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Teofimo Lopez vs. Shakur Stevenson: Picks, Predictions and More

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On Saturday at Madison Square Garden in Fresh York, Teofimo Lopez Jr. will stand on the line for the WBO junior welterweight title against Shakur Stevenson.

Lopez (22-1, 13 KO), former unified lightweight champion, defends his belt for the fourth time with a unanimous decision over Josh Taylor in June 2023 at the Theater at MSG. Since then, Lopez, who enters the fight as a +250 underdog according to DraftKings Sportsbook, has recorded decision wins over Jamaine Ortiz and Steve Claggett in 2024, followed by a win over Arnold Barboza Jr. last May. Although Lopez hasn’t recorded a stop since his seventh-round knockout of Pedro Campa in August 2022, he has turned in some dominant performances, particularly against Taylor and Barboza.

Lopez’s combination of power, footwork and athleticism could be the key to his success, especially if he can string together distance and landing combinations against a challenging target.

Stevenson (24-0, 11 KO), the current WBC lightweight champion, moves up to 140 pounds for the first time in his life as he looks to become a four-division world champion after world titles at featherweight, junior lightweight and lightweight. Widely considered one of boxing’s elite defensive technicians, Stevenson (-330 favorite) has been criticized at times for his conservative style, but his in-ring control and evasion have made him nearly untouchable as a professional. He also showed offensive superiority in a dominant victory over William Zepeda last July.

The matchup presents a classic stylistic contrast: Can Lopez solve Stevenson’s defense and impose his attack from within? Or will Stevenson control the range with his jab and footwork, neutralizing Lopez’s power?

Hall of Fame commentator Al Bernstein, former welterweight champion Shawn Porter and former junior middleweight champion Raul Marquez discuss how the fight could unfold and give their picks for the winner.


Shawn Porter, former welterweight champion

Fit

Lopez has those values ​​in boxing that can’t be taught – athleticism, explosiveness and strength. Stevenson was born with the ability to time and dictate the distance and pace of a fight. While Lopez may have more things to do in the ring, he needs to figure out what he needs to do and fight arguably the most unhittable boxer in the game, and most importantly, when to do it. It’s Stevenson’s fight to lose and Lopez’s fight to win.

How does Lopez win?

His patience will be key. He must start the fight with patience and take his time to land a robust blow. The more he tries this, the easier it will be for Stevenson to time him and establish his rhythm. If he fights with rhythm, using basic jabs and feints to find moments for throw combinations, his patience can facilitate set the pace of the fight and opportunities will come.

How does Stevenson win?

Stevenson just has to be himself to win. He likes his space and controls the pace very well. He needs to force Lopez to attack him and fight on the front foot. An aggressive opponent benefits Stevenson. If he doesn’t fight like himself, he may lose this way. He fought aggressively against Zepeda, so he knows he can’t do that against Lopez because he is also a real offensive threat. But as long as he fights like he always does – as a great counter puncher – he can win.

Anticipating the fight

I said it was Stevenson’s fight to lose, and if it’s someone else’s fight to lose, that means he should probably win. It’s strenuous to pick a fight, but I will say Stevenson will win.


Raul Marquez, former American Olympian and junior middleweight champion, boxing analyst

Breaking the fight

I’m glad this fight will happen when it’s supposed to happen. I love the way Shakur fought in his last fight [William] Zepeda. We didn’t see him in his usual defensive mode. Coming forward, trading with Zepeda, he was very offensive and it was fun. Teofimo is one of those guys for whom the most crucial thing is how he wakes up on a given day. When Teofimo is on, he is a great and talented fighter. He is a student of the game. He is very confident, explosive and has great footwork. Shakur is a very wise fighter. He may not have the power of Lopez, but his ring intelligence and speed definitely make up for it.

This is boxing at the highest level. I think after three or four rounds Teofimo should take control. I really think it’s stronger and more powerful. But can he do it with Shakur? I don’t know.

How does Stevenson win?

