If they repeat this rivalry next, the stakes will change. Both will carry the belts, and the fight will have consequences for the unification in the welterweight division.
Ryan spent Thursday evening posting multiple times on X about the second fight with Haney. He pushed strenuous, shared a “Garcia vs. Haney 2” graphic, and wrote bluntly.
“Haney, if it’s time to end you, now is the time,” Garcia wrote. “You will be erased… Mark my words, after this you will never fight again… War has been declared.”
Haney responded with a different type of message.
“Let’s start VADA testing so we can fight the biggest fight in boxing!”
That’s what it’s all about. Haney is trying to set the terms before anything moves forward. Weight limit. Year-round VADA tests. After the unclear results of the first fight, he wants formal safeguards introduced before the rematch becomes official.
Their fight in 2024 never had a neat finish. Garcia won by majority decision but missed weight, which meant Haney retained the WBC title. Then came the failed drug tests and legal consequences, and the argument went beyond the scorecards.
This story explains why the rematch discussion returns to the same issues: contracted weight and testing. The unification of the welterweight division with VADA removes an venerable dispute.
The timing is noteworthy. Kingry recently showed interest in fighting Shakur Stevenson, which was a different fight with its own charm. Stevenson’s name was not included in Thursday’s posts. Haney was gone.
Everything Garcia posted was towards the same goal: he wants Haney to be next.
There are still obstacles. Haney has a lawsuit related to the first fight. The deal will require firm language on weight, testing and money. None of this is minor. But Garcia’s tone suggests it’s a priority.
If they can get it done, the welterweight will get the Garcia-Haney version of what should have happened the first time.
Ryan seems confident he can end the competition. If he really wants this next, agreeing to the same weight and testing conditions that Haney demands is the only way to stick to that claim.
Dan Ambrose is a boxing journalist at Boxing News 24, respected for his direct analysis and extensive coverage of the global fighting landscape. His reports focus on the most critical fights, division development and the most discussed stories in sports.