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Gervonta Davis’ career is no longer fully in his hands

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Gervonta Davis wearing a black robe before his ring walk at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

For much of the end of 2025, it seemed like Gervonta Davis was managing the timing of his own exit from professional boxing.

He spoke openly about leaving, questioned what the sport still offered him and gravitated toward exhibition-style opportunities rather than time-honored title paths.

At the time, the direction seemed well thought out.

Planned exit, then loss of control

Players change their minds. Some people retire and come back. Others step away for a while before deciding they want to come back. This cycle is well known in boxing.

What’s different about Davis’ situation isn’t the idea of ​​fighting again, but how much control he now has over whether that happens.

Recent reports suggest that Davis is looking to restart his career. However, there is no confirmed opponent and no date or schedule for the promotion has been announced.

In a sport built around scheduling and certainty, this absence matters.

Miami-Dade County Courthouse

Availability becomes a limiting factor

Currently, Davis is struggling with legal issues that directly affect his ability to return to the ring. He was released on bond in Miami and has a separate, energetic warrant out of Baltimore.

If this situation is not resolved, the consequence is uncomplicated. A competitor who cannot guarantee availability risks losing his or her license, schedule or entry into the competition.

Simply put, freedom becomes part of the equation. The legal process will continue as it does, and boxing will not wait for it.

Sports commissions need certainty. Promoters and broadcasters plan months in advance. When doubt replaces reliability, the cards move on without the warrior’s input.

When boxing moves forward

The lightweight division isn’t stopping. The WBA’s decision to remove Davis as champion has already shown how quickly the situation can change.

Rankings change. Mandatory situations change. Opponents have other plans. When this happens, the comeback will be less about skill and more about timing.

Davis is at an age where elite players can still produce definitive results. But the history of boxing is clear. It is sporadic to regain the best years lost due to inactivity.

The window does not close with the announcement. It closes when there is no longer room for an individual in sport.

In the industry, players are judged not only on performance, but also on availability. When uncertainty replaces schedule, leverage decreases and momentum shifts elsewhere.

At the end of 2025, Davis seemed to have closed a chapter by his own choice. By early 2026, that choice may no longer be his alone.

No judgment is required to understand what’s at stake. If a clear path back to competition cannot be established, boxing will continue as it always has – forward.

In practice, this is how many careers end. Not a goodbye, but an absence that silently becomes indefinite.

About the author

Phil Jay is the editor-in-chief of World Boxing News (WBN), boxing veteran with over 15 years of experience. Read the full biography.

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Boxing

World champion claims Conor Benn pulled out of fight after ‘setting up the whole deal’

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World champion says Conor Benn pulled out of fight after the ‘whole deal was set up’

Conor Benn could be ready for a world title fight against Ryan Garcia, but there is one reigning world champion who claims the Briton recently pulled out of a title shot even though “the whole deal has already been done.”

Benn made his Zuffa Boxing debut earlier this month. defeating Regis Prograis in a 150-pound catchweight bout – his first fight at sub-154 pounds in four years – and now he looks ready to fight for world titles at welterweight.

Although his position as mandatory challenger for the WBC title put him in line to face Garcia, WBA 147-pound champion Rolando Romero claimed that Benn had withdrawn from the title fight.

I’m talking to Fighting Hub TV“Rolly” explained why he doubted the Garcia fight would happen and revealed that he expected to fight Benn until “The Destroyer” changed his mind.

“Conor Benn waived me, we had the whole deal done, we were supposed to fight on May 30 in Fresh York for my world title, and then he just disappeared out of nowhere.

Conor Benn was there begging to fight me. By the way, we already had everything planned, but he’s in Fresh York trying to create all this fuss and stuff – he did it for advantage. Same with this, he can do this with Ryan too to gain strength.

“They’re out there trying to do all this stuff, I don’t do this imitation beef. That throws me off, you go and do all this imitation beef and then you come here and act like a gigantic, tough guy and then you run away and don’t fight.”

“Maybe he was doing it with Ryan because Ryan would have knocked him out cool.”