Shakur has to box with jabs, straight shots to the center, and turning him around all the time. He must circle around him, keep his foot in the middle of the ring, stay away from the ropes and corners. He also has to strike in series and apply combinations. Grab it, hold it, lean on it, go back outside, jab it, double it and go to work. The key for him is to stay focused, composed and in the box.

How does Lopez win?

There will be three or four rounds of trying to understand each other, but sooner or later he will have to attack. When it’s on, it’s very elusive, comfortable, loose, and a lot of fun to be in there. When he does this, he is amazing and strenuous to beat. The key is to attack from all sides with combos, always pushing forward.

Anticipating the fight

I think Shakur should win, but I wouldn’t be surprised if Teofimo won. I go with Teofimo, nervous.


Al Bernstein, boxing commentator and member of the International Boxing Hall of Fame

Fit

This is intriguing because Stevenson is a very good boxer and a decent puncher, and Lopez is also a good striking boxer. So these two in some ways, even though they’re lefty and righty, have a somewhat similar skill set. Although I think Stevenson is a cleaner boxer than Lopez. The gigantic question is: which Lopez will show up?

In terms of consistency, Stevenson would have the advantage, even though he had a few performances that people weren’t ecstatic with. But the other thing about this fight is that we don’t know if any of these fighters will come out a little out of character. Will we see Stevenson be more aggressive than he has been at times? I thought against it [William] Zepeda [in July]showed the outbreak of a major offensive. Or will Lopez take a more measured approach than we expect? People are always trying to put pressure on Stevenson because he is a pristine boxer – will Lopez, who has boxing skills, change his game? These are questions we can ask ourselves.

How does Lopez win?

It’s crucial for Lopez to give his all. And when he gives it his all, he is a very good fighter.

I think at his best he is the pure definition of a boxer-puncher, but maybe with an emphasis on punching. He has power and knocks people down. I think that’s what he’s going to need in this fight. He will want to be aggressive; you have to do this and he’s going to have to turn up the volume a little bit. I think Lopez is going to have to make sure he cuts his hands in this fight and that alone could facilitate him win rounds. There have been fights in the past where he has had a bit of a lull in his striking range, but he can’t let that happen.

If he stays busy, concentrates on both the body and head, and manages to cut through the ring – which he will have to do without chasing Stevenson – he has a chance to win.

How does Stevenson win?

I think he’s winning the way we always feel, winning fights by having really good boxing skills while also making sure he’s offensive enough to win rounds. Shakur better do enough offensively to secure rounds if the fight goes the distance, which could very likely be the case.

Anticipating the fight

The problem with betting against Stevenson is that Lopez loses and that Stevenson wins most of the rounds in his fights. And so you feel like you can control it all. Now it is unknown whether he will be able to control a fight in this weight class and whether he will be able to control Lopez. But I guess I’d give a slight nod to Stevenson, but I think it’s a pick ’em fight.

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A Family Feud Under the Fireworks: The New Standard

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Abdullah Mason and Albert Bell face off before their WBO lightweight title fight in Cleveland beneath Fourth of July fireworks for "A Family Feud Under the Fireworks" feature.
Abdullah Mason and Albert Bell face off before their WBO lightweight title fight in Cleveland beneath Fourth of July fireworks for "A Family Feud Under the Fireworks" feature.

Abdullah Mason (left) and Albert Bell face off ahead of their July 4 WBO Lightweight Championship clash in Cleveland. The all-Ohio showdown between former training partners has become one of boxing’s most compelling matchups of the summer.

By JuniorTheTruth™

On July 4, 2026, Cleveland won’t simply celebrate Independence Day. For one night, it will become the center of the boxing world.

Inside the Wolstein Center, undefeated WBO Lightweight Champion Abdullah Mason will make the first defense of his world title against fellow unbeaten Ohio native Albert Bell in a matchup that has quietly evolved into one of the most compelling fights of the summer.

This isn’t merely champion versus challenger.

It’s Cleveland versus Toledo.

Youth versus experience.

The sport’s newest champion versus one of its most overlooked contenders.

Former training partners become opponents. Two undefeated Ohio fighters are willing to do something boxing doesn’t always reward: face a dangerous man they know.

That alone deserves recognition.

