Boxing
Ward says Haney still needs a rematch with Garcia
Published
3 weeks agoon
Ward says the most critical fight for Haney is his next meeting with Ryan Garcia.
“I think this is a fight he has to take,” Ward told The Ring. “You’re right that from a legacy standpoint, no one can say anything. I think it will make him a much better warrior because he’ll be able to deal with his personal demons.”
Haney and Garcia first fought in April 2024. Garcia scored three knockdowns and received a majority decision, but the result was later changed to a no-contest after failing drug tests. Garcia was also overweight and ineligible to win Haney’s WBC 140-pound title.
Since then, the rivalry has remained unfinished. A second fight was discussed after both fights appeared on the same May 2025 card in Times Square, but Garcia’s loss to Rolando Romero scuppered those plans.
Ward also said Garcia looked hazardous again after his last win, which only increases the demand for a second meeting.
“Ryan Garcia looked amazing in his last fight,” Ward said. “The hands are still quick and the power is still there. This fight sells itself. I think it’s a fight both of them should have right now.”
It’s effortless for a retired fighter to tell an busy fighter to “just take the fight.” Ward doesn’t have to face the 2026 reality of pay-per-view splits, Allegiant Stadium seat fees or the massive legal and medical problems that arose after the first fight.
Andre Ward is not at the negotiating table and he’s certainly not the one putting his health or legacy on the line. Boxing is a business and Ryan has no obligation to enter into a deal that he feels underestimates his drawing power just because an elder statesman representing the sport thinks it is good for his soul.
Ryan had just dominated Mario Barrios in February to become the WBC welterweight champion. He has his own lane now and probably has more commercial clout than Haney. If Haney’s camp tries to stick to a 50/50 split or take the lion’s share, Ryan has every right to leave.
Dan Ambrose is a boxing journalist at Boxing News 24, respected for his direct analysis and extensive coverage of the global fighting landscape. His reports focus on the most critical fights, division development and the most discussed stories in sports.
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Boxing
Operation Junto Nakatani delays Naoya Inoue’s rematch
Published
20 minutes agoon
May 11, 2026
Junto Nakatani is reportedly scheduled to undergo surgery this week to repair a left orbital fracture he suffered in his loss to Naoya Inoue on May 2, which could delay a rematch between the two undefeated stars until 2027.
InsideRingShow on Monday reported that Nakatani’s coach, Rudy Hernandez, confirmed the injury to The Ring reporter Mike Coppinger. The fracture reportedly occurred delayed in the fight after an accidental clash of heads in the 10th round, and Inoue later attacked the damaged area during the final rounds.
Despite the injury, Nakatani completed all 12 rounds, losing by unanimous decision at the Tokyo Dome in one of the biggest fights of the year.
The surgery complicates increasingly constant talks about a possible rematch. Hernandez had already publicly pushed for a second fight, after which he made it clear that he was confident.
“If we don’t beat him in the rematch, I will never coach players again,” Hernandez said recently.
“I’ll quit.”
Inoue has also left the door open for another fight with Nakatani, although she has several other options open to her, including a possible weight change and a much-discussed confrontation with Jesse Rodriguez.
The injury now changes the schedule. Orbital fractures often require several months of recovery before players can return to full sparring and contact training. Hernandez reportedly expects Nakatani to resume training in about three to four months, but a return to fight Inoue before the end of 2026 seems much less certain right now.
The delay could mean a challenging decision for Inoue. He can wait until Nakatani is fully recovered, or continue working his way up the division while the momentum from their first fight is still fresh.
Their first meeting was a major commercial success in Japan and resulted in one of the toughest fights in Inoue’s career. There is a demand for a rematch. The moment suddenly may not be there.
Robert Segal is a boxing reporter at Boxing News 24 with over a decade of experience covering fight news, previews and analysis. Known for his first-hand reporting and in-ring perspective, he delivers authoritative coverage of champions, challengers and emerging talent from around the world.
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Last update: 2026/05/11 at 16:03
Boxing
Adrien Broner is about to make the worst decision of his life
Published
1 hour agoon
May 11, 2026
Adrien Broner may have finally found a way to rebuild his life outside of boxing. The problem is, it might also be the worst decision he’s ever made.
Over the past few weeks, Broner has found modern life on stream alongside Deen The Great.
Some of what Broner said was truly inspiring. Some moments reminded fans why Broner became such a huge personality.
The money flowing through the broadcasts was also significant, including one $15,000 donation as viewers rallied behind the former four-weight world champion.
