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Ryan Garcia needs to grow up after losing Romero

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Image: Ryan Garcia's Next Opponent: De La Hoya Rules Out Rolly Romero II, Eyes Teofimo Lopez

Analyst Sergio Mora defended promoter Oscar De La Hoya in response to Ryan Garcia’s social media attacks on him. Earlier this week, De La Hoya told Ryan in an interview on the AH Show that he needed to “wake up” and “grow up.”

Garcia responded by posting, “Fuck the golden boy.”

De La Hoya’s tough love

Former six-division world champion De La Hoya’s comments were intended to make Garcia take seriously his career, which is heading downhill. As Mora points out, Ryan’s record in his last four fights is 1-2-1, and he hasn’t fought since his upset 12-round unanimous decision loss to Rolando “Rolly” Romero on May 2, 2025 in Modern York.

“Ryan Garcia lost to Rolly Romero in a fight he shouldn’t have lost. He’s 1-2-1 in his last four fights,” analyst Sergio Mora told DAZN Boxing about Ryan Garcia not working out. “He’s not a winner now. He hasn’t even won the championship.

Training in the living room

Instead of Garcia in the gym preparing for her next fight in 2025, she posts training videos of herself working out in her living room. This led to comparisons between him and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., who did the same when his career began to decline in September 2012.

“Oscar De La Hoya, yes, he has a lot of skeletons in his closet. Why you?” [Ryan] do you have to keep mentioning it? You haven’t achieved anything this man has achieved in boxing. Until you get your first belt, let alone six or seven divisions like Oscar did, you should stay composed, work tough in the gym and get back to where you belong. This is the highest place.”

Strenuous reality

The problem is that Garcia “isn’t among the top.” Outside of his upset 12-round majority decision victory over Devin Haney on April 20, 2024, he has never shown that he belongs among the best. Now that he’s been reduced to a lounge-school athlete, it doesn’t seem like he’s going anywhere in the sport.

Garcia doesn’t have the talent of 1992 Olympic gold medalist and former six-division world champion De La Hoya. He will never do it. The enormous amounts of money Kingry has made in his miniature career – $50 million – act as an anchor, stifling his hunger for constant improvement.

Ryan’s contract with Golden Boy Promotions is believed to expire in 2026. At this point, it may not matter much to De La Hoya that he loses Garcia. He turned into a YouTuber-style warrior. He doesn’t seem to be able to beat any of the top fighters at 147 pounds, and the situation is the same at 140.

While Ryan is useful in gaining fans due to his immense social media following, his performance against Rolly and loss to Gervonta Davis show that he lacks the talent to become a world champion.

“Ryan Garcia is a top contender, but he’s going in the wrong direction right now and he’s not winning,” Mora said.

Last update: 24/10/2025

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Boxing

Hamzah Sheeraz takes aim at Canelo Alvarez after winning the WBO title

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Image: Hamzah Sheeraz Still Calls Canelo A “Goat,” Eyes Future Showdown After WBO Title Win

“I believe he is one of the goats in boxing. It would be an honor to share the ring with him and if I get the chance, I will definitely win,” Hamzah said after his victory over Begic.

Sheeraz made this comment after saying he plans to win more super middleweight titles after moving up from 160 pounds.

“I’ll fight anyone. Look, there were boxing kings in the ring tonight and I’m trying to follow in their footsteps. So I’m just going to beat whoever I put in front of me.”

“So I’m going to take all the belts this time and inshallah, next year you will be able to see Hamzah Sheeraz as the unified champion in the 168 division,” Hamzah said.

The path to a Sheeraz-Canelo fight could open quickly if Alvarez defeats Christian Mbilli on September 12 in Riyad. Canelo’s victory will likely allow him to retain the WBC title again, while Sheeraz now holds the WBO belt after Saturday’s victory.

This would give Riyadh Season a ready-made unification fight between the two marquee names at 168 pounds.

Sheeraz’s team already seems interested in forcing the fight. Manager Spencer Brown pointed openly at Canelo after the fight when discussing the newly crowned champion’s next step.

“We are marching in the face of Canelo boxing,” Brown said.

“This is the fight we want.”

Maybe it’s finally time for Sheeraz. He has picked up back-to-back stoppage wins since moving up to super middleweight, and his size and offensive style appear to be better at 168 pounds than they were at the end of his middleweight career.

Canelo is still the bigger star by a mile, but Riyad has shown he’s willing to take on younger, undefeated fighters against established fighters if enough belts are on the line. Sheeraz seemed to be part of that conversation on Saturday night.

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Canelo Alvarez makes his feelings clear after Verhoeven’s controversial 11th round stoppage against Usyk

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Canelo Alvarez makes feelings clear on controversial Verhoeven stoppage against Usyk in 11th round

Canelo Alvarez commented on the controversial break between Oleksandr Usyk and Rico Verhoeven.

The boxing world was buzzing with their reaction Usyk successfully defended his heavyweight crown against Verhoeven at the Pyramids of Giza in Egypt.

However, for a long time it seemed that this would not be an effective defense, and the final came in the 11th round when referee Mark Lyson stopped the fight, which many viewers prematurely believed.

Verhoeven performed well above expectations, causing Usyk numerous problems throughout the fight, but although he recovered from the knockdown, the kickboxing star was stopped on his feet and denied the chance to advance to the 12th round.

Tony Bellew believes Verhoeven should be given a chance to continue his career, but Mexican superstar Canelo does not share the same view.

I talk to professional boxing fansCanelo revealed that he agreed with the judge’s decision.

“It was a good fight, I don’t think so [that it was was an early stoppage]I think they saved a brutal knockout.”

Usyk is expected to take some time before deciding on his next move, with some fans calling for an immediate rematch with Verhoeven while others want him to face mandatory WBC title challenger Agit Kabayel now.

As for Canelo, he will return to action in September and will look to reclaim his world titles when he fights WBC super middleweight champion Christian Mbilli in Riyad, Saudi Arabia.

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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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