At one point Floyd Schofield Jr. he encouraged a duel between them.
“But fuck this boy. Fuck him right here. Can we get it in 2026? 2027?”
The clip quickly spread across social media, but many fans focused less on the possibility of a fight and more on Davis’ size.
Several commentators argued that Keyshawn had outgrown the lower weight classes and should compete at welterweight rather than discussing fights against naturally smaller opponents.
“This guy shouldn’t be fighting anything lower than 147, lol.”
“Keyshawn should have had a low score of 147.”
“Keyshawn looks much bigger than Roach. 147-154 Keyshawn. Leave the lower weight classes alone.”
Others pointed to Davis’ recent weight issues as evidence that the upward move is overdue.
“And you all wondered why this weight tyrant couldn’t gain weight many times over.”
“Why don’t these fighters want to fight in the right weight class?”
The comments reflect a growing view among some fans that Davis’ future may be at welterweight. The former lightweight had failed to make weight in two of his last three fights, and many observers believed the size difference between him and Roach was evident in ring footage.
While talk of a future fight has generated interest, most of the discussion has focused on whether Davis should target bigger opponents instead.
Dan Ambrose is a boxing journalist at Boxing News 24, respected for his direct analysis and extensive coverage of the global fight landscape. His reports focus on the most significant fights, division development and the most discussed stories in sports.
He was stripped of his WBA lightweight title and named champion on hiatus, but reports in recent weeks suggest the 31-year-old will return to competition at some stage later this year. probation violation announced last week may change that.
If he returns in 2026, he has been ordered to face WBA number one contender Floyd Schofield, but now another world champion has revealed he would be willing to face ‘Tank’.
The fighter in question is O’Shaquie Foster, who defended his WBC super featherweight title on Saturday with a majority decision victory over Ray Ford.
In addition to calling up Davis, Foster also discussed several other possible options.
“Shakur, Lamont, whoever. Hitchins is already on the run, so I can’t get him. Whoever they send at me, whoever they put in front of me, I’m going to take them down until they say I’m number one.”
The super featherweight champion had a heated confrontation with Shakur Stevenson following his victory over Ford, which perhaps made the next fight more realistic than a clash with Davis, who has also been linked to fighting Stevenson multiple times over the years.
Foster seems keen on moving up, so he could face Davis at lightweight in the future.
Discussing the situation, Hearn confirmed Smith’s position as the mandatory challenger for the WBO title.
“Now he has been ordered to fight Callum Smith. People are talking about Beterbiev 3 or Benavidez, but Callum has to get his chance, so we will see what happens,” Hearn said on the Matchroom Boxing YouTube channel.
“We will talk to Dmitry, Vadim and the team. If he decides to fight Beterbiev or Benavidez again, Callum Smith versus Buatsi will fight for the world title, which would be a massive fight.
Hearn stopped miniature of presenting Smith as Bivol’s clear next opponent. Instead, he immediately discussed alternative scenarios and openly outlined a contingency plan involving Smith and Joshua Buatsi if Bivol decided to take a bigger fight elsewhere.
Typically, a promoter with a mandatory challenger will bang the drum, demand a fight, and try to corner the champion. Instead, Hearn immediately changes his mind to: “Well, if he doesn’t want it, we’ll just have this gigantic fight in the country for the vacant belt.”
This shows zero confidence that Bivol will actually take the fight to Callum Smith and honestly why would he? Bivol just returned to form against Eifert and wants those gigantic legacy nights against Benavidez or a Beterbiev trilogy. Hearn probably knows this, so instead of fighting the current, he’s already building a bridge in case Bivol inevitably loses the WBO belt.
Matchroom wins either way. If Smith gets Bivol, great. If Bivol leaves, Hearn will be given a massive stadium-level hit in the UK with Smith vs Buatsi 2 without having to share the pie with outside promoters.
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.
“They laughed when I said I was going to be a professional boxer.” – these were the words written by potential heavyweight fighter Joseph Mesi Jr. earlier this year when he recalled his journey into the professional ranks.
The son of former heavyweight fighter Joe Mesi also revealed that he once weighed 345 pounds and struggled with depression and suicidal thoughts before turning his life around.
Today Mesi Jr. he is 3-0 as a professional and is one win away from helping his family to a perfect overall record of 40-0.
Heavyweight father and son
The elder Mesi retired from boxing in 2007 with an undefeated record of 36-0, after a career that once seemed destined for world title contention.
As World Boxing News has previously covered in its look back on Mesi’s career, the Buffalo heavyweight became one of boxing’s greatest stories when health problems cut low his career just as he was on the brink of contention.
Despite never getting a chance to fight for a world title, Mesi came out perfect with 29 knockouts and victories over names like Monte Barrett, DaVarryl Williamson and former cruiserweight champion Vassiliy Jirov.
For years, the 36-0 mark remained untouched. Now it has a second chapter.
A perfect 40-0
Joseph Mesi Jr. he made his professional debut in October 2024 and already has a 3-0 record and two wins after the break.
The 31-year-old heavyweight will return on July 14 in Rochester against an unknown opponent.
A victory would raise the combined record of father and son to 40-0.
Not many boxing families can boast such an undefeated record in the heavyweight division.
Many sons followed in the footsteps of notable fathers and joined the sport. Few did so, carrying the ‘0’ which remained intact for almost two decades before being given the opportunity to continue doing so.
Different meaning
The younger Mesi’s post on social media looks completely different today.
The same man who claims he was ridiculed for wanting to become a professional boxer has already overcome obstacles far greater than skepticism.
Mesi Jr. he had previously spoken about weighing 345 pounds and struggling with depression and suicidal thoughts before finding direction in boxing.
After three wins in his career, he is no longer trying to prove that he belongs in the sport.
Instead, he’s trying to extend a family record that seemed finished when his father retired.
One more win would take Mesis to a perfect 40-0.
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.
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