In an era when too many meaningful fights disappear beneath promotional politics, network affiliations, and carefully managed careers, Mason and Bell have chosen competition over convenience. They have given boxing fans exactly the kind of fight the sport consistently says it wants—and too rarely delivers.

Why This Fight Matters

When Joe Cordina was forced to withdraw because of visa complications, many expected Top Rank to secure a more manageable replacement for its newly crowned champion.

Instead, Albert Bell accepted the opportunity.

With one phone call, an ordinary title defense became a genuinely intriguing championship fight.

Bell isn’t an unknown opponent looking for a payday. He’s an undefeated veteran who has spent years waiting for an opportunity worthy of his résumé.

Likewise, Mason isn’t defending his championship against a carefully selected opponent designed to extend his reign. He’s facing a fellow Ohio native who believes this is the moment he’s been preparing for throughout his professional career.

That’s the kind of risk boxing fans continually ask for.

Real stakes.

Real consequences.

Real uncertainty.

Those elements—not manufactured rivalries or promotional slogans—are what make championship boxing special.

Abdullah Mason’s Rise

At just 22 years old, Abdullah Mason already looks like one of boxing’s brightest young champions.

The world title confirms his accomplishments, but it doesn’t fully explain why so many people believe he’s destined for greatness.

His style does.

Mason has quickly developed into one of boxing’s most exciting young boxer-punchers. He combines speed, timing, creativity, accuracy, and finishing instincts in a way that appeals to hardcore boxing enthusiasts and casual fans alike.

He isn’t content to simply outpoint opponents.

He breaks them down.

He creates openings.

He forces mistakes.

And when opportunities present themselves, he finishes the job.

Those qualities have become increasingly rare in modern boxing.

The sport’s biggest stars don’t merely win fights—they give fans a reason to anticipate the next one.

Mason already possesses that quality.

Just as impressive has been his maturity.

Championship expectations can overwhelm young fighters, yet Mason has handled the spotlight with remarkable composure. His development inside the ring has been matched by his poise outside of it, suggesting that the championship has arrived because he was prepared for it—not because he was rushed into it.

That doesn’t mean he’s a finished product.

Far from it.

Like every young champion, there are still lessons to learn and adjustments to make. Experience remains boxing’s greatest teacher, and Mason’s education is only beginning.

That’s precisely what makes his ceiling so fascinating.

From my perspective, Mason has every ingredient necessary to become one of the defining fighters of his generation. He has the athletic ability, the fan-friendly style, the championship mentality, and the personality to become one of the sport’s future faces.

This title defense represents another important step in that journey.

Whether it becomes a routine victory or a career-defining challenge may depend entirely on the man standing across the ring.

Bell’s Long Road

While Mason represents boxing’s future, Albert Bell represents one of boxing’s oldest problems.

Sometimes the most dangerous fighter isn’t the most famous one.

Sometimes he’s the fighter who spent years winning without receiving the opportunities his record deserved.

Bell has lived in that space for much of his professional career.

Tall. Long. Technically disciplined. Undefeated. Difficult to look good against.

Those aren’t always qualities that attract championship opportunities. More often, they’re qualities that make other fighters—and the people guiding their careers—look in another direction.

That’s the harsh reality of boxing.

The sport doesn’t always reward the most deserving contender. It often rewards the most marketable matchup.

Bell has spent years proving he belongs in meaningful conversations while waiting for the kind of opportunity many believed should have arrived much sooner.

His move from junior lightweight to lightweight wasn’t simply a change in weight classes.

It was a reset.

A fresh opportunity to pursue the championship fights that had repeatedly slipped away and to remind the boxing world that his name still belongs among the division’s best.

I’ve followed Albert Bell’s career for years.

I’ve watched him develop from a talented prospect into a polished professional. I’ve watched him consistently win while receiving only a fraction of the attention given to fighters with far less accomplished résumés. And I’ve watched him become one of the sport’s most overlooked contenders—not because of a lack of ability, but because of the difficult style he brings into every fight.

Before going any further, I want to acknowledge Ohio Runs Boxing for its unwavering support of Abdullah Mason and Albert Bell from their amateur days through their rise in the professional ranks.

