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Richardson Hitchins leaves the shadow of Floyd Mayweather behind him

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Richardson Hitchins performed a distinctive performance to defend his super featherlight IBF title on Saturday evening.

The former Promotion Star Mayweather pushed into 20-0, 8 KO, with a powerful show of knocking the body against the former world owner George Cambosos Jr.

Richardson Hitchins breaks out

Hitchins lit a theater in Madison Square Garden, proving that there is no longer Floyd Mayweather in the shade. It is noticeable, however, that Hitchins collected several features of his former mentor.

After a week filled with destitute blood, Hitchins and Cambosos settled beef like men in the middle of the ring. Hitchins turned out to be stronger and more qualified.

The result was never doubtful from the first minute of the first round. Continuing everything with a stab, Hitchins won a perfect victory and finished the competition in eighth place with a sweet shot.

Cambosos drops to 22-4, 10 KO, lost to Devin Haney, Vasiliy Lomachenko, and now Hitchins.

When discussing his victory, Hitchins said: “A few years ago I watched Teofimo Lopez and George Cambosos Jr. who go to war.

“I sat on these stairs and said that when I have the opportunity, I would apply the best. With the assist of Eddie Hearn and Keith Connelly, they changed my life in two years.”

He added: “As for the fight itself, I told the world of boxing that I am true. If you don’t know Richardson Hitchins, you now know.

“I told the world of boxing that I came. They should have heard and now I am here.”

Geoffrey Knott / Matchroom

Moving from Floyd Mayweather

Before the fight, Hitchins moved why he left Mayweather to fresh pastures after becoming his own man.

“The last conversation of Floyd and I was so that he tried to force me to sign with him again because I asked Leonard [Ellerbe, CEO of Mayweather Promotions] Let me leave.

“I wasn’t cheerful with how it lasts and [Floyd] I came to me to tell me, you know, for example: “Let’s be there, but I was there, I did it.

“It was like a toxic relationship,” he concluded.

Eddie Hearn, who took advantage of Mayweather’s loss, gave Cambosos his props, but smiled from ear to ear because of his clever takeover of the Hitchins.

He said: “George is a warrior, but you need it if you are Richardson, go out, get on gas and dominate.

“Sometimes it was allowed by the coast for 12 rounds, but he left and dominated an excellent performance.

“This is a statement that he had to mix with these guys. A great atmosphere, a great performance of a great adolescent American champion. It’s time to make great fighting.”

Hitchins vs Cambosos Undercard results

Also on the account of Andy Cruz moved to 6-0, 3 KO, stopping Hironori Mishiro (17-2-1, 6 KO) in five rounds.

Cruz won the featherlight title IBF Eliminator after two -time dropping of Mishiro and proving his world title references. The Olympic gold medalist may expect a compulsory title in the coming months.

In his interview after the fight, Cruz said: “I want to thank you because I am really grateful for all people who appeared, real boxing fans who followed me through my entire career.

“This is another step to achieve my main goal, which is the world champion.”

Teremoana's ko1 nyc
Geoffrey Knott / Matchroom

In further actions, Australian hefty Brute Teremoana Teremoana made it eight KO from eight wins. Giant Puncher knocked out Aleem Whitfield in the first round.

Zaquin Moses (4-0, 3 KO), Nishant Dev (2-0, 1 KO) and Adam Mac (1-0, 1 KO) won in earlier duels.

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Boxing

Prince Naseem Hamed’s biopic “Giant” hits the United States on May 22

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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.

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Rico Verhoeven reacts to the loss of Oleksandr Usyk

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Image: Rico Verhoeven Reacts To Usyk Loss: “I’m Here To Stay”

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.

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Categories Aleksander Usyk

Last updated: 23/05/2026 at 20:20

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Rico Verhoeven speaks out about the referee stopping Usyk’s fight one second before the end of the round

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Rico Verhoeven speaks out on referee stopping Usyk fight with one second left in the round

Rico Verhoeven commented on the controversial break in the match after the defeat to Oleksandr Usyk.

Verhoeven challenged heavyweight king Usyk at the Giza Pyramids in Egypt, and despite most expecting a huge mismatch before the fight, the Dutchman came within a whisker of arguably the biggest upset in boxing history.

The kickboxing legend did enough to win multiple rounds heading into the final stages, with the underdog Usyk struggling to cope with his unconventional opponent.

Usyk finally found the shot he needed when he dropped his opponent at the end of the 11th round, and although Verhoeven managed to get up, the Ukrainian attacked again. led to referee Mark Lyson stopping the fight. Many fans – as well as Verhoevens’ team – were outraged by this decision.

After the fight, Verhoeven shared his thoughts on Lyson, who waved it off, saying he felt he deserved to fight longer.

“I thought it was an early break. It’s not up to me. I believe the referee knows we’re almost at the end of the round, whether he lets me go to the target or let the bell ring… it was close and I thought we were equal on the scorecards.”

Vehoeven was humble at the time when asked if he deserved a rematch.

“It’s not up to me, it’s up to the organization, let’s see what happens.”

It is unknown whether the second fight will actually take place, as the WBC has already ordered Usyk to face mandatory challenger Agit Kabayel next, under threat of being stripped of his belt.

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