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Ryan Garcia faces deeper water in his fight against Mario Barrios

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Image: Ryan Garcia Is Stepping Into Deeper Water Against Barrios

Coach Bob Santos is not selling out hope. He makes a comparison. In his opinion, Mario Barrios will beat Ryan Garcia if the right version of Barrios emerges. If the wrong one does this, the fight will quickly escalate. Either way, Santos sees this fight less as Garcia’s coronation and more as a test he hasn’t passed yet.

Santos is no longer in Barrios’ corner. For this camp, Barrios moved on to Joe Goossen, the same coach Garcia worked with early in his career. Santos now speaks from the outside, but from the position of a friend. He knows which version of Barrios exists, even if he is no longer responsible for releasing it.


Santos points Barrios, who outworked Yordenis Ugas in 2023. He reckons this version wins by about sixty-five to thirty-five. The advantage comes from control. Distance. The ability to stay tranquil when the fight slows down and do something useful when a change is needed. Santos is equally outspoken about the alternative. The Barrios, who had a twelve-round draw with Manny Pacquiao and Abel Ramos, are turning it into a fifty-fifty.

Garcia enters the fight with less evidence than a profile. He’s coming off a loss to Rolando Romero, and Santos sees that as pressure, not momentum. In an interview with MillCity Boxing, Santos treated this fight as a line in the sand for Garcia. Not in a dramatic sense. In a practical way. Lose here and you run out of excuses.

Garcia’s career will not end in failure. The sport no longer punishes players who can be sold in this way. The road to a lucrative fight with WBC mandatory Conor Benn would suffer. This fight is based on timing and perception. The loss to Barrios makes it complex to sell as a significant move, even if promoters could still court casual fans.

For Santos, it comes down to experience. Garcia has never won a world title and hasn’t had these problems. Barrios has. His size, patience, and ability to do things all work to his advantage if he engages in combat instead of running away. It’s not about speed or noise. It’s about who gets to act when the plan stops working. If Barrios fights like a pro, Garcia will be in for a long night.

Barrios also fared better in his loss to Gervonta Davis than Garcia. He shared the ring with Keith Thurman, Manny Pacquiao, Yordenis Ugas and Abel Ramos. The experience advantage is difficult.

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Last update: 01/09/2026

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Shakur Stevenson only sees one winner in Canelo vs. David Benavidez: ‘I’m a fan’

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Shakur Stevenson sees only one winner in Canelo vs David Benavidez: “I’m a fan”

Shakur Stevenson gave a balanced assessment of why the fight between Canelo Alvarez and David Benavidez has not yet taken place.

Both multi-weight world champions seemed to be on a collision course at 168 pounds, with Canelo reigning as the undisputed king.

Meanwhile, Benavidez held the “interim” WBC title after becoming a two-time super middleweight world champion and awaited his mandatory shot at the full WBC title.

This opportunity, however, never materialized as Canelo continued to defend his undisputed crown against alternative opposition.

During that time, the Mexican had one-sided points victories over the likes of John Ryder and Jermell Charlo, but was widely criticized for failing to face his most formidable rival, Benavidez.

Benavidez has since won the WBC 175-pound title and now looks set to become a three-weight world champion against Gilberto Ramirez, whom he will face on May 2 for the WBO and WBA cruiserweight titles.

This may seem like a bold move, but the 29-year-old’s physique will enable him to develop into an effective 200-pound operator, while Canelo is clearly best suited at 168 pounds.

The natural size difference therefore made their clash even less likely, as Stevenson points out Joe Rogan that in his opinion this is the most significant factor.

“Benavidez is too large for Canelo. I see both sides. I love Benavidez and I’m a fan of his, so I see the ‘fight me, brother’ side.”

“But then I see Canelo’s attitude. He’s like, ‘Man, this guy regularly weighs 200 pounds. I don’t get anywhere near that weight, so I ask myself, ‘Why would I fight this guy?'”

Despite a unanimous decision loss to Terence Crawford, Canelo was promised a shot at the world championship by Turki Alalshikh in Riyad, Saudi Arabia in September this year.