Illustration of Ohio Runs Boxing wearing a traditional conical hat pulled low over his face while standing inside a dramatic boxing gym with Ohio-themed elements, symbolizing Ohio's rich boxing culture and grassroots fight community.

Ohio Runs Boxing has become one of the state’s most recognizable independent voices, documenting Ohio’s rich boxing tradition while supporting fighters, gyms, and events across the Buckeye State.
Alternative Caption
Known throughout the Midwest boxing community, Ohio Runs Boxing continues to shine a spotlight on Ohio’s fighters, gyms, and grassroots boxing culture.

Its commitment to championing Ohio boxers—past, present, and future—has become one of the state’s most recognizable contributions to the sport. Saturday night’s all-Ohio world championship fight is one of the proudest milestones in that journey.

It’s also a historic moment for my brother Marcus and everyone who has helped build Ohio Runs Boxing into a platform that celebrates the fighters, the gyms, and the culture of boxing throughout our state, and that legacy continues tonight.

Ohio Runs Boxing, indeed.

That kind of commitment matters.

Real support begins long before championship belts, television cameras, and headline events.

It’s built through years of believing in fighters before the rest of the boxing world notices them.

That’s why I don’t see Albert Bell as a late replacement.

I see him as a legitimate championship challenger whose opportunity has finally arrived.

Styles Make Fights

Records introduce a fight.

Styles usually decide it.

That’s what makes this matchup so compelling.

Mason enters as the naturally aggressive boxer-puncher.

His southpaw stance, explosive combinations, quick hands, and offensive instincts allow him to dictate exchanges when he’s fighting on his terms. He excels at creating angles, applying intelligent pressure, and overwhelming opponents before they can settle into a rhythm.

When Mason establishes that tempo early, he’s exceptionally difficult to discourage.

Bell presents a completely different challenge.

His length, patience, timing, and defensive discipline have frustrated opponents throughout his career. He doesn’t need to dominate every exchange to control a fight. Instead, he forces opponents to overreach, become impatient, and make mistakes they wouldn’t normally make.

That style can be incredibly frustrating for aggressive fighters.

Bell’s objective isn’t to match Mason’s activity.

It’s to disrupt it.

He’ll look to establish his jab, manage distance, and force the younger champion to think before committing offensively. If he succeeds, Mason may find himself fighting at a pace that’s unfamiliar and uncomfortable.

Those tactical questions make this far more than a battle between two undefeated records.

Can Mason consistently close the distance without exposing himself to counters?

Can Bell maintain the spacing necessary to neutralize Mason’s explosiveness?

Can youth, speed, and offensive creativity overcome experience, patience, and ring discipline?

Those questions—not promotional narratives or betting odds—will determine who leaves Cleveland with the WBO lightweight championship.

The JuniorTheTruth™ Verdict

I’ve heard plenty of people describe this as another successful title defense waiting to happen.

I don’t see it that way.

This isn’t a showcase.

It isn’t a stay-busy fight.

And it certainly isn’t the type of assignment a young champion should overlook.

To me, this is a genuine 50-50 fight.

That’s not because I doubt Abdullah Mason’s talent.

Quite the opposite.

I believe Mason is one of the most gifted young fighters in boxing today. He has championship ability, tremendous upside, and every opportunity to become one of the defining stars of the next generation.

None of that changes how I view Albert Bell.

For too many observers, Bell has become the fighter whose accomplishments are acknowledged but rarely appreciated. That’s a dangerous mistake.

Length matters.

Experience matters.

Patience matters.

Ring IQ matters.

Those qualities don’t always produce highlight-reel knockouts, but they’ve decided countless championship fights throughout boxing history.

Bell isn’t stepping into this ring hoping to survive twelve rounds.

He’s stepping into it expecting to win.

That confidence isn’t manufactured.

It’s built upon years of preparation, years of waiting, and years of believing this opportunity would eventually arrive.

Mason deserves to be favored.

He’s the champion.

He’s younger.

He’s explosive.