Garcia and Benn could collide this summer in Las Vegas when Benn returns to the welterweight division in a direct world title fight.

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Jermell Charlo picks Tim Tszyu to defeat Errol Spence Jr

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Image: Jermell Charlo Picks Tim Tszyu to Beat Errol Spence Jr

Charlo then launched into a longer explanation, questioning what version of Spence would emerge after his years outside the ring and claiming that style favored Tszyu.

“He has little defense. Errol will come in softly. He doesn’t really move his head. Tim moves his head. He throws a few stone hay shots. “I just follow my fighting style and be realistic.”

Jermell looked like a war veteran and described the fight, giving reasons why he chose Tszyu to beat Spence.

For years, these two towers were the “Twin Towers” of Derrick James’ gym in Dallas. They shared celebrations, sweat and secrets. The problem is that Errol was very vocal about these sessions, essentially telling the world that he was “teaching” Jermell.

For a guy like Charlo, who carries enormous pride and has built his “Lions Only” brand on being the alpha, having a former teammate claim dominance over him is a stain he can’t wash off in a sanctioned fight.

Having never fought professionally, these gym stories are the only narrative that exists and you have to wonder if it’s still eating at him.

Charlo also indicated the location, with the fight expected to take place in Australia.

“He’s going to Australia there. I see Tim Tszyu winning that fight,” Jermell said.

X is having a field day because Charlo looks like a man who sat in a dim room and watched Spence’s training videos over and over again. Fans call this the “villain arc” energy. He spoke quickly, louder and louder, and seemed personally interested in the answer.

During the prophecy, Jermell had a diabolical look in his eyes, as if he were performing a technical exorcism on his elderly rival.

When he has such wide eyes and high energy intensity, he tends to rely on his “Only Lions” personality, which thrives on perceived disrespect. In this case, the disrespect is the years in which Errol Spence Jr. he claimed to be the “substantial brother” at the gym.

“I don’t have to fight Errol Spence and I don’t care about fighting Errol Spence,” Jermell said.

Jermell is essentially using Tim Tszyu as a proxy. Since Charlo hasn’t fought at 154 pounds since 2022, he needs Spence to lose to someone else to prove that the elderly era (the Derrick James era) is over. If Tszyu destroys Spence, it will validate Charlo’s technical criticism and make his inactivity look like a calculated move rather than a decline.

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Roy Jones Jr sums up Tyson Fury’s chances of beating top-ranked Lennox Lewis

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Roy Jones Jr sums up Tyson Fury’s chances of beating a prime Lennox Lewis

Britain has produced some great heavyweights in recent years, ending an almost century-long curse and seeing success in the division ever since. Predicting the outcome of the clash between two of the best fighters in the country, Lennox Lewis and Tyson Fury, Roy Jones Jr said it would be a “great fight”.

Bob Fitzsimmons became the first British world heavyweight champion in 1897, and he and Jones remain the only two fighters in boxing history to have won both middleweight and heavyweight world titles.

However, Great Britain struggled for success in the division after the Fitzsimmons fight, unable to claim heavyweight supremacy until Lennox Lewis became WBC world champion in 1992. Britain has since crowned its title 11th world heavyweight championFabio Wardley, who follows in the footsteps of Fury and Anthony Joshua.

In an interview with Grosvenor CasinoJones said he would give Lewis an advantage over the “Gypsy King” if they met in their prime.

“Tyson Fury vs. Lennox Lewis? That would be a great fight, but my first thought was Lennox Lewis because of his power. But my second thought was also that Tyson Fury was great at making adjustments. I would go with Lennox Lewis.”

At least one heavyweight world title is expected to remain in a Briton’s hands for some time, with Daniel Dubois scheduled to face another Briton, Fabio Wardley, for the WBO belt next month.

In the meantime, we hope 21-year-old Moses Itauma can continue Britain’s success for many years to come, with the youngster considered by many to be the hottest prospect in boxing.

As for Fury, he is focused on the UK-wide megafight with Joshua – their own ‘Battle of Britain’ after Lennox fought Frank Bruno in 1993.

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