Boxing
Regis Prograis confirms Conor Benn’s fight is still ongoing
Published
2 months agoon
The rumor spread earlier in the day following a post on X stating that the fight had been canceled. Prograis responded directly with a video message in which he denied any withdrawals and made it clear that he was still preparing.
“It’s not true. I’m still fighting. Don’t believe I’m backing down. No, it’s not happening,” Prograis told Ring Magazine
Prograis turned his attention to Benn, who makes his debut under the Zuffa Boxing banner on the Tyson Fury vs. card. Arslanbek Makhmudov.
“I’m definitely coming, Conor. Don’t think it’s going to be effortless for you. It’s not going to be effortless for you. I’m coming for your ass.”
For Prograis, this 150-pound catchweight fight is a huge opportunity to erase the pain of losing two of his last three. While he is the veteran in this equation, he faces a hefty $15 million payday against the younger Benn.
“The fight is still going on. I’m still fighting. I don’t know what people are talking about. It’s all bullshit. It’s coming from me.”
For a guy who just turned 37 and is 1-2 in his last three games, he knows he’s playing with his own money at Prograis.
It’s strenuous to ignore the feeling that fell to his knees during that fight. When you look at his last game. With a loss to Devin Haney, a razor-thin (and probably lucky) split decision over Danielito Zorrilla and a fading end to the Jack Catterall fight, Prograis didn’t scream “big-money headliner.” Yet here he is, weighing down to 150 pounds to make his Netflix/Zuffa Boxing debut.
This is Conor Benn’s large debut in Dana White’s recent boxing venture. They need a ‘confessional’ opponent who will give them credibility but who may be catching the tail end of their great form.
Interestingly, Prograis himself called this fight “an oop from God.” He knows that after the defeat to Catterall, he almost fell out of the high stakes circle.
For Benn, beating a former two-time world champion like Prograis provides the legitimacy he needs to chase a $15 million payday or a clash with Ryan Garcia. For Prograis, it’s a career-saving lottery ticket.
The reason Regis put these rumors to rest “quickly” is basic: at his age and in his current form, if this fight ends in a fiasco, he doesn’t have a “plan B” to pay it off well. He even admitted that he told his manager to “take the fight” regardless of the weight and hydration clauses because he couldn’t let it pass him by.
It’s clearly based on the assumption that Benn is a “just okay player” whose name has been exaggerated.
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.
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Boxing
Claressa Shields ‘banned from all MVP events’ after Alycia Baumgardner incident
Published
1 hour agoon
May 19, 2026
Claressa Shields has been “banned” from all future Most Valuable Promotions events following an altercation with Alycia Baumgardner at last weekend’s Rousey vs. Carano event in California.
They were both present at the first MMA gala organized by Most Valuable Promotions and at Netflix’s first entry into combat sports. The card has been completed Ronda Rousey defeats Gina Carano in 17 seconds and also featured the return of Francis Ngannou, as well as a veteran clash between Nate Diaz and Mike Perry.
On the boxing side, MVP Jake Paul and Nakisa Bidarian have formed the strongest stable of fighters in the sport, and Baumgardner is emerging as a leading star.
The unified super featherweight champion has been embroiled in a feud with five-time Shields division champions that has been widely reported on social media. When the pair came face to face in the VIP area at the event, Shields appeared to punch Baumgardner.
A few days later, MVP announced that “The GWOAT” would no longer be able to participate in any of his events.
“Most Valuable Promotions is aware of an incident that occurred during MVP Rousey vs. Carano Saturday night, which involved physical contact between Claressa Shields and Alycia Baumgardner.
“MVP maintains a strict zero-tolerance policy for hostile, threatening or aggressive behavior towards athletes, staff, media or guests at any of our events. Physical altercations outside the ring or cage are unacceptable in any MVP environment. MVP does not condone, condone or condone Claressa Shields’ behavior in such an environment and it reflects poorly on MVP and the women’s sport we have worked tirelessly to support.”
” Effective immediately, Claressa Shields is banned from all MVP events until further notice. There is a time and place for tension and athlete banter, but physically attacking another athlete while he or she is a guest in a private VIP area is unacceptable.
“MVP would like to thank venue security for their quick response in addressing and de-escalating the situation, and appreciates that Alycia Baumgardner did not retaliate or make the situation worse. We remain committed to maintaining a safe and sound, respectful and professional environment for all participants at our events and will continue to enforce these standards without exception.”
Shields has not responded yet.
Boxing
Ronda Rousey’s Slam Goes Viral As Carano Fight Approaches
Published
3 hours agoon
May 19, 2026
By Boxing Insider Staff
Ronda Rousey returns to the cage Saturday night against Gina Carano at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California, in the main event of MVP MMA 1 on Netflix. In the days before the fight, a video of Rousey’s open training striking session became the dominant story of the fight week, and not in the way Most Valuable Promotions would portray it.
Footage of Rousey throwing punches in front of cameras spread widely on social media this week, sparking mockery from fans and players. One widely shared post on X claimed that Rousey “looks like she’s never done striking in her life” – a sentiment echoed across MMA and boxing accounts.
