Boxing
Holly Holm will face Stephanie Han for the lightweight title on January 3
Published
4 months agoon
Holly Holm will face WBA lightweight champion Stephanie Han in the co-main event of Amanda Serrano vs. Erika Cruz, which will take place on January 3 in San Juan, Puerto Rico, ESPN Most Valuable Promotions announced on Wednesday. The fight will be fought on equal terms between men and the fight will last 10 3-minute rounds.
Holm (34-2-3, 9 KO) recently ended a 12-year hiatus from boxing, signing with Jake Paul’s Most Valuable Promotions and winning a unanimous decision over Yolanda Vega in June. Before returning to the sweet science, Holm worked successfully as a mixed martial arts fighter, winning the UFC women’s bantamweight title after famously knocking out Ronda Rousey in 2015. However, the three-time world boxing champion and 2022 International Boxing Hall of Fame inductee is chasing another boxing title at the age of 44.
“Holly Holm returns to the fight for a world boxing title 12 years after leaving the sport and doing so with the MVP title,” Jake Paul and Nakisa Bidarian, co-founders of MVP, said in a statement. “They come face to face with an all-around athlete in Stephanie Han, who is a champion, a mother, and a policewoman. And they do it in 3-minute rounds, just like the men.”
Holm will certainly have her hands full in only her second boxing match since 2013 against undefeated Han (11-0, 3 KO), who won the WBA title in February with a first-round knockout of Hannah Terlep. Han, 35, has been fighting in El Paso since turning professional in 2021 and has won all of his fights by knockout or decision. Holm will be the most prolific opponent of Han’s career.
“From El Paso to the world stage, I will now fight Holly Holm in Puerto Rico alongside the island’s greatest female boxer, Amanda Serrano,” Han said in a statement. “Every sacrifice has led to this moment and I am grateful and excited for this opportunity. And a level playing field with 3-minute rounds.”
Fighting out of Albuquerque, Fresh Mexico, Holm is wasting no time in his pursuit of a championship despite being out of the ring for over a decade. Holm made a robust decision to win earlier this year and is aiming to become the 135-pound champion after winning the welterweight, junior welterweight and junior middleweight titles.
“I feel great,” Holm said in a statement. “I am thrilled to have the opportunity to fight for my fourth weight class title on Saturday, January 3 and add to my legacy. I am grateful for MVP and this opportunity, and I look forward to fighting in Puerto Rico, an island with a deep boxing culture.”
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“It’s analyzing how the system works on this side of the wall, in the States, and then it will make its own move,” Nelson told iFL TV. “He only wants one belt.”
Turki Alalshikh has already become one of boxing’s most influential financial sponsors thanks to his involvement in major events. The chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority has helped finance several high-profile fights by working with promoters across the sport.
Nelson believes this approach could ultimately influence how the championship is organized.
For decades, boxing titles were distributed among several sanctioning bodies, with each group recognizing its own champion in the same weight class. The result is multiple belts in one category and constant debate about who is actually at the top.
Nelson indicated that Turki’s long-term interest may include simplifying this structure.
“He’s just sorting out all his ducks,” Nelson said. “He understands how everyone works.”
Turki has already shown a willingness to work with various promoters and networks in supporting major fight cards in Saudi Arabia. His involvement has helped unite fighters and promoters who often operate in separate business paths.
These partnerships included collaborations with competing promoters and broadcasters that had historically operated separately. The Saudi-backed substantial cards also attracted fighters from several promotional groups to the same event.
Nelson sees the current period as preparation for a bigger game.
Another question is whether a single-lane system could ever be implemented. The four main sanctioning bodies would continue to exist and their titles would continue to be recognized unless broadcasters chose to ignore them.
This kind of change would likely require networks like DAZN to focus exclusively on events built around the Ring Belt. For now, such a scenario seems arduous to imagine.
Turki has already become one of the main financial figures of sport. Turki has the resources to influence boxing, but turning a four-belt sport into a one-belt system would be a completely different fight.
Boxing
Derek Chisora makes his feelings clear about Conor Benn leaving Eddie Hearn for Zuffa
Published
4 hours agoon
March 10, 2026
Derek Chisora has shared his opinion on Conor Benn leaving Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom Boxing and joining Dana White’s Zuffa promotion.
When it was announced last month, it was a huge shock Benn has parted ways with longtime promoter Hearn to join forces with the modern upstart company Zuffa, headed by UFC boss White.
Benn spent his entire career at Matchroom up to 2016, going through many ups and downs during that decade, including the infamous failed drug tests and two epic fights with Chris Eubank Jr last year.
He returns to action when he faces Regis Prograis in a 150 catchweight bout on April 11 at Tyson Fury vs. Arslanbek Makhmudov, for which he will reportedly receive a purse worth $15 million.
It is because of this number that heavyweight contender Chisora has no objection to Benn leaving Hearn. saying Playbook Boxing that his compatriot did the right thing.