Potential options include Christian Mbilli and Jose Armando Resendiz, the respective WBC and WBA champions, while the IBF and WBO super middleweight world titles remain vacant following Crawford’s retirement.

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Eddie Hearn clarifies Turkie’s shoe shine comment

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Image: Eddie Hearn explains remark about cleaning Turki Alalshikh’s shoes

“If you ask me to immaculate your shoes, I will immaculate them,” Hearn told The Stomping Ground. “But basically the reference was that I said I wasn’t too proud to know my position and the opportunities open to me.”

Over the past two years, Saudi Arabia has financed a series of major boxing events, combining several championship fights that had been stalled in customary negotiations. Matchroom-promoted fighters have appeared on a number of Riyad’s season cards during this period, including major title fights and heavyweight events featuring some of the sport’s most recognizable names.

Hearn said his approach has always been elementary. When an opportunity arises that will benefit the players and the company, the priority is to take advantage of it rather than worrying about what the moment will look like in public.

“My senior man says if you walk past a fivepence coin on the floor you’ll pick it up,” Hearn said. “If a great opportunity comes along, we make money and I enjoy it, no problem.”

Hearn added that he expects to continue working with Turki on future boxing events, despite the occasional public exchange. Several promoters now partner with Saudi-backed events, and financing has become a regular feature of the sport’s biggest fight negotiations.

“I think he enjoys working with us,” Hearn said. “He will always do what suits him and we will continue to do what suits us and our players.”

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Oliver McCall’s heavyweight ranking of 60 raises questions

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Oliver McCall defeating Gary Cobia on Country Box at age 59

Former heavyweight champion Oliver McCall still appears in the US heavyweight rankings at the age of 60, an unusual entry that immediately raises questions about how those rankings are calculated.

BoxRec currently ranks McCall 51st among American heavyweights and in the top 250 in the world, which puts the “Atomic Bull” ahead of several energetic fighters.

Below McCall are DeAndre Savage (No. 54), Josh Popper (No. 59), Curtis Harper (No. 61), Ed Latimore (No. 70) and Tyrrell Herndon (No. 83).

What stands out about these spots is that many of these players have been much more energetic in recent years, while McCall’s appearances have been constrained. Several of them also faced noticeably stronger opposition.

Oliver McCall’s ranking anomaly

McCall, whose professional career began in 1985, has a record of 61-14-1 with 40 knockouts and remains one of the most recognizable heavyweight champions of the 1990s.

The Chicago native defeated Lennox Lewis to win the WBC title before building one of boxing’s longest-lasting careers.

Despite turning 60, McCall still wrestles occasionally under the Country Box banner. His last appearances were in Nashville, Tennessee, where he recorded wins over Gary Cobia and Stacy Frazier and a draw with Carlos Reyes.

McCall fought just three times in six years and drew once. The level of his opponents doesn’t even register on any significant scale compared to some of the fighters listed around him, especially Tyrrell Herndon, who could reasonably be rated higher simply for surviving a seven-round loss to Deontay Wilder.

The anomaly raises a broader question. Is this just a quirk of the ranking system or something that requires further explanation?

It is known that BoxRec uses a points-based formula, but it is unclear whether the calculations are currently fully automated and whether human supervision still plays a role in determining the order.

Country box

Mike Tyson Rating

For context, Mike Tyson’s return to Jake Paul – when Tyson was two years younger than the current McCall – placed the former undisputed champion at No. 74 in the United States and No. 338 in the world.

That ranking was about a hundred places below McCall’s current global standing, even though Tyson’s return attracted much more attention and faced a much more vital opponent.

McCall turned professional at the age of 19, meaning the former heavyweight champion is still appearing in the rankings more than forty years after his debut.

On this basis, the existence of a plain nostalgia factor can probably be ruled out.

Instead, the situation indicates that algorithm-based rankings can sometimes produce results that do not reflect activity or opposition.

Whether the breakdown reflects a system working exactly as designed or an anomaly worthy of closer examination is a fair question.


About the author

Phil Jay is a seasoned boxing journalist with over 15 years of experience covering the global fight scene. As editor-in-chief of World Boxing News since 2010, Jay has interviewed dozens of world champions and covered boxing’s biggest nights in the ring. View all articles by Phil Jay.

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