For the first time in a long time, Broner looked financially stable, motivated and surrounded by people who were trying to pull him up instead of dragging him down.
Deen deserves recognition because the past few years have been complex for the Cincinnati native.
World Boxing News has thoroughly documented Broner’s decline, especially since the breakdown of his relationship with Don King following the Blair Cobbs defeat.
At several points, Broner openly admitted that he was returning to street life, while publicly asking for one last chance to turn the situation around.
Now another chance has come.
The danger is that it may also feed the very thing that has repeatedly threatened to destroy it.
Adrien Broner broadcast
Despite the positive outlook on Broner’s streaming success, one detail cannot be ignored.
The drinking never stopped.
Broner appeared on the broadcast almost every night under the influence of alcohol, sometimes to the point of oblivion, while alcohol was constantly available at home, clubs and events associated with the content lifestyle.
That’s why the latest trend seems much more threatening than people want to admit.
Over the past few years, Broner has opened up several times about his struggle with alcohol addiction. But the environment around him now revolves almost entirely around nightlife, streaming chaos, viral clips, and cameras going off at all hours of the day.
The issue is no longer whether Broner can make money outside of boxing.
Clearly it can.
The problem is whether turning real life into lasting content while struggling with alcoholism will push him even further away from stability.
Worst decision
There is increasing talk that Broner will finally get his own streaming home and fully enter the same world that Deen lives in every day.
From a financial perspective, this opportunity makes sense, but from a public perspective, it could prove to be a disaster.
Because if the current pattern continues, viewers won’t just watch Adrien Broner rebuild. They will watch the same destructive cycle unfold in real time with an even larger audience.
That’s why some of the recent clips stopped being amusing and started feeling uncomfortable.
The information circulating on the Internet that Broner was being “released due to content” aroused emotions for good reason. People are starting to see the difference between helping someone and profiting from their instability.
None of this changes the fact that Deen seems to genuinely care about Broner and helped him when few others were willing.
However, caring and enabling can sometimes occur in the same room, and that’s the threatening part.
Because Broner finally has another platform, another audience, and another chance to rebuild his life.
The real danger is that it intends to replace one addiction with another – and this time the entire Internet will be watching the phenomenon live.
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.
Boxing
Gilberto Ramirez recalls the David Benavidez fight in his first statement since his KO defeat
Published
2 hours agoon
May 11, 2026
Gilberto Ramirez confirmed his future following his loss to David Benavidez, while also addressing the elbow controversy during their cruiserweight clash earlier this month.
“Zurdo” entered the bout as the defending unified champion, but was ultimately vacated of his WBO and WBA world titles following a sixth-round stoppage.
The emphatic finish came thanks to Benavidez’s sustained attack ahead becoming world champion in three divisions.
Even though it was his first fight at 200 pounds, the “Mexican Monster” showed incredible composure and hand speed, causing an unpleasant swelling to appear on his opponent’s right eye.
Ramirez, to his credit, showed great spirit in fighting through pain, but was ultimately defeated by an inherently smaller man.
Since their rivalry, video footage shows that Benavidez elbowed himself during one exchange, causing a slow-motion replay of the incident to circulate on social media.
In response, the 29-year-old insisted it was completely unintentional, although some observers tried to accuse him of using unfair tactics.
Ramirez, however, urged fans not to discredit Benavidez’s performance, while explaining w post on social media that he intends to “come back stronger.”
“Saturday didn’t go as I planned. The loss is painful – the pain is real. But I will sit with it, learn from it and come back stronger. This is not the end.
“I take my hat off to David… His success didn’t come overnight and that only motivates me more. Don’t discredit what he brought – he was the better man that night and I have nothing but respect for him and his team for the preparation they put in. Elbow or not, it’s going to be a fight at the end of the night.”
“If we ever share this ring again, I’ll be better prepared — and I’ll get my revenge. For now, I’m spending time with my family and enjoying the summer.”
At 34, it’s strenuous to predict where Ramirez will go next, and a rematch with Benavidez seems far from realistic.
Instead, the WBC featherlight heavyweight champion has entered preliminary talks for an undisputed showdown with Dmitry Bivol, who must first defeat mandatory challenger Michael Eifert on May 30.
Operation Junto Nakatani delays Naoya Inoue’s rematch
Adrien Broner is about to make the worst decision of his life
Daniel Dubois & Fabio Wardley FACEOFF #boxing #wardleydubois #boxingnews
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