Boxing
Eddie Hearn Strikingly Attacks Dana White: ‘Come Into the Ring and I’ll Show You’
Published
2 months agoon
Eddie Hearn has heard enough. And on Tuesday, he made sure everyone knew it.
In a wildly witty interview with IFLTV and another performance Ariel Helwani showthe president of Matchroom Boxing, in two separate interviews conducted within a few hours, interviewed Dan White, formally accepting the challenge from the UFC boss, outlining the financial terms he believed would be attached to the fight and predicting a knockout.
Since the launch of Zuffa Boxing, the exchanges between the two promoters have escalated rapidly, and White’s post-UFC 327 press conference this past weekend added fuel to the fire. In a conversation with the media in Miami, White sharply criticized his rival with characteristic bluntness.
“Eddie Hearn is in a coma. Eddie Hearn isn’t boxing anyone, he’s posting f***ing pictures of himself hitting the speed bag. It looks like it’s in sluggish motion,” White said. “I’ll tell you what. If that happened, me and Eddie Hearn are bums. We’d be the first fight of the night. These guys are talking like we’re going to be the headliners.
Hearn, appearing on IFLTV, had a very different view on card placement.
“He called me ap***y and that would be the start of the night. No, hell no! It’ll be the main event probably on Netflix,” Hearn said. “And if you generate… it will probably be the biggest fight right now, outside of AJ.”
The interviewer pressed him on the potential of a pay-per-view broadcast, pointing to Hearn’s previous statements about the benefits of a White fight. Hearn didn’t hesitate.
“You said categorically, you said it in one of my interviews, that he makes a minimum of 1 million purchases. Are you earnest? 1 million purchases is straightforward. EASY,” Hearn said. “Does Dana, who clearly knows this, think this will be the first fight of the night? I don’t know what he means.”
Financial framework
In addition to hurling insults, Hearn laid out the specific financial structure for the fight, treating the hypothetical fight like any other major promotion he has lined up.
“You put it in the pot 50-50. I know they’re not used to this model, but we’ll split the revenue. Me and him, 50-50,” Hearn said. “A broadcaster wants to sign up, they can take 10 or 15 percent of their pay-per-view. Eat what you kill. We’ll make $30 million per fight.”
This figure is significantly different from what has apparently been offered so far. Hearn referred to the $10 million figure set for the site and dismissed it as “very far off.” He also admitted that Turki Alalshikh was involved in discussions behind the scenes, although no formal offer had appeared on his desk.
“He thinks Turki has made some kind of offer, not an offer. He hasn’t made me an offer yet,” Hearn said. “Kind of disappointing. Dana White sure forgot a bit about this, didn’t he?”
White confirmed this during the UFC 327 press conference, telling reporters: “You don’t think Turki would try to make this fight? Of course he would. People are throwing offers everywhere.”
“I think I’m going to knock him out.”
If the IFLTV interview provided the financial framework, Hearn’s Monday appearance on The Ariel Helwani Show provided the knockout prediction.
“He keeps calling me hopeless, but I’m like, let’s see if I’m diseased,” Hearn told Helwani. “I mean, we would each make $30 million. What does he think, that I’m straightforward to touch? I’m very narrow, but I can handle it. I’ll get into good shape. I’m a gigantic lump and I think I’ll knock him out.”
Then, in perhaps the most sincere and self-aware moment of the entire media frenzy, Hearn accepted with extraordinary joy a different possible outcome.
“But if I get knocked out and make $30 million, it won’t be the saddest day in the world and people will probably find it pretty witty,” he said. “Now I’m very excited about it. After this conversation, I’m going to go to the gym.”
The formal acceptance was as direct as possible.
“He called me, I agree. I’m in. Let’s find out who the real dick is,” Hearn said. “Put me in, write down my name, find me a pair of shorts and I’ll go.”
“I’m Ready”
Returning to the IFLTV interview, Hearn was already building the case for his readiness with all the subtlety of a hammer. White mocked the swift bag footage that Hearn posted during training at Oleksandr Usyk’s camp in Spainand Hearn took it personally.
“We also saw your duffel bag and we said that was sluggish motion. Honestly, him and his guys, the cheeky bastards,” Hearn said before launching into what can only be described as a full scouting report on him. “I train every day. I’m torn to pieces. Fucking hand speed. Unbelievable. And I’m ready.”
The Matchroom boss then went into full Essex mode, with obvious relish referencing his amateur boxing past.
“You think Dana doesn’t know anything about Eddie Hearn, the Iceman from Billericay? Lake Meadows, 4 and 0, four by the way,” Hearn said, smiling. “Do you think Dana White will survive a frigid night on Brentwood High Street? Do you think?”
