs.

Also honored will be coaches and editors Russ Anber and Jimmy Glenn, referee Frank Cappuccino and Dr. Edwin “Flip” Homansky, who will be the second doctor to be inducted. The first is his wife, Dr. Margaret Goodman.

Journalist Kevin Iole and the overdue broadcaster Alex Wallau were selected for the Observer category.

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Oleksandr Usyk is naming the heavyweight fight he wants after Rico Verhoeven

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Oleksandr Usyk names the heavyweight fight he wants after Rico Verhoeven

Oleksandr Usyk is taking Rico Verhoeven seriously, perhaps because he will face a bigger challenge later.

The elite southpaw will face kickboxing icon Verhoeven on May 23 in Egypt in a fight focused on spectacle after years of hard-fought victories on the road. Even though Usyk has strayed from his usual matchmaking, he has now assured fans that they can expect a return to top-level championship boxing later.

Speaking on DAZN’s Inside the Ring, Usyk revealed that after the fight, his goal would be to become the undisputed heavyweight champion for a third time, with his primary goal being either Daniel Dubois or Fabio Wardley.

“For me it’s a real fight. Yes, Rico is not a good boxer, ok, nice fight, no problem, but I want my next fight [against the] Daniel Dubois and Wardley winner.”

Wardley was promoted from interim to full WBO champion when the Ukrainian vacated the belt rather than face him as mandatory challenger. His first defense against Dubois, scheduled for May 9 in Manchester, is perilous.

This is a legacy-based strategy that Usyk has used in the past, dropping the IBF belt to allow Dubois’ elevation, defending against Anthony Joshua, and then facing him to regain the belt. If “DDD” defeats Wardley, he could expect a trilogy fight, but fan interest may wane given how the first two fights went.

It all depends on whether Usyk retains his three titles. Although the fight for the WBC belt with Verhoeven is highly controversial, the IBF and WBA leagues have not been mentioned yet. The sanctioning authorities may well decide to declare a vacancy in their belts.

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Tank Davis is eyeing a rematch with Isaac Cruz after a tough fight in 2021

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Image: Tank Davis Eyes Isaac Cruz Rematch After Tough 2021 Fight

Fighters like Raymond Muratalla, Abdullah Mason, William Zepeda and Floyd Schofield represent the direction many expected from Davis, making the return to Cruz a remarkable step, even if the first fight remains the one fans remember.

The fight is being discussed in the 140-pound weight class. Their first meeting took place at lightweight in December 2021 and ended in a unanimous decision for Davis after twelve rounds.

Cruz’s pressure forced Davis (30-1, 28 KO) in a cautious fight rather than the knockout victories that marked much of his career. Davis injured his left hand early in the fight and relied heavily on movement, defense and counters with his right hand while Cruz continued to press forward and raise the volume of his throws.

The judges scored the fight 115-113, 115-113 and 116-112 for Davis. Cruz’s pressure kept the contest close and led to a physical twelve-round battle that looked different than many of Davis’ other victories.

Cruz (26-2-1, 18 KO) continued to build his record after this fight, and his victories put him near the top of the division. His aggressive style and willingness to constantly push forward made it the first fight that fans still bring up when discussing Davis’ toughest fights.

Davis most recently fought to a twelve-round draw against Lamont Roach in March 2025 and has been inactive since that fight. A second fight with Cruz would mark a return to a fight that continues to attract attention whenever we analyze Davis’ career.

A novel element is the weight class. Discussions about a rematch point to a fight at 140 pounds, rather than the lightweight limit where they first met.

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Keyshawn Davis Claims He’s ‘Increasing Weight For Championship Fight’

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Keyshawn Davis says he is ‘moving up in weight for championship fight’

Keyshawn Davis has been linked to a move up to welterweight in recent weeks, and it appears “The Businessman” will be making the jump soon, with the “championship fight” date reportedly set at 147 pounds.

Davis was stripped of his WBO lightweight title when he missed weight last June for his scheduled first defense against Edwin De Los Santos. He then moved up to super lightweight and knocked out Jamaine Ortiz in the final round of their fight on the Teofimo Lopez vs. card. Shakur Stevenson.

In the wake of that victory, the Norfolk-born superstar called for a fight against current WBO welterweight world champion Devin Haney, who originally agreed to the fight before negotiations stalled.

As a result, it looked like Davis might stay at 140 pounds, but in… interview for FightHubThe 27-year-old revealed that he has a date for a “championship fight” in preparation for his 147-pound debut.

“I definitely got a response [from the people I called out] and I definitely have a date too. I’m telling you all this now and I’ll definitely be back sooner than you all think. That’s why you saw me playing politics in the gym.

“It’s political, but I’m really staying pointed. Don’t fuck up, I’m staying astute. There’s something coming.”

“I think I’m moving up [to 147lbs]. Yes, [for a championship fight]”

Haney seemed to be close to securing a unification fight with WBA champion Rolando Romero Lewis Crocker (IBF) postponed his match with Liam Paro due to injuryand Ryan Garcia (WBC) is looking elsewhere. It’s unclear where Davis fits.

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