Oscar De La Hoya believes Canelo Alvarez is entering the final phase of his career and indicated that his September fight against Christian Mbilli is heading in that direction.
It has been reported that the Canelo Alvarez vs. Christian Mbilli has been signed and is scheduled to take place on Mexican Independence Day weekend in September 2026, although the exact date has not been officially confirmed.
De La Hoya said Alvarez is no longer at the same stage of his career as he was before.
“Every fighter has his peak and then you start to see a clear exit and Canelo is right there,” De La Hoya told Sean Zittel. “He’s still a few fights away from retirement don’t blame him for taking the money and running away. I don’t blame him. I mean, clever guy.
De La Hoya’s “cash-out” narrative seems disconnected from the tactical reality of this matchup. Calling Christian Mbilla a “take the money and run” suggests that Oscar may have been interested in name recognition rather than the film.
If a player is looking for an uncomplicated way out, you don’t go for a 31-year-old power hitter like Mbilli.
Canelo is 35, recovering from surgery on his left elbow and coming off a decisive loss to Crawford where he looked stagnant in the championship rounds. Fighting a fighter like Mbilli in Riyad is a huge risk.
De La Hoya admitted that Alvarez still has significant fights left before he leaves.
“He still has some good fights ahead of him against great fighters,” Oscar said.
If Mbilli drowns Canelo or even “destroys” him, De La Hoya’s schedule for the remaining “good fights” will immediately evaporate. The perception that he has a few left suggests he can still compete at an elite level, but the 168-pound division has shifted toward younger, more impressive fighters.
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.
Sylvester Stallone has spent decades proving people wrong. He created Rocky, became one of Hollywood’s biggest stars, earned Oscar nominations and built a franchise that changed his life forever. However, one childhood wound never healed.
In a recent interview, Stallone spoke about the pain he carried from his upbringing and how some of the success he chased throughout his life didn’t provide the ending he wanted.
Rocky’s greatest gift
Rocky transformed Stallone from a struggling actor into a global superstar.
The film won the Academy Award for Best Picture and launched one of the most successful franchises in film history. This made Stallone a household name and opened the door to another iconic role in Rambo.
However, Rocky’s success always seemed to come with a bit of sadness.
For years, he struggled to gain recognition as an actor outside of the franchise he created.
Even when that recognition finally came thanks to his Golden Globe-winning performance in “Creed,” many still argue that Stallone’s best acting work came decades earlier in “Cop Land.”
Despite all the success that followed, Rocky remained the role that defined him.
The only thing that’s missing
What makes Stallone’s comments so revealing is that none of these achievements gave him what he wanted most.
Rocky made him eminent and earned him Oscar nominations for both Rocky and Creed, placing the underdog boxer at the center of the most crucial work of his career.
But success could not rewrite the past.
Stallone revealed that even winning the Oscars at the height of Rocky’s success didn’t give Rocky the acceptance he had been looking for for years.
“You want the people you love to say no to you, and now you’re here, you’re at the Oscars, and they don’t want to go,” Stallone recalled.
For most, this moment would be the finish line.
No amount of success can force someone to give you what they never wanted to give.
NBC
Another rocky story
For many fans, Rocky is the ultimate story of perseverance and triumph against impossible odds.
In many ways, Stallone lived this story himself.
He fought for the role, fought to get the movie made, and built a career that exceeded even his expectations after refusing to give up his starring role in Rocky.
But nearly fifty years later, Stallone still talks about the pain he felt long before Rocky stepped into the ring.
Rocky changed Sylvester Stallone’s life.
Thanks to him, he became eminent all over the world.
But it just couldn’t give him the acceptance he had been chasing all his life.
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.
Usyk’s future has become a major topic of conversation in boxing following his controversial 11th-round stoppage victory over Rico Verhoeven in May. While some observers have called for a rematch with the decorated kickboxing champion, others believe the undefeated Ukrainian should fulfill his duties as the WBC heavyweight champion.
The former two-weight world champion argued that Kabayel deserved another chance.
“If he stays energetic, Kabayel deserves to fight for the title. You can’t just stay energetic and hold the world title hostage,” Malignaggi told Froch on Fighting. “If you want to become a champion, you must either be stripped or accept duty.”
Malignaggi also questioned how long Usyk should continue to compete at the highest level, pointing out the reality of aging even for elite players.
“I think at this age it’s very, very arduous to maintain a championship level all the time if you’re a guy like Usyk,” Malignaggi said. “That’s why I think he’s achieved so much. Maybe retirement is the best option. But if he’s going to retire, then retire.”
The comments come amid growing debate over the 39-year-old’s next move. Usyk has previously indicated he intends to fight only a circumscribed number of fights before retiring, but his latest performance has raised up-to-date questions about how long he can maintain the standards that have made him a two-time undisputed champion.
Kabayel strengthened his title shot chances with an impressive win streak that catapulted him to the must-see position in the WBC. If Usyk decides to remain champion, the undefeated German now appears to be first in line.
According to Malignaggi, this issue leaves little room for debate. The champion either defends against the challenger he is about to face or steps aside so the division can move forward.
Olly Campbell is a boxing journalist covering this sport since 2014, providing reports from the ring and technical analyzes of the most crucial fights. His work focuses on fighter tendencies, tactical adjustments and the details that shape high-level competition.
James Toney believes that there is only one man in history who can be considered even better than himself.
Toney is a three-weight world champion who has earned world honors in the middleweight, super middleweight and cruiserweight divisions during his nearly 30-year career.
He also competed in the heavyweight division, where he once defeated Evander Holyfield, and later won the WBA heavyweight title with a victory over John Ruiz, but was later ruled a no contest after failing a drug test.
When it comes to the greatest fighter of all time debate, he is another heavyweight that is often mentioned by many boxing fans, and one of the legends is Muhammad Ali.
Toney, however, disagrees with this assessment, insisting on WiseNuts that he ranks as the second greatest of all time, with Sugar Ray Robinson taking the top spot.
“I’m an Ali fan myself, but I’m sorry, he’s not the greatest fighter of all time [Sugar] Second place Ray Robinson and James Toney, period. If you look at how we did it, we did it the right way… I fought, Ray Robinson, we fought. Where is he from? My hometown, Detroit. We do it like no one else.”
Robinson’s achievements speak for themselvesholding the world welterweight title for five years, from 1946 to 1951, during which he recorded a remarkable 91-fight unbeaten streak.
At one point, he had 129 wins in 132 fights, 85 of them by knockout. He is also a five-time world middleweight champion, finally hanging up his gloves in 1965, winning 174 of his 201 fights.
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