When the IFLTV interviewer jokingly offered to call Mike Tyson as a potential opponent, Hearn used it as the perfect opportunity to prove his point.
“So just because I want to fight Mike Tyson doesn’t mean it’s going to f**king happen,” Hearn said. “But Mike Tyson never called you out. In fact, Mike Tyson doesn’t even fucking know who you are, dude.” He paused long enough to deliver the punch line. “He challenged me to a fight, he said I wouldn’t fight him, and I’m telling you I’ll fight you. And I’m telling you I’ll beat him. Composed down. Show some respect to my name.”
More than a joke, less than a deal
What makes the Hearn-White animated so unusual is that it is situated in a veritable no man’s land, between promotional theater and real hostility. Their once-friendly relationship deteriorated rapidly after White signed Conor Benn from Matchroom to Zuffa Boxing for a reported $15 million. Hearn responded by recruiting UFC heavyweight champion Tom Aspinall to his newly formed Matchroom Talent Agency. Since then, the photos have been personal.
White maintained that if the fight did happen at all, it should be the opening card, not the headline, and that, at age 56, he should not be in the ring. However, he also stopped brief of closing the door definitively, confirming that real deals were being discussed and that Alalshikh is actively trying to make that happen.
Hearn, 10 years younger, at 46 and much taller, appears to be the one pushing harder. His closing argument on IFLTV leaned toward the absurd, yet somehow still sounded half-serious.
“Imagine a traveling army from Essex, 20,000 mighty, going to Vegas,” Hearn said. “I documented it. I trained my balls too. I’m ready. I’m fucking ready.”
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Oscar Collazo stops replacement Neider Valdez in the second round
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1 hour agoon
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Bisla was successful on counters in the first rounds while Gallardo pushed forward behind the high guard. The fight was frequently interrupted by clinching, with Bisla repeatedly tying up Gallardo as exchanges developed.
Gallardo began to have more success in the middle rounds. In the seventh, he landed a few punches to the body and then rocked Bisla with a left hook to the chin, after which Bisla caught himself and went to the canvas.
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Olympian Ruslan Abdullaev (5-0, 3 KO) knocked out Orestes Velazquez (8-2, 7 KO) in the fifth round of a scheduled 10-round fight.
Abdullaev scored a knockdown with a right hand to the side of the head in the first round. He controlled the next two rounds, forcing Velazquez on the defensive and steadily increasing his lead.
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Ken Hissner is a senior boxing journalist at Boxing News 24 with over 20 years of experience in the sport. Known for his in-ring reporting, detailed results and historical perspective, he provides authoritative coverage of boxing through the eras.
Boxing
David Benavidez names the greatest Mexican fighter of all time
Published
3 hours agoon
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David Benavidez has revealed who he sees as Mexico’s greatest ever player, believing the Hall of Famer is in a league of his own when it comes to his technical ability.
When talking about the greatest Mexican champions of all time, Julio Cesar Chavez is often the first name that comes to mind.
This was because he remained undefeated and became a world champion in three weight classes in his first 90 professional fights before ultimately retiring with a record of 107-6-2 (85 KOs).
Apart from the controversial draw with Pernell Whitaker in 1993, Chavez barely made a mistake during his unbeaten streak, which ended after a loss to Frank Randall in 1994.
However, while appreciating Chavez’s extraordinary achievements, Benavidez believes that Salvador Sanchez should be considered the greatest Mexican fighter of all time.
As the WBC featherweight champion, Sanchez defended his title nine times before he tragically died in a car accident in 1982.
He had previously stopped Azumah Nelson in the 15th round, and in 1981 he had another notable stoppage, this time against Wilfredo Gomez of Puerto Rico.
As a reigning champion who values technical mastery, Benavidez said Luis Parra why he considers Sanchez the greatest Mexican to ever cross that border.
“Honestly, number one is Salvador Sanchez. The technique he had – I don’t think there will ever be another player like Salvador Sanchez.
“Then Julio Cesar Chavez, Ricardo Lopez, Marco Antonio Barrera… Who else? Juan Manuel Marquez. Erik Morales. There are many great fighters. Oscar Valdez is also a great fighter. “El Vaquero” [Emanuel Navarrete] also. [Oscar De La Hoya]is in the top three.”
While De La Hoya was widely considered the sport’s No. 1 operator in the behind schedule 1990s, the Mexican-American is rarely mentioned in discussions specifically surrounding Mexican champions like Chavez and Sanchez.
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