Keyshawn Davis made a powerful statement in a novel weight class with a 12th-round stoppage in the final seconds of his junior welterweight fight against Jamain Ortiz on Saturday night at Madison Square Garden in Recent York.
The fight was headlined by Teofimo Lopez and Shakur Stevenson and marked a triumphant return for Davis after a tumultuous 2025.
Davis (14-0, 10 KO) controlled the fight from the opening bell, demonstrating exceptional ring control and using jabs and body punches to win rounds against an opponent he had never stopped in his professional career.
“I had an amazing performance, just like I promised,” Davis said. “I heard you all booing, but I knocked you out. You just have to be patient.”
Ortiz (20-3-1, 10 KO) gave Teofimo Lopez and Vasily Lomachenko everything they could handle despite losing to both fighters. Ortiz was expected to give Davis a tough test ahead of his 140-pound debut. However, he struggled to achieve anything and was singled out by The Businessman.
Although he had a significant advantage, Davis continued to push for the finish and dropped Ortiz with a body shot in round 11. Davis increased the pressure and ended the fight in the final seconds with a strenuous right hand, before another body shot knocked Ortiz down for good.
“I just love being great,” Davis said. “I keep kicking and moving on. I just wanted to put on a great performance and I feel like I did that.”
Davis bounced back from a challenging 2025 when he missed weight in his title defense against Edwin De Los Santos, causing the fight to be canceled. Davis suggested retirement, but returned to fight Ortiz in a novel weight class with a novel training team. Davis, 26, previously trained under Brian “BoMac” McIntyre alongside Stevenson and Terence Crawford, but went his own way.
The move paid off as Davis picked up the biggest win of his career and the former WBO lightweight champion is ready for a novel opponent.
“Devin Haney is definitely on my hit list and we will make it happen in 2026,” Davis said.
Haney is the WBO welterweight champion, which means Davis would have to move up in weight again. Regardless of whether that happens, Davis proved he belongs among boxing’s elite after Saturday’s dominant performance.