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Oscar De La Hoya sums up David Benavidez’s skills after Ramirez won the title via KO

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Oscar De La Hoya sums up David Benavidez’s ability after Ramirez KO title win

Oscar De La Hoya had a lot to say after David Benavidez defeated Gilberto Ramirez on Saturday to become the three-division world champion.

Benavidez has proven he can carry his power up to 200 pounds he scored a sixth-round victory over Ramirez to win the WBA and WBO cruiserweight titles at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

It was a performance that caught the attention of all of boxing, and “The Mexican Monster” still holds the WBC lithe heavyweight title, having previously held the 168-pound world champion.

De La Hoya is Ramirez’s promoter, so he was ringside on Saturday to watch the situation unfold, and while he may have wanted his fighter to win, – he admitted in an interview with Fight Hub TV that it was a masterful performance by Benavidez.

“Attractive. Benavidez saw, massive hits, and the only shot Zurdo had was right in the middle. The speed was too brisk, Benavidez was too huge. The monster has been here for a long time. I’m very proud of him.”

Benavidez is currently expected to drop down to 175 pounds for his next fight, and De La Hoya also revealed what he thinks the next “Mexican Monster” fight should be.

“He has a lot of options. I think he is the man in this weight class now. Whoever fights him will have to wait in line… Benavidez is the right man now.”

Most fans would like to see an undisputed fight against unified lithe heavyweight champion Dmitry Bivol next, but first the Russian will face Michael Eifert on May 30 at the UGMK Arena in Yekaterinburg, Russia.

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Naoya Inoue wins $30 million at Tokyo Dome on May 2, US viewership declines

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Image: Naoya Inoue vs Junto Nakatani Hits $30M Gate, 500K PPVs Early

“Yahoo Japan confirms our previous report: over $30 million in Tokyo Dome event box office for Naoya Inoue vs Junto Nakatani,” said analyst JuliusJulianis in his X account.

“And with the PPV on Thursday, they already sold over 500,000 at $40 each, so they would probably sell a little more, 800,000 PPV.”

In the US, the fight was a standard subscription event rather than a PPV, likely to lessen the impact of the early morning start time. Early streaming data suggests a acute rise and fall in viewership, with viewership only peaking in the final four innings as East Coast fans began to wake up.

Without the marketing push from the Las Vegas slot machine, the uncontested 122-pound bout remained niche interest. Most casual fans were preoccupied with the David Benavidez vs. Gilberto Ramirez cruiserweight fight later that evening, which was the headline story in the Western media.

The super bantamweight division remains a tough sell to the American public. Despite Inoue’s P4P status, the lack of a “villain” or recognizable domestic rival makes it challenging for him to break out of the “hardcore” bubble.

While Inoue is a superstar in Tokyo, his reach in the U.S. is still circumscribed due to the “out of sight, out of mind” nature of his Japanese residences. To the casual observer, 122 pounds is seen as a developmental milestone rather than a goal.

For boxing purists, Nakatani’s victory was simply the last hurdle before the real danger began. The consensus among the hardcore community is that Inoue has “cleared” 122 weights and is now overstaying his welcome in a comfortable weight class.

Pressure is mounting to move up to the 126-pound (featherweight) weight class, with three champions waiting:

Rafael Espinoza: “Divino” has terrible height for Inoue and is at a disadvantage.

Luis Alberto Lopez: Known for its unconventional power and durability.

Bruce Carrington: The rising tech star, many believe, has the tools to outsmart the “Monster.”

The event was a financial triumph with over $30 million in the gate and over $500,000 in purchases domestically, but it failed to move the needle in the US. For Inoue to truly conquer the West, he may have to stop being the A-side in the Tokyo Dome and start being a contender at 126 pounds against the featherweight Lions.

Will a $30 million payday in Japan be enough to keep Inoue at 122 pounds, or will the lure of “all-time great” status force him to move up to featherweight and put his undefeated record on the line?

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David Benavidez Watches Vegas Date September 14; Canelo away

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Image: David Benavidez eyes Sept. 14 Las Vegas date with Canelo abroad

David Benavidez plans to return to Las Vegas on September 14, Mexico’s conventional Independence Day weekend, and Saul Alvarez is scheduled to fight in Saudi Arabia.

After his stoppage victory over Gilberto Ramirez, Benavidez said he intended to set his sights on the September date that has long been associated with Canelo’s appearances in Las Vegas.


“I think it’s in the best interest of my career to continue trying to fight on May 5 and September 14,” Benavidez said, via Ring. “Canelo is there in Saudi Arabia, so he leaves it open to me. It’s a great date, we gave people a great show and I deserve it.”

Benavidez headlined Las Vegas for the first time over Cinco de Mayo weekend and made it clear he wanted to stay energetic at two sporting events associated with Mexican boxing fans in the United States.

David Benavidez built his latest schedule around Las Vegas, where most of his fights took place, and said he prefers to continue fighting in the United States.

“I have been a professional for 13 years, since I was 16,” Benavidez said. “I started from the bottom and worked my way to the top, calling for the best of the best. I did it the challenging way. Nothing was ever given to me. So now that I’m here, I think I deserve to fight on this card on this day.”

Canelo has fought multiple times over the past decade on Cinco de Mayo and Mexican Independence Day weekends in Las Vegas, but his September fight will take place in Riyad, opening up the opportunity for the fight to come to the U.S. market.

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Categories Canelo Alvarez and David Benavidez

Last update: 2026/05/04 at 19:52

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The former world champion claims he would have knocked out Terence Crawford if he had agreed to fight him

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Former world champion says he would’ve KO’d Terence Crawford if he had agreed to face him

Terence Crawford hung up the gloves without suffering a defeat, but there is one former world champion who believes he would have knocked out “Bud” if he had agreed to the fight.

Crawford’s superstar has skyrocketed in his recent fights, becoming the undisputed multi-division champion after a spectacular stoppage victory over welterweight rival Errol Spence Jr to finally gain the recognition his skills deserved.

The victory over Israil Madrimov further confirmed Crawford’s talent, but it was true his historic triumph over Canelo Alvarez this earned the Omaha operator recognition as a true great.

However, before moving up to super welterweight and fighting Madrimov, Crawford was linked to a fight with rising 147-pounder Jaron “Boots” Ennis, who would later become the unified welterweight world champion.

I’m talking to Daily Mail.When asked about their fight, the Philadelphia native shared his belief that he would knock out Crawford if they ever came to blows.

“[It would have ended with] I, victorious. I stop [him and] anyone, for sure.

“It’s not like that [just] what should I say, this is what I know. I am like this. Anyone who knows me and is around me knows that the bigger the opportunity, the higher the stakes and stakes – you know how it is. I start revising and I get nasty.

Although Ennis believes Crawford refused to fight him at the time, “Bud” maintains that Ennis had the opportunity to face him earlier in his career before he fought Shawn Porter in 2020.

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