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Conor Benn Win does not give an interview, brief version of the program

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Image: Broadcast moves on quickly after Conor Benn win, Mannix questions it

Benn defeated Regis Prograis by unanimous decision, but the performance was against a smaller, older opponent, one of whom was reportedly struggling with previous injuries. This connection created clear expectations. Fans wanted a dominant display that would command attention. Instead, the fight went on for a long time, without a moment that called for it.

It was incredibly irritating. When you consider Zuffa’s involvement, the advantage was supposed to be UFC-style production. Typically, even a mediocre win is given full credit when the fighter is someone you’re trying to make a superstar out of.

When Conor Benn failed to deliver a highlight-reel ending, producers had nothing to fall back on. If a performance doesn’t live up to the hype, an Ultimate Fighting Championship-style machine tends to move on rather than pushing a narrative that viewers won’t buy.

This is a complex moment for Benn. In the up-to-date era of boxing broadcasting, just winning isn’t enough to keep the cameras trained on you. If you do not request the headlight with your hands, the manufacturers will literally turn it off.

The lack of post-fight coverage only exacerbated this reaction. Zuffa Boxing events were expected to mirror the Ultimate Fighting Championship model, in which a star fighter is put through a tough fight after a robust performance. This usually involves immediate praise, replay analysis and an in-ring interview to lend a hand you take the next step.

None of that happened here. Benn’s hand was raised and the show moved straight towards Tyson Fury, giving no time to determine the outcome.

When a company spends $15 million on a one-fight deal, it buys a victory and buys an afterglow. In the Ultimate Fighting Championship and Zuffa Boxing models, the post-fight window is when promoters start building the next event. Then the push begins. Skipping this step for a player you just paid an eight-figure sum for is scarce.

I feel like Benn walked into that ring as the future of Zuffa Boxing and came out as a guy who had just come off a very pricey one-night show.

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Buddy McGirt Praises Diego Pachecos Untouched Talent Before Aleem Fight

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"Buddy McGirt Praises Diego Pacheco's 'Untouched Talent' Before Aleem Fight"

Hall of Fame trainer Buddy McGirt believes Diego Pacheco has only scratched the surface of his potential, saying the unbeaten super middleweight possesses “untouched talent” as he prepares for Saturday night’s fight against veteran Immanuwel Aleem on DAZN.

McGirt, who recently joined Pacheco’s team, said the 25-year-old reminds him of former two-division world champion Vernon Forrest because of how naturally certain skills come to him.


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“Honestly, he has untouched talent,” McGirt said to the Boxing Mob. “He knows he’s good, but he doesn’t realize how good he is and could be.

“He does things sometimes that remind me of Vernon Forrest. When I say, ‘Okay, do that again,’ Vernon used to look at me like, ‘What the hell did I just do?’ He’s kind of the same way. I say, ‘Do that move again,’ and he’s like, ‘What did I just do?’ It’s just so natural. The key now is to sharpen it up and improve each fight.”

Pacheco (25-0, 18 KOs) will face Aleem at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California, in what will be McGirt’s first fight working his corner. Although Aleem is viewed as a step below the elite contenders at 168 pounds, McGirt isn’t taking the assignment lightly.

“At this stage of the game, anybody’s a high risk,” McGirt said. “The key is just to prepare for any and everything and be ready for whatever he brings to the table.”

Saturday’s fight comes at an important point in Pacheco’s career. While he remained unbeaten with a decision over Kevin Lele Sadjo in his last outing, the performance drew criticism after he spent long stretches holding to neutralize Sadjo’s pressure. Instead of strengthening his standing among the division’s top contenders, the fight raised questions about whether he is ready for the elite names at super middleweight.

McGirt clearly believes those doubts overlook Pacheco’s natural ability. Now the challenge is turning that talent into the type of complete performance that restores confidence in his long-term championship potential.

A convincing win over Aleem would mark a strong start to the McGirt-Pacheco partnership. Another laborious performance would likely keep the spotlight on the questions that surfaced after the Sadjo fight.