He’s already demonstrated the qualities that suggest he’ll remain at the top of the sport for years to come.

But favorites lose championship fights every year.

Not because they lack talent.

Because styles create problems.

Albert Bell has the style, the experience, and the confidence to present Mason with questions he hasn’t consistently faced at the championship level.

That’s why I reject the idea that this is an easy title defense.

It isn’t.

It’s the kind of fight that reveals exactly how good a champion truly is.

More Than a Championship

The WBO lightweight championship is on the line.

But this fight represents far more than a title belt.

It represents competition.

It represents confidence.

It represents conviction.

Most importantly, it represents two undefeated fighters willing to accept a challenge that many others in today’s boxing landscape might have declined.

For years, fans have voiced the same frustration.

Too many meaningful fights never happen.

Business gets in the way.

Risk outweighs reward.

Careers become carefully managed rather than courageously tested.

Whether by circumstance or intention, Abdullah Mason and Albert Bell have given boxing something refreshingly different.

Uncertainty.

There are no guarantees when the opening bell rings.

No manufactured narratives.

No carefully selected opponent designed to preserve an undefeated record.

Only two highly skilled Ohio fighters are standing across the ring from one another, with everything they’ve worked for hanging in the balance.

That’s what championship boxing is supposed to look like.

Whether you’re cheering for Mason, believing Bell is ready for his moment, or simply hoping to witness a great fight, this matchup deserves far more attention than it has received.

Because, regardless of the outcome, both men are honoring one of boxing’s oldest traditions:

If you want to prove you’re one of the best, eventually you have to fight someone capable of proving you wrong.

Final Bell

Abdullah Mason may very well become one of the defining fighters of his generation.

Albert Bell may finally receive the opportunity many believe should have arrived years ago.

Those two ideas can coexist.

In fact, they’re exactly what makes this fight so compelling.

One man is defending everything he’s earned.

The other is fighting for everything he’s waited to receive.

That’s a dangerous combination.

Championship boxing has always been at its best when certainty gives way to possibility—when reputation collides with hunger, when momentum meets patience, and when talent is forced to answer difficult questions under the brightest lights.

That’s why I refuse to dismiss Albert Bell as simply the next name on Abdullah Mason’s résumé.

And it’s why I refuse to overlook what Mason has already become.

This isn’t a showcase.

It’s an examination.

For Mason, it’s an opportunity to prove that his championship reign is only beginning.

For Bell, it’s the opportunity to show the boxing world that years of being overlooked never diminished his ability—only the attention he received.

When the final bell rings inside the Wolstein Center, one man will leave Cleveland with the WBO lightweight championship.

But regardless of whose hand is raised, both fighters will have reminded the boxing world of something it desperately needs to remember.

Great champions aren’t measured by how carefully they’re protected.

They’re measured by the challenges they’re willing to accept.

On Independence Day, two undefeated Ohio fighters chose challenge over comfort.

In today’s boxing landscape, that’s more than a championship fight.

That’s the new standard.

-JuniorTheTruth™, 2026

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IBF gives Moses Itauma a shot at the world title – fighting Hrgovic no longer makes sense

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Moses Itauma was given a direct path to the IBF heavyweight title, leaving Queensberry with one obvious question: Why risk it all against Filip Hrgovic?

In a statement sent to World Boxing News, the International Boxing Federation confirmed that it had received official notice on June 26 of Oleksandr Usyk’s resignation as IBF heavyweight champion.

Under championship rules, the governing body ordered top-ranked Frank Sanchez to negotiate with number three contender Moses Itauma for the vacant title. Both have until July 29 to reach an agreement.

Immediately, Hrgovic became an unnecessary obstacle to Itauma’s path to the world title.

When Itauma agreed to face Hrgovic on August 29 at The O2 in London, it was the perfect step for one of boxing’s brightest adolescent heavyweights.

This equation has completely changed.

IBF pays tribute to Usyk

In a statement provided to WBN, the IBF also confirmed Usyk’s reign before confirming the order.

“Over the course of his distinguished career, Usyk has established himself as one of the sport’s elite competitors, and the IBF is honored to recognize him as one of its world champions.