Ronda Rousey looks like she’s never taken striking practice in her life. 😭😭😭 pic.twitter.com/04F5R2SDcy
— 𝓚𝓲𝓷𝓰 𝓕𝓲𝓰𝓰𝔂 👹🩸 (@ChampFiggy) May 15, 2026
Rousey (39) told reporters during fight week that she started preparing for her 2024 return while pregnant. “I was about three months pregnant when my husband caught me doing suplexes in the garage,” she said, referring to former UFC heavyweight fighter Travis Browne. At Thursday’s press conference, Rousey was asked if she would hesitate to break Carano’s arm in the cage. “I definitely wouldn’t hesitate to break it,” she said. “But I wouldn’t hesitate to put it back in place either.”
Pioneer context
Receiving training videos is additional given Rousey’s place in combat sports history. She was the first fighter signed by the UFC, headlined UFC 157 against Liz Carmouche in February 2013 in the promotion’s first women’s fight, and retained the bantamweight title with six defenses. Her mainstream visibility, magazine covers, ESPY Awards and Hollywood roles are widely credited with making women’s MMA a mainstream product.
This visibility extended beyond MMA. The infrastructure and audience that Rousey helped build for women’s combat sports in the mid-2010s preceded the commercial growth of women’s professional boxing seen since then, an era that produced Katie Taylor, Claressa Shields, Amanda Serrano and the first women’s main events at Madison Square Garden and on stadium-level boxing cards.
Mayweather Cycle
The viral clips also bring back memories of one of the strangest promotional cycles in the recent history of combat sports media. In 2014 and 2015, when Rousey was at the peak of her UFC career, the question of whether she could beat Floyd Mayweather circulated in interviews, talk shows and sports columns for the better part of two years.
The framing was usually pushed by others, not Rousey herself. UFC President Dana White has said publicly that Rousey will hurt Mayweather in the fight. Conor McGregor said in 2015 that Rousey would “dismantle him in seconds.” Rousey, when asked directly during an August 2015 Reddit AMA if she could beat Mayweather, gave a more measured answer. “Floyd is one of the greatest boxers of all time,” she said. “He would definitely beat me in a boxing match. Unfortunately, I don’t like ‘matches’. I’m fighting for my life.” She added that in a fight without rules, she believed she could beat anyone, as ESPN reported at the time.
The boxing-specific version of the question of whether Rousey could compete with a pound-for-pound boxer of her generation was largely a media and promotional construct. Mayweather closed the 2015 ESPYs himself, telling reporters that he had never seen an MMA fighter earn that much in one fight.
Saturday night
Rousey enters the Carano fight with a 12-2 record in professional MMA, and last fought in December 2016 when she was stopped by Amanda Nunes in 48 seconds. Carano (7-1) hasn’t fought since 2009. The fight lasts five rounds in the 145-pound featherweight limit. Nate Diaz and Mike Perry will be the co-main event, with Francis Ngannou and Philipe Lins also appearing on the main card. according to ESPN’s card breakdown.
This fight is billed as the last professional appearance of both women. Whatever happens in the cage, the reaction to a few seconds of glove work this week is a data set on how much the conversation around women’s combat sports has changed, a conversation Rousey was instrumental in starting in the decade since her name appeared alongside Mayweather’s.
Tony Bellew believes Rico Verhoeven could give Oleksandr Usyk some awkward moments early in the fight, but he still expects the undefeated heavyweight champion to eventually work him out once the fight turns into a boxing match. Bellew also warned that Verhoeven’s kickboxing background makes him much more hazardous than many boxing fans realize.
“If this was a kickboxing match, I’m telling you, Oleksandr would be in huge trouble. Don’t kick him,” Bellew told DAZN Boxing. “Fortunately for Oleksandr Usyk, this is a boxing fight. I think once the first three or four rounds pass and Oleksandr Usyk sees the awkwardness, the attitude and the style, I think Rico may have a night of tough work ahead of him.”
“Rico Verhoeven is a problem. He is a problem and we don’t really know much about him from a boxing point of view. We don’t really know anything. He had one fight and you can’t get anything out of it at all. His kickboxing experience tells you an awful lot.
Bellew said during an interview leading up to the Usyk-Verhoeven fight that Verhoeven’s unconventional style could create arduous moments before Usyk starts making changes.
“You would forgive him for thinking this guy was a kickboxer. I won’t have to be 100% ready to beat this guy like Tyson Fury thought he was against Francis Ngannou,” Bellew said. “Or maybe he’ll take the Anthony Joshua approach where you go in there and say, ‘This is a grave fight. I’ve got to get rid of him.’
“I don’t think he’ll be taken lightly. Usyk is a consummate professional. He’s a conscientious professional. You’ll never catch this guy sleeping. You have to get out of bed really, really early to catch him.”
Bellew still made it clear that he sees Usyk eventually taking control once he gathers enough information during the fight.
“I think this fight will be very invigorating for six, seven, maybe eight rounds. I think Oleksandr will take a look at Rico. He will see what he is doing. He will find out what the feints will do to him and which side he will take him on.”
“Once he’s got it all, he’ll get rid of Verhoeven. He’ll just have too much and that’s the end of it. He’s doing the same to everyone else,” Bellew said.

Olly Campbell is a boxing journalist covering this sport since 2014, providing reports from the ring and technical analyzes of the most significant fights. His work focuses on fighter tendencies, tactical adjustments and the details that shape high-level competition.
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Last updated: 18/05/2026 at 23:10
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