Richard Torrez Jr. believes that Saturday’s fight with Frank Sanchez will show whether he is indeed a grave heavyweight title contender, and it looks like he can’t wait to finally prove it after a long training camp.
Torrez Jr. will face Sanchez next weekend in Egypt in a heavyweight clash that many consider the toughest test of his newborn professional career. The undefeated southpaw made it clear during Thursday’s press conference that he intentionally wanted a risky opponent, not another exhibition fight.
“I’ve been in camp for five months and I can’t wait to be in the ring. Now it’s time to show what I’ve been working on and how difficult I’ve worked in this camp,” Torrez Jr. said.
“To show your skills, you have to ask someone for skills. I’m not in this game to beat anyone. I want difficult fights. I want to be able to show that I should be here, on top of the world.”
Sanchez is viewed by many fans as one of the more technically gifted heavyweights in the division despite recent setbacks, and Torrez has repeatedly emphasized the Cuban challenger’s level of experience when discussing the fight.
“I think Frank Sanchez is a formidable opponent who has competed in some incredible competitions, and I want to show that I’m right there with him,” Torrez Jr. said.
The 25-year-old Olympic silver medalist also suggested he was approaching the fight with a more disciplined attitude, rather than chasing an early save against an experienced opponent who had only lost once as a professional.
“I’m never going to get into a fight again trying to get a knockout, because if I decide to do that, it’ll never happen. So I’m going to go in and try to do well. I’ll be the best Richard Torrez on Saturday night and that’s enough.”
Torrez enters the fight as one of the most closely watched heavyweight prospects on Top Rank, but Sanchez is widely viewed as the biggest name and most complete opponent he has faced since turning pro.
Tomek Galm is a boxing journalist covering the global fight landscape since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, industry trends and fighter psychology.
Hamzah Sheeraz is hoping to secure a shot at Canelo Alvarez in 2027, but the Mexican has made it clear what the Briton needs to do to make that fight happen.
If Canelo regains the WBC title, Sheeraz plans to make Canelo’s regular appearances on Cinco De Mayo in a bid to potentially unify the 168-pound division, planning to announce himself as the super middleweight he will defeat by defeating the division’s poster boy.
However, talking to DAZN BoxingCanelo stated that if Sheeraz wants to face him, he should try to unify the belts with newly crowned IBF world champion Osleys Iglesias to encourage him to take part in the proposed fight.
“I’ve never checked it [potential fights with Hamzah Sheeraz or Osleys Iglesias]. I think they have to fight each other and then I will choose the winner. It’s the smartest thing they can do.
“At some point we all have to earn what we deserve, right? They have to earn it [a fight with me]why not? That’s why I say they have to [fight each other] and I’m not saying they don’t deserve it.
“They deserve it, that’s why they’re there as champions, number one or whatever.
“But they have to fight each other and then, after my fight, we will see.”
Sheeraz is expected to reappear next month, but it won’t be against Iglesias, whose promoter believes the Briton is uninterested in any fight in that role.
TIME revealed the inauguration TIME100 Sports List On June 9, 100 figures recognized by the magazine as the most influential people shaping the global sports landscape were honored. Among those honored was Amanda Serrano, one of only three combat sports figures on the list, alongside undisputed heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk and UFC CEO Dana White.
According to a statement from Most Valuable Promotions, Serrano is the only female combat athlete to be named to the inaugural list. In his career, which began in 2009, Serrano won world titles in seven weight categories.
Serrano responds to honor
In a statement released via MVP, Serrano addressed the recognition and the broader issue she has associated with her career.
“Being named to TIME’s inaugural TIME100 Sports list is an incredible honor. Throughout my career, I have always wanted to prove that women’s boxing is one of the biggest stages in sports and that women fighters deserve the same opportunities, visibility and respect as men,” Serrano said.
Jake Paul points to the MVP role
Jake Paul, who co-founded MVP with Nakisa Bidarian in 2021 and promotes Serrano, reacted to the news on X.
I said it in my documentary and I’ll say it again: being a part of getting Amanda Serrano the recognition she deserves is one of my greatest achievements in life. Congratulations to Amanda on being named to Time’s 100 Most Influential People in Sports for the first time.
Serrano’s profile skyrocketed thanks to her rivalry with Katie Taylor. Their first meeting in April 2022 headlined Madison Square Garden and was the first women’s fight to top the bill at the venue. The pair fought three times, with Taylor winning each match, the last one taking place in July 2025.
TIME’s inaugural sports issue features a worldwide cover featuring LeBron James. The full TIME100 competition list will appear in the June 22, 2026 issue, which hits newsstands on July 12.
Sylvester Stallone has spent decades proving people wrong. He created Rocky, became one of Hollywood’s biggest stars, earned Oscar nominations and built a franchise that changed his life forever. However, one childhood wound never healed.
In a recent interview, Stallone spoke about the pain he carried from his upbringing and how some of the success he chased throughout his life didn’t provide the ending he wanted.
Rocky’s greatest gift
Rocky transformed Stallone from a struggling actor into a global superstar.
The film won the Academy Award for Best Picture and launched one of the most successful franchises in film history. This made Stallone a household name and opened the door to another iconic role in Rambo.
However, Rocky’s success always seemed to come with a bit of sadness.
For years, he struggled to gain recognition as an actor outside of the franchise he created.
Even when that recognition finally came thanks to his Golden Globe-winning performance in “Creed,” many still argue that Stallone’s best acting work came decades earlier in “Cop Land.”
Despite all the success that followed, Rocky remained the role that defined him.
The only thing that’s missing
What makes Stallone’s comments so revealing is that none of these achievements gave him what he wanted most.
Rocky made him eminent and earned him Oscar nominations for both Rocky and Creed, placing the underdog boxer at the center of the most crucial work of his career.
But success could not rewrite the past.
Stallone revealed that even winning the Oscars at the height of Rocky’s success didn’t give Rocky the acceptance he had been looking for for years.
“You want the people you love to say no to you, and now you’re here, you’re at the Oscars, and they don’t want to go,” Stallone recalled.
For most, this moment would be the finish line.
No amount of success can force someone to give you what they never wanted to give.
NBC
Another rocky story
For many fans, Rocky is the ultimate story of perseverance and triumph against impossible odds.
In many ways, Stallone lived this story himself.
He fought for the role, fought to get the movie made, and built a career that exceeded even his expectations after refusing to give up his starring role in Rocky.
But nearly fifty years later, Stallone still talks about the pain he felt long before Rocky stepped into the ring.
Rocky changed Sylvester Stallone’s life.
Thanks to him, he became eminent all over the world.
But it just couldn’t give him the acceptance he had been chasing all his life.
About the author
Phil Jay is the editor-in-chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a boxing veteran with over 15 years of experience. Read the full biography.
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