“His talent and commitment to excellence have made a lasting impact on boxing and will continue to inspire future generations of fighters.

“The IBF wishes Oleksandr Usyk continued success in his future endeavors.”

Only after paying tribute to the former champion did the IBF officially order Sanchez and Itauma to negotiate for the vacant world title.

This is an opportunity that many contenders have been chasing for years. Itauma immediately received this opportunity.

Hrgović’s fight no longer makes sense

When Queensberry announced the fight with Hrgovic, promoter Frank Warren described it as a “litmus test” that Itauma was ready for, while DAZN described it as a key fight with world title implications.

These consequences have now become a reality.

No one doubts Itauma’s willingness to fight anyone. He signed a contract with Hrgovic before the world title unexpectedly landed on the table. This is a completely different situation.

Hrgovic remains one of the most perilous heavyweight contenders despite suffering only one loss to Daniel Dubois. Since then, the Croatian has regained momentum with victories over Joe Joyce, David Adeleye and Dave Allen, which put him back among the top contenders in the division.

If an agreement can be reached, the obvious solution would be to replace Hrgović with Sanchez on August 29 in exchange for the vacant IBF heavyweight title.

As compensation, Hrgovic could get the first shot at the recent champion if Itauma defeats Sanchez.

Whether this proves possible depends on whether all involved are willing to restructure the contracts already in place.

The heavyweight story still beckons

The change would also support Itauma in its historic mission, which has already missed one goal.

Itauma’s dream of breaking Mike Tyson’s record as the youngest heavyweight champion is gone, but another goal remains within reach.

If the 21-year-old wins the vacant IBF title before October, he will overtake Floyd Patterson to become the second-youngest heavyweight champion in history.

If he waits until the match against Hrgovic, this chance will be gone forever.

Queensberry matched Itauma with Hrgovic because it seemed like the quickest path to a chance at the championship.

The IBF has now given them an even faster fight.

Unless Hrgovic’s contract can no longer be salvaged, Queensberry should exhaust all options to hire Sanchez instead.

The IBF unexpectedly gave Itauma a world title shot and a chance to become the second-youngest heavyweight champion in history.

It would be arduous to justify giving up this opportunity in favor of unnecessary risk.


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.

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Lennox Lewis ‘admitted’ he should have had one more defeat to former heavyweight champion on his record: ‘You won’

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Lennox Lewis ‘admitted’ he should’ve had one more loss on his record to former heavyweight champion: “You won”

The former world champion claims Lennox Lewis once admitted he should have retired after three defeats in his professional career.

“The Lion” is considered one of the greatest heavyweights of all time. He retired in 2003 after avenging his only two losses to Oliver McCall and Hasim Rahman.

Lewis also had a successful rematch with Evander Holyfield, who somehow managed to do so defended his world titles after a controversial draw in their first meeting.

However, later that year in 1999, Lewis managed to become the undisputed heavyweight champion after winning by unanimous decision, maintaining his lineal status until his retirement following a sixth-round victory over Vitali Klitschko.

However, already in 1996, many believed that the Briton should have suffered another defeat, this time to Ray Mercer, who had briefly held the WBO title in 1991.

The American eventually vacated the belt and was defeated by Larry Holmes the following year before losing a 10-round unanimous decision to Holyfield in 1995.

“Merciless” then faced Lewis in a battle between two Olympic gold medalists, this time suffering a highly controversial defeat by a 10-round majority.

I’m talking to James SlaterMercer insisted that even Lewis doubted he deserved to win their competition.

“Yeah, I won that fight, man. He admitted it to me. He knows, a fighter knows. I won that fight. He told me, ‘I know you’re going to win.’ I told him, ‘Where’s my half of your check!’

“He said OK. Every time I see him, I tell him I’m still waiting! They were preparing him for the fight [Mike] Tyson. That’s what happened and that’s why they gave him the win.

As it happened, Lewis didn’t face Mike Tyson until 2002, when he secured victory after the eighth round.

Instead, after the controversy with Mercer, there was a rematch with McCall, whom he stopped for the WBC title.

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