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PBC claims the rights to Cinco de Mayo along with Benavidez-Zurdo

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Premier Boxing Champions has faced a lot of criticism since moving from Showtime to Amazon Prime Video – lower production, inconsistent schedule, episodes where boxing’s deepest squad sat idly while the rest of the sport raced to the front. The Cinco de Mayo weekend card that PBC is preparing on May 2 at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas is a direct response to all of this.

Undefeated two-division world champion David “El Monstro” Benavidez (31-0, 25 KO) will move up to 200 pounds to face unified WBA and WBO cruiserweight champion Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramírez (48-1, 30 KO) in the main event. PBC payment available on Prime Videowith DAZN.com also streaming. PBC announced the full undercard on Wednesday, adding a WBA super middleweight world title fight as the co-main event and two additional all-Mexican fights to a lineup that now rivals anything the promotion has assembled since arriving on Prime Video.

Main Event: Benavidez chases history at cruiserweight

Benavidez-Zurdo is a fight that grew out of years of fighting in the gym. The two sparred extensively, and both spoke publicly about these sessions with the mutual respect that usually means the rounds were real. Benavidez admitted as much at a February press conference in Las Vegas: “We had so many great sparring sessions and I told Zurdo then that one day we would have to do it on pay-per-view. Now we fight for two titles on May 2.”

For Benavidez, the stakes go well beyond adding a third division title to his collection – although that in itself would be significant. The 29-year-old from Phoenix became the youngest ever super middleweight world champion at the age of 20, defeating Ronald Gavril for the vacant WBC belt in 2017. He lost the title twice outside the ring – once to a positive cocaine test, once to the scale – and has rebuilt his career with a resume that leaves no room for debate. Caleb Plant via unanimous decision. Demetrius Andrade stopped in the sixth place. Oleksandr Gvozdyk dethroned in the fight for the WBC lithe heavyweight title. David Morrell Jr., undefeated at the time, scored the unification bout. Anthony Yarde was demolished in seven years during its last outing last November in Riyad.

Now he bypasses the likely path to Dmitry Bivol and Artur Beterbiev at 175 to jump into Ramírez’s 25-pound division. His father and coach, Jose Benavidez Sr., put the move in characteristically blunt terms: “David Benavidez doesn’t just have to win, he also has to show up to prove he can beat the Bivols and Beterbievs.”

Ramírez, 34, from Mazatlán, Sinaloa, earned his position the classic way — by going where the lanes are. He held the WBO super middleweight title for two years beginning in 2016, making five defenses, including two wins over Jesse Hart and victories over then-undefeated challengers Alexis Angulo and Habib Ahmed. His only loss was to Bivol in the lithe heavyweight division in 2022. Instead of staying at 175 pounds and fighting for what’s left, Ramírez moved up to cruiserweight and quickly took over the division, winning the WBA title by unanimous decision over Arsene Goulamirian in March 2024 and adding the WBO belt by defeating Chris Billam-Smith in November. He defended both teams last June against former champion Yuniel Dorticos before undergoing shoulder surgery. Benavidez will be his first opponent upon his return.

The matchup is historically unprecedented: the first-ever Mexican-Mexican championship fight to be held at over 168 pounds. The combined record of Benavidez and Ramírez is 79-1, with 55 knockouts. Both are comfortable at range and inside, and both possess the strength and power that tend to produce fights that fans remember. Ramírez has the size, experience at the weight and a championship pedigree at 200. Benavidez has the speed, the engine and a growing sense that he is close to becoming the face of the sport.

“I feel like I’m one step away from becoming the face of boxing,” Benavidez said at a news conference. “And if Zurdo wins, his stock will soar. Greatness awaits us on the other side of the tunnel.”

Card With Depth

On Wednesday, PBC rounded out the understated card with three fights that reflect real investment in the event, not filler.

The co-main event will be a legal fight for the world title. WBA super middleweight champion Armando “Toro” Reséndiz (16-2, 11 KO) will make his first defense against former 154-pound world champion Jaime Munguía (45-2, 35 KO). Reséndiz (27) won the belt in a painful way — upsetting Caleb Plant by split decision last May during a performance in which he defeated the former champion 186-108, according to CompuBox. Trained by Manny Robles, the Nayarit native displayed relentless pressure and bodywork that exhausted technically superior opponents. Munguía, 29, of Tijuana, is one of Mexico’s most popular energetic fighters – a former 154-pound titleholder with five defenses and a reputation as a crowd pleaser. He failed to make an undisputed title shot against Canelo Alvarez in 2024, but a victory over Reséndiz would have made him a two-division champion and put him back in the world title talks at 168.

