Brian Norman Jr.’s father, Brian Sr., anticipates Devin Haney will be in attendance “panic” mode in the first round of the fight, which took place on November 22, 2025 in Riyad. He says he’s not sure Haney (32-0, 16 KO) will do it “disqualify” yourself, making it an ugly fight to escape the situation.
Norman Sr. questions Haney’s nerve
Haney’s last fight against Jose Ramirez on May 2 left some fans with the impression that he was still shaken by what he endured against Ryan Garcia on April 20, 2024. Against a fighter who is ponderous and long-toothed, Devin looked terrified throughout the 12-round fight.
The pressure and power exerted by WBO welterweight champion Norman Jr. (28-0, 22 KO) will bring to the Nov. 22 fight are much bigger than the faded former welterweight champion Ramirez brought to Times Square in May.
The “Won’t last 12 rounds” promise.
Brian Sr. says Devin ‘won’t go 12 rounds’ with Norman Jr. He will be knocked out no matter how much he runs and stays in the fight. Survival tactics won’t save Haney in this fight.
“You have so many different arguments about Brian Norman Jr. and then you try to do the exact same thing that genetically Brian Norman Jr. has always done his entire life. Brian Norman doesn’t lift any weights at all,” Norman Sr. said. MillCity Boxingtalking about how Devin Haney is trying to bulk up for his November 22 fight.
Haney gained a lot of muscle during training camp, which makes him look like a middleweight fighter. A photo of Haney standing next to his sparring partner, middleweight Troy Isley, showed how massive he had become. He wore a size larger than Isley’s 5’10”.
“Does that make Devin slower? Does the same rule apply to Devin when you say muscles don’t win fights. These people just talk. It’s nervous energy,” Norman Sr. said of Haney and his father, Bill.
“It will be a panic by the bell.”
“Initially, there will be panic in the first round. I don’t know if he’s going to disqualify himself. I hope he doesn’t make it an ugly fight, but he’s not going to fight. “He won’t go 12 rounds with Brian Norman Jr.”
However, for a long time it seemed that this would not be an effective defense, and the final came in the 11th round when referee Mark Lyson stopped the fight, which many viewers prematurely believed.
Verhoeven performed well above expectations, causing Usyk numerous problems throughout the fight, but although he recovered from the knockdown, the kickboxing star was stopped on his feet and denied the chance to advance to the 12th round.
Tony Bellew believes Verhoeven should be given a chance to continue his career, but Mexican superstar Canelo does not share the same view.
“It was a good fight, I don’t think so [that it was was an early stoppage]I think they saved a brutal knockout.”
Usyk is expected to take some time before deciding on his next move, with some fans calling for an immediate rematch with Verhoeven while others want him to face mandatory WBC title challenger Agit Kabayel now.
As for Canelo, he will return to action in September and will look to reclaim his world titles when he fights WBC super middleweight champion Christian Mbilli in Riyad, Saudi Arabia.
a biopic chronicling the career of former featherweight champion Prince Naseem Hamed will be released in select U.S. theaters and on VOD on May 22. The film stars Amir El-Masry as Hamed and Pierce Brosnan as his longtime trainer Brendan Ingle, with Sylvester Stallone among the executive producers.
Directed and written by Rowan Athale, it premiered at the BFI London Film Festival in October 2025 and was released in the UK and Ireland on January 9, 2026, before arriving in the Middle East via the Red Sea Film Festival. Vertical holds U.S. distribution rights, and the film was financed by AGC Studios and BondIt Media Capital.
What the movie covers
The plot follows Hamed’s rise from Sheffield, England, to a world title under Ingle, an Irish-born steelworker who ran a boxing gym in a church hall. According to the official description, the film also addresses the racism and Islamophobia that Hamed faced in the UK in the 1980s and 1990s, and also focuses on his relationship with Ingle, who died in 2018.
Collider published an exclusive clip from the film on May 21 featuring Hamed’s 1994 fight against Vincenzo Belcastro. In this fight, Hamed won the European bantamweight title in 12 rounds, which was only his 12th professional contest, which was the beginning of his later career.
The warrior behind the film
Hamed, a southpaw of Yemeni heritage, finished his professional career with a 36-1 record and 31 knockouts while holding featherweight titles in multiple sanctioning bodies throughout the 1990s. Now 51, he was known for his unconventional style, pre-fight showmanship and ring walks that often ended with a fall over the top rope. In 2015, he was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.
Following Ingle’s death, Hamed directly attributed his success to his coach Ring that without him he wouldn’t have achieved what he did in sports.
The supporting cast included Toby Stephens as promoter Frank Warren and Katherine Dow Blyton as Alma Ingle. The film lasts 110 minutes.
Rico Verhoeven insists he has proven he belongs in boxing despite an 11th-round loss to Oleksandr Usyk on Saturday night in Egypt.
The former kickboxing champion pushed Usyk much harder than many expected before the referee stepped in tardy in the fight. At the time of the stoppage, two judges had the fight even at 95-95, with the third having Verhoeven ahead 96-94.
“Yeah, it sucks. I felt like I was so close to shocking the world,” Rico Verhoeven told DAZN Boxing after the fight.
“I want to stay here. I think I showed the world that I can definitely box. Even as a kickboxer they told me, ‘Who is this guy? He can’t do anything. It’ll be four or five rounds,’ but I think after four or five rounds we were pretty even in terms of results.”
“So I think it was a crazy, crazy performance. I felt like I was so close to winning, but it is what it is.”
Verhoeven entered the fight as the main underdog against the undefeated unified heavyweight champion, but his physical pressure, size and willingness to trade caused Usyk to struggle during several early and middle rounds.
The performance immediately changed the discussion about Verhoeven’s future in boxing.
Rather than treat the fight as a one-off, the Dutch heavyweight later made it clear that he planned to continue boxing despite the defeat. His comments also reflected the fierceness of the fight before Usyk finally took control in the championship rounds and forced a stoppage.
For much of the fight, Verhoeven looked much more comfortable than many expected against one of boxing’s greatest champions.
Tomek Galm is a boxing journalist covering the global fight landscape since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, industry trends and fighter psychology.
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