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Last Updated on 2026/07/13 at 8:06 PM

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Buddy McGirt Praises Diego Pachecos Untouched Talent Before Aleem Bout

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"Buddy McGirt Praises Diego Pacheco's 'Untouched Talent' Before Aleem Bout"

By Robert Segal – 07/13/2026 – Comments

Hall of Fame trainer Buddy McGirt believes Diego Pacheco has only scratched the surface of his potential, saying the unbeaten super middleweight possesses “untouched talent” as he prepares for Saturday night’s fight against veteran Immanuwel Aleem on DAZN.

McGirt, who recently joined Pacheco’s team, said the 25-year-old reminds him of former two-division world champion Vernon Forrest because of how naturally certain skills come to him.


Add EBoxing News 24as a preferred source on Google

Follow Boxing News 24 on Google News

“Honestly, he has untouched talent,” McGirt said to the Boxing Mob. “He knows he’s good, but he doesn’t realize how good he is and could be.

“He does things sometimes that remind me of Vernon Forrest. When I say, ‘Okay, do that again,’ Vernon used to look at me like, ‘What the hell did I just do?’ He’s kind of the same way. I say, ‘Do that move again,’ and he’s like, ‘What did I just do?’ It’s just so natural. The key now is to sharpen it up and improve each fight.”

Pacheco (25-0, 18 KOs) will face Aleem at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California, in what will be McGirt’s first fight working his corner. Although Aleem is viewed as a step below the elite contenders at 168 pounds, McGirt isn’t taking the assignment lightly.

“At this stage of the game, anybody’s a high risk,” McGirt said. “The key is just to prepare for any and everything and be ready for whatever he brings to the table.”

Saturday’s fight comes at an important point in Pacheco’s career. While he remained unbeaten with a decision over Kevin Lele Sadjo in his last outing, the performance drew criticism after he spent long stretches holding to neutralize Sadjo’s pressure. Instead of strengthening his standing among the division’s top contenders, the fight raised questions about whether he is ready for the elite names at super middleweight.

McGirt clearly believes those doubts overlook Pacheco’s natural ability. Now the challenge is turning that talent into the type of complete performance that restores confidence in his long-term championship potential.

A convincing win over Aleem would mark a strong start to the McGirt-Pacheco partnership. Another laborious performance would likely keep the spotlight on the questions that surfaced after the Sadjo fight.

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Last Updated on 2026/07/13 at 8:06 PM


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Shakur Stevenson Forecasts Epic Showdown: Oscar De La Hoya vs Gervonta Tank Davis in Boxing News

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Shakur Stevenson Forecasts Epic Showdown: Oscar De La Hoya vs Gervonta 'Tank' Davis in Boxing News

Shakur Stevenson has been linked to a showdown with Gervonta Davis throughout his career but now the Newark southpaw has predicted how his rival would fare against one of the greats of the sport in Oscar De La Hoya.

Stevenson and Davis each held world titles in the lightweight division as recently as February, but Stevenson was then stripped of his WBC crown due to unpaid sanctioning fees and ‘Tank’ was recently demoted to the WBA’s ‘champion-in-recess’ because of prolonged inactivity.

Any hope of seeing the fight is now beginning to dwindle, with Stevenson having signed with Zuffa Boxingwhilst Davis is expected to remain sidelined until early 2027, meaning if the pair are to ever fight, it is unlikely to be anytime soon.

Despite that, Stevenson still clearly holds his rival in high regard, as when discussing hypothetical encounters in an interview with Daily Mail Sporthe picked the Baltimore-born knockout artist to trump a prime De La Hoya, who is one of just two fighters in boxing history to have ruled in six divisions.

De La Hoya fought as a lightweight for just over a year-and-a-half and is better known for his reign as welterweight champion, where he overcame the likes of Pernell Whittaker, Héctor Camacho and Julio César Chávez.

Although, whilst Stevenson also picked Davis to overcome stars such as Vasyl Lomachenko and ‘Sugar’ Shane Mosley, he felt as though a meeting with pound-for-pound sensation Terence Crawford would prove to be a step too far for the undefeated three-division conqueror.

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