Oscar Duarte (30-2-1, 23 KOs), a 30-year-old from Parral, Chihuahua who is knocking on the door at 140 pounds, will face powerful Tijuana brawler Angel Fierro (23-4-2, 18 KOs) in a 10-round super lightweight bout. Duarte is on a four-fight winning streak and was scheduled to face IBF champion Richardson Hitchins before an illness on fight day ended his chance. Fierro is coming off a February 2025 war with Isaac “Pitbull” Cruz that has been on many fight of the year lists.

The first pay-per-view bout features two undefeated Mexican fighters: Isaac “Puro México” Lucero (18-0, 14 KO) vs. Alan Sandoval (30-0-1, 19 KO) in a 10-round super welterweight fight. Sandoval, who has defeated 13 of his last 14 opponents, will make his U.S. debut. At least one additional undercard fight is expected to be announced.

PBC Statement on Cinco de Mayo

Cinco de Mayo weekend in Las Vegas has been the most valuable real estate in sports for decades, a tradition built by Oscar De La Hoya, Julio César Chávez and most recently expanded by Canelo Alvarez’s decade-long reign. With Canelo sidelined by injury, the holiday’s calling card was the open field, and PBC ran into it.

The event is co-promoted by Golden Boy Promotions and Sampson Boxing in association with TGB Promotions, a cross-promotional arrangement that reflects the realities of current boxing dealmaking. “I am very excited about Cinco de Mayo weekend this year,” said Oscar De La Hoya. “These guys have 55 knockouts under their belt. They won’t bore the crowd. They’ll put on a show.”

It is worth paying attention to the distribution configuration. The PPV will be available on Prime Video – PBC’s home platform – but also on DAZN.com, a first for PBC. In a sport where platform fragmentation remains the biggest obstacle to fan engagement, staging the same PPV on two major streaming services is a practical concession to reality. Conventional cable and satellite TV ordering remains possible as well. The consumer still pays the PPV price regardless of platform, but the additional access point through DAZN – which currently includes Matchroom, Queensberry, Golden Boy and Top Rank – expands the potential audience.

The May 2 event comes five weeks after PBC’s March 28 PPV, headlined by Sebastian Fundora vs. Keith Thurman at the MGM Grand Garden Arena. Two pay-per-view main events in five weeks is the kind of schedule that PBC critics have deemed necessary for the promotion. Whether this marks a lasting change or a seasonal blowout remains to be seen, but the product PBC will present for Cinco de Mayo weekend — undefeated pound-for-pound divisional contenders set to challenge the unified champion, a co-main event for the world title and a pan-Mexico support at T-Mobile Arena on the most iconic weekend in sports — is the strongest argument the promotion has made for itself since arriving on Prime Video.

The pay-per-view service starts at 8:00 PM ET / 5:00 PM PT.

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Boxing

Dave Allen weighed at his lightest in seven years, causing ‘biggest brawl in British boxing history’ in match against Hrgovic

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Dave Allen weighs lightest in 7 years to produce ‘biggest upset in British boxing history’ against Hrgovic

Dave Allen kept his word and will enter the fight with Filip Hrgovic in decent shape.

The fan-favorite Briton has been emotional throughout his career, often revealing after defeats that he could have trained harder and prepared better.

This weekend he will be looking to claim the biggest scalp of his campaign in Hrgovica world-class, well-trained and sturdy Croatian, whose only defeat was against the up-to-date world champion Daniel Dubois.

Although he still considers the main event at London’s O2 Arena against Lucas Browne to be the biggest achievement of his career, Allen will be fighting in front of 10,000 fans at the Keepmoat Stadium in Doncaster, and the importance of this event has not crossed his mind.

He clearly has a tough trainer, tipping the scales at 248.8 pounds. This is an impressive drop compared to the 271 he weighed in his last appearance – in February he defeated Karim Berredjem in the first round. In fact, this is the lowest weight Allen has registered since his 2019 loss to David Price.