“We both know the saying: If you want to be steadfast, you buy what? A dog. I’m not steadfast. No one is steadfast when someone comes along and says, ‘You know what?’ I will give you this much money. Come with me.”
“Let’s not try to tell ourselves that what this teenage man did was so bad. He made a good deal. If he turns it down, you’ll think, ‘Oh, you’re fools. Why did you turn it down? Oh, you’re steadfast to Eddie.’ No, fuck it, man.
Chisora must prepare for his own fight next month when he faces former WBC heavyweight champion Deontay Wilder at the O2 Arena on April 4.
Boxing
Jazza Dickens: “I finally got a chance when no one believed in me”
Published
6 hours agoon
March 10, 2026
WHAT JERSEY DOES What do Joe Walcott, Archie Moore and James “Jazza” Dickens have in common?
All three have shown incredible resilience on their journey from their professional debut to winning the world title. It took Walcott (heavyweight) 21 years in 1951, Moore (lithe heavyweight) 17 years in 1952, and Dickens (junior lightweight) 14 years and 319 days.
Dickens added his name to the list of boxers who have the longest time to win their first world title since their professional debut, when he was promoted from interim WBA champion to full world champion in December after Lamont Roach was stripped of his world title belt.
Dickens (36-5, 15 KO), 34, of Liverpool, will step into the ring as a world champion on Saturday for his first defense against Northern Ireland’s Anthony Cacace (24-1, 9 KO), 37, at the 3Arena in Dublin, Ireland. Dickens, who traveled from his training base in Dubai after the region was bombed, was scheduled to face Japan’s Hayato Tsutsumi at the Mohammed Abdo Arena in Saudi Arabia in December, but was canceled due to Tsutsumi’s injury.
While there are similarities to Cacace’s blossoming career (he stopped Joe Cordina at age 35 to win the IBF junior lightweight title), Dickens’ story is very different from that of superstar world champions like Oleksandr Usyk, Naoya Inoue and Ryan Garcia.
Dickens had to work challenging without the support of his main promoter, struggling with knockout defeats, passivity and boxing politics. His career was very different from the attention and wealth enjoyed by his fellow Englishmen Tyson Fury, Anthony Joshua and Conor Benn.
At times, Dickens wondered whether his career would ever reach the same heights as it did in 2016, when he challenged Cuban Guillermo Rigondeaux for the WBA junior featherweight world title and was stopped slow in the second round with a broken jaw.
BUT Dickens has changed his career in 2025. First came a 10-round points victory over Zelfa Barrett, before Dickens knocked out Russia’s Albert Batyrgaziev, the 2021 Olympic gold medalist, in the 4th round to win the interim WBA junior lightweight title in Turkey.
“There were times when I thought, ‘What is this all about?’ When things were really challenging,” Dickens told ESPN.
“I believe if you listen, God is teaching you, but I wondered, ‘What are you trying to teach me?’ sometimes. I’m glad I was patient all these years because I finally got a chance when no one believed in me. The most significant thing that happened was the opportunities, that’s why I’m here now as a world champion.”
“These opportunities came when people thought I had had enough. When I got knocked out [Hector Andres] Sauce [in July 2023]people thought I was finished. There were a lot of things going on behind the scenes leading up to this fight, but I got knocked out and it didn’t look good.
“People thought I was done after that fight, and Batyrgaziev thought it would be an straightforward fight against me, but I went out there and dominated.”
JUST LIKE THE RING the legends of Moore and Walcott, Dickens showed unwavering perseverance in pursuing his goal.
Dickens, who has won four fights since his last defeat, has repeatedly rebuilt his career. After being stopped by Kid Galahad in 2013, Dickens suffered back-to-back losses to Rigondeaux and Thomas Patrick Ward in 2016 and 2017. After another loss to Galahad in 2021 and a crushing loss to Sosa, Dickens started 2025 far from world title contention.
“I joined my coach Albert Aryrapetyan a year ago and moving to Dubai to train has been a key part of my career,” Dickens told ESPN.
“He was the only person who answered me when I needed a coach. The phone didn’t ring, no one wanted to know, but since I became champion, he hasn’t stopped calling. We joined forces before the fight with Barrett, and Albert put together a good game plan for that fight and for the fight with Batyrgaziev.
“Since those defeats against Rigondeaux and Galahad, I always go to the gym, trying to get better, trying to develop, that hasn’t changed. What has changed? Perhaps I have grown mentally, as happens with age in any sport or job.”
After completing one of the longest world title journeys in boxing history, Dickens also now manages boxers under the banner of Integrity Boxing Management with Mitchell Walsh.
“We called it honesty boxing because there’s not a lot of honesty in boxing,” Dickens told ESPN.
“We don’t do this for a fee, it’s my pleasure and my reward is seeing the smiles on the faces of the boxers and their families.”
Turki Alalshikh studies the boxing system
Derek Chisora makes his feelings clear about Conor Benn leaving Eddie Hearn for Zuffa
Anthony Joshua abandons the UK for Dubai as the boxing star moves amid terrifying scenes in the Middle East
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