Turki Alalshikh has a preliminary plan for David Benavidez and Devin Haney to share the card in February 2026, provided that both won in their fights on November 22 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Turk’s vision Alalshikh in February 2026
Master WBC Delicate Heavyweight Benavidez (30-0, 24 KO) should be good to go to the event of February 2026, because he has the title defense to leave the road against Anthony Yarde on November 22. Benavidez’s “Mexican monster” is very privileged to defeat Yarde (27-3, 24 KO).
The one who could have problems is Haney (32-0, 16 KO) because he stands in front of the knockout artist Brian Norman Jr. (28-0, 22 KO) For its WBO WBO WOPTREIGHT title on November 22 events at the Anb Arena on Dazn PPV. Norman Jr. He is perceived by many as the most complex puncher in the 147 pounds ward and has the power that Haney has never seen before during his career.
Haney will face Norman Jr.
Turki did not mention what his Plan B The option is that Haney is evaporated According to one of Norman’s shots, which hits zero zero on November 22. It would not be the end of the world if Haney did not go through the fight of Brian Jr. If Turks can match Benavidez to one of the substantial names at 175, it will not be a great loss that does not have Devin as part of the event.
Rumors Options for Benavidez in February:
Artur Beterbiev
Dmitriry Bivol
Dazn and Ring magazine Both report Turk’s ambitious plans Alalshikh, that Benavidez and Haney will provide the card in February next year.
Again, when it comes to Haney, it is very insecure. To be unthreatening, Turki would be better to mention Norman JR than Haneya to share the Benavidez card. In this way there will be less chance of hanging fans.
The Canelo operation opens Riyadh Spotlight
Initially, Canelo Alvarez was to fight in February 2026 as part of his four contracts with the Riyadh season. However, his elbow surgery prevented him to fight soon. Therefore, Turki wants to pack Benavidez and Haney together in one two, just like from November 22, the event of the Riyadh season to attract fans.
Ken Woods He was a senior writer in Boxing News 24 From 2013, covering sport from every angle. Thanks to the years of reporting of ringists, he provides messages, results and analyzes that cross the noise. Ken’s work consistently distinguishes masters, pretenders and potential clients, giving fans a pointed, competent view of the global boxing scene.
Mike Tyson assessed Terence Crawford’s chances against the Four Kings, determining how successful “Bud” would be in such a competitive era.
WITH Crawford is dedicating time to his decorated career Last December, when he became the five-division world champion, many wondered how he would fare against the likes of Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler, Thomas Hearns and Roberto Duran.
During this iconic era, all four champions competed at the highest level for many years, with Leonard, Hearns and Duran fighting in multiple weight classes.
Meanwhile, Hagler weighed 160 pounds throughout his career, making 12 successful world title defenses before losing to Leonard in 1987 by controversial split decision.
However, during his nearly seven-year reign, “Marvelous” scored a unanimous decision victory over Duran and stopped Hearns in the third round of a shootout that many consider to be the greatest of all time in its own right.
As for the other Four Kings, who also fought at welterweight, super middleweight and super middleweight, it could be said that their careers are more similar to Crawford’s.
Regardless of the weight class, former heavyweight champion Tyson he told Ring magazine that Crawford shone brightly in the era of the Four Kings.
“It would be a handsome fight. There were people back then who weren’t as good as.” [Crawford] was, [but they] they were champions.
– He would do well [in that era]”
Even though Crawford had never fought at super middleweight before, he was able to dethrone Canelo Alvarez to become the undisputed three-division champion last September.
But his greatest success arguably came at 147 pounds, when the American stopped seven opponents before engineering a devastating ninth-round finish over Errol Spence Jr. in 2023.
Itauma (13-0, 11 KO) turned professional with the ambition to break Tyson’s record as the youngest heavyweight champion in history. Tyson established this goal in November 1986 when he defeated Trevor Berbick for the WBC title.
While Itauma’s early rise has generated excitement, his professional resume remains confined. The 20-year-old went just 26 rounds in 13 fights, averaging just over two rounds per fight. Two of his fights ended the distance during six-round fights scheduled at the beginning of his career. Since then, none of his opponents have heard the bell to start the third round.
These quick finishes highlight Itauma’s two-handed strength, but also leave unanswered questions about how he performs in longer fights against an experienced opponent.
Franklin (24-2, 15 KO) enters as the most established opponent of Itauma’s career. The American has already gone the distance with top heavyweights and has the stamina to extend fights into deeper rounds.
The fight was originally scheduled to take place in January, but was postponed due to Itauma’s biceps injury. Changing the date of the gala to March 28 brings the heavyweight candidate back into action.
For Itauma, this fight will be the next step in a career that has developed dynamically since his professional debut. For Franklin, it’s a chance to stop the momentum of one of boxing’s fastest-rising heavyweights.
Comparisons to Tyson continue to follow Itauma as he builds his record. The upcoming fight could provide a clearer picture for the juvenile heavyweight as he continues to climb the division.
Is Moses Itauma really the fresh Iron Mike Tyson?
This release Rummy Corner will attempt to answer this question by examining in detail the numbers, styles and schedules of both men. We compare Tyson’s legendary 1985-1986 career, during which he fought 28 times in just 565 days, with Itauma’s up-to-date trajectory. We also look at the enormous differences in their physical characteristics and fighting styles, leaving aside the “hype” to see the technical reality. Please watch and enjoy the video. This is Rummy’s Corner (produced and narrated by Geoffrey Ciani).
Geoffrey Ciani has been involved in boxing since 2000 and is the creator and host of the popular YouTube channel Rummy Cornerwhere he provides in-depth analysis, storytelling and comparisons of classic and up-to-date fights.
The WBC recently approved Oleksandr Usyk’s title defense against Rico Verhoeven, but ordered the Ukrainian to face interim champion Agit Kabayel next.
Usyk will face kickboxing star Verhoeven in May this year in Egypt. It was originally supposed to be a fight for the WBC commemorative belt, but it was later considered a legitimate world title fight. The WBC’s decision was met with criticism given that the Dutch kickboxing champion had just had one professional boxing fight and did not appear in the world rankings.
President Mauricio Sulaiman assured that Kabayel’s next well-deserved shot would be next, but Usyk’s latest interview, in which he revealed his planned last three fights before retirement, made no mention of the German heavyweight.
With the two-time undisputed champion set to face Verhoeven, the winner of Fabio Wardley’s fights with Daniel Dubois and Tyson Fury, it appears he plans to ignore the WBC’s order and risk being stripped of his green and gold belt.
If Usyk manages to retain his IBF and WBA belts – which is by no means guaranteed as neither sanctioning body has commented on the Verhoeven fight – and negotiates with the winner of the WBO champ’s Wardley vs. Dubois fight, he could lobby the WBC for an undisputed fight to trump his mandatory challenge and allow him to retain the belt.
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