Speaking about the transformation, “Dazzling” Dave said:

“I’ve just eaten less chocolate, less sweets… People talk about sacrifices but I’m actually very elated. I spend a lot of time with my family, my children and boxing for a living. Everyone here doing a 9-5, it’s a sacrifice. It wouldn’t be fair to talk about sacrifice, I live my dreams every day. Sometimes it’s difficult in the gym, sometimes I feel like eating something, but I’ll go out in front of 10,000 people in Doncaster against one of the best heavyweights in the world. world. It was my dream and I will make it come true soon.

Regardless of his shape, most consider Hrgović too gigantic a mountain for Allen to climb. He is aware of this but believes it could cause one of the worst disturbances ever seen on British shores.

“He’s a great fighter, but I’m not afraid of him. He’s been trying to tell me all week that I don’t want to look at him. I don’t care about Filip Hrgovic. It’s a boxing match.

“On paper I shouldn’t even be in the ring with him, but I feel tomorrow at Donny’s will be a special night where I’ll experience one of the biggest upsets in British boxing history.”

If Allen fails to disrupt the odds and Hrgovic emerges unscathed, he is widely expected to face Moses Itauma in August.

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David Morrell says a career doesn’t end after a KO defeat

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Image: David Morrell Says Career Isn’t Over After Zak Chelli Knockout

David Morrell says his career isn’t over after his knockout loss to Zak Chelli last Saturday in England, but questions are already being raised about whether Morrell should return to 168 pounds after another tough run at lithe heavyweight.

Morrell was stopped in the 10th and final round after a competitive bout on the Fabio Wardley vs. Daniel Dubois heavyweight undercard. The defeat was Morrell’s second defeat in his last three fights following a decision loss to David Benavidez in February 2025.


“This doesn’t mean David Morrell’s career is over,” Morrell said on the I shownstagram. We must take this as a lesson and move on with greater strength.

“We’ll be back soon and we’ll have more news for you.”

Morrell also assured fans that he was recovering quickly from the knockout.

“For those who are worried: thank God, I am well and robust.

“A person is not measured by the number of times he falls, but by the number of times he gets up.

“This is the beginning of a fresh stage, not the end of the race.”

The loss to Chelli increased criticism of Morrell’s move to 175 pounds. Since moving up from super middleweight in August 2024, Morrell entered 2025 undefeated, but has now lost two of his last three fights since moving up to lithe heavyweight.

Morrell dropped a split decision victory over previously undefeated Imam Khataev last July before losing to David Benavidez and being stopped by Zak Chelli.

Boxing analyst Chris Mannix was among those who suggested Morrell may need to rebuild at super middleweight after the defeat.

The 28-year-old Cuban currently has a record of 12-2 with nine knockouts, having entered 2025 undefeated and viewed as one of the most perilous newborn fighters in boxing.

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Last update: 2026/05/14 at 23:49

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Coach Terence Crawford BoMac admits that one of the players “had his number”: “We had to take it away”

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Terence Crawford trainer BoMac admits one fighter ‘had his number’: “We had to pick it up”

Terence Crawford has faced select top-class players throughout his career, but there was one player who coach Brian “BoMac” McIntyre deemed a real threat to his protégé’s dominance.

As the undisputed champion of three divisions, it’s safe and sound to say that “Bud” never shied away from a formidable challenge, even if it meant putting himself at a significant disadvantage.

His fight with Canelo Alvarez, for example, saw the extraordinary technician move up two weight classes and dethroned the Mexican with a remarkable unanimous decision victory last September.

Similarly, many felt that Crawford was clearly the underdog before us his fight with Errol Spence Jr. in 2023only to score a ruthless ninth-round finish and unify all four major welterweight titles.

But according to longtime head coach “BoMac,” Crawford came closest to his only professional loss in 2019, six years before he retired from the sport.

The American was then defending his WBO welterweight title against Egidijus Kavaliauskas, also known as “Mean Machine”, who was not only undefeated, but also boasted an impressive knockout to victory ratio.

I’m talking to Podcast on the front pageMcIntyre credited Kavaliauskas with forcing Crawford to change his tactics after the third round, when “Bud” jumped out of the ring after being deemed a no-knockdown.

“That motherfucker just kept coming and coming. He didn’t stop. For the first few rounds, he only had Bud’s number because he was punching before Bud and punching after Bud.

“It was like, ‘Damn, dog – you [Crawford] I have to pick it up.”

Ultimately, Crawford managed to secure a ninth-round victory over Kavaliauskas, but he had to dig deep into his tool bag to win. The record-breaking star later said that “Mean Machine” was one of the hardest hits he had ever faced.

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