Boxing
Shakur Stevenson stops Josh Padley for nine
Published
1 year agoon
By: Sean Crose
The featherlight champion of WBC Shakur Stevenson received the widely unknown Josh Padley on Saturday in Saudi Arabia. Stevenson was to fight Floyd Schofield before Schofield had to give up the fight because of his illness. 15-0 Padley then struggled outside the miniature notification. The question, of course, was whether Padley could give 22-0 Stevenson a real fight.
Southpaw Stevenson dominated the first with his excellent set of skills. Stevenson began to land in the second. Although Padley certainly did not turn out to be amateur, the defending master was able to launch some angular combinations in the third. Being defensive by nature Shakur was not one of them. Despite this, the fourth, it seemed that Stevenson was working on winning in space.
The fifth was a tardy, silent romance. However, Stevenson worked well on the body at the end. Then he shot Padley’s head in front of the bell. Padley, at his own discretion, fired with bad intentions. Until six, Stevenson looked like he was working on ending the fight. However, he did not hurt his man, which could disappoint some fans. Still, Stevenson showed extraordinary skills.
Stevenson’s hand seemed to be hurt in seventh place. Although he looked keen in eighth place, it seemed that Stevenson’s hand would prevent the early end of the fight. It wasn’t like that.
In the ninth place, when it seemed that the fight would run a distance, Padley was dropped with a shot. He got up, but the second shot from the body put him away again. Padley got up for the second time, but the fight was almost finished. Indeed, Stevenson put down his man for the third time before the end of the round. Padley’s corner, seeing enough, threw a towel, giving Stevenson his early victory.
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“I think this is the biggest fight in the world, especially in this weight class,” Benavidez said at the post-fight press conference.
“It’s definitely a fight I want. Like I said, I’m not afraid of anyone. This is Monstro’s world and if he wants to get the fight, we’ll get it.”
Opetaia recently lost her IBF cruiserweight title after joining Zuffa Boxing and fighting an unsanctioned fight against Brandon Glanton. Benavidez suggested this move, which immediately complicated negotiations for a future fight.
“I don’t know why he went to Zuffa,” Benavidez said. “We could have had this fight right after this one.”
“I’m not going to go out there and fight for the Zuffa title.”
Benavidez also questioned whether fighters associated with Zuffa would have access to the biggest opportunities in boxing, pointing to Dana White’s history with rival promotional companies.
“I think they’re definitely losing their power,” Benavidez said. “There’s just a lot of politics involved.”
“I think Dana White has shown that he doesn’t want to fight PBC, DAZN.”
The undefeated champion later made it clear that he believed he was in a stronger commercial position compared to Opetaia and suggested that there was no reason for him to choose another promotional organization.
“I’m the one filling these stadiums,” Benavidez said. “I’m the one fighting pay-per-view.”
“Jai Opetaia has never fought on pay-per-view. He has never filled an arena like this.”
Benavidez added that he would still be open to fighting if the two sides manage to reach an agreement outside Zuffa’s structures.
“If they want to come to the table here, we can do that,” Benavidez said. “Let’s get it.”

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.
Tyson Fury believes Anthony Joshua may still be injured and if the long-awaited heavyweight clash finally happens later this year, the “Gypsy King” will be looking to become the tenth man to carry his British rival to the canvas.
Joshua’s heavyweight aura didn’t disappear overnight. He broke in the match with Wladimir Klitschko, fell in the match with Andy Ruiz Jr. and has never fully recovered since then.
Long before Daniel Dubois smashed Joshua at Wembley and Fury publicly questioned his ability to take punches, warning signs were already observable for the former unified champion.
Dillian Whyte first took a look at boxing in 2015.
Joshua recovered to hold off Whyte but was badly concussed in a wild exchange that immediately raised doubts about the Olympic gold medalist’s reaction under pressure.
At the time, these concerns were drowned out by the hype around Joshua’s promotion. Eddie Hearn was building his biggest star and openly talked about Joshua as a generational heavyweight who could join the likes of Muhammad Ali and Lennox Lewis.
Then came Klitschko.
Anthony Joshua
Joshua’s victory over Wladimir Klitschko in 2017 remains one of the best heavyweight fights of the up-to-date era, but it also permanently changed how many watched him.
After tripping the Ukrainian, Joshua came close to forcing a stoppage before Klitschko suddenly turned the tide and sent the Londoner to the canvas with a powerful right hand.
Joshua recovered brilliantly and eventually stopped Klitschko in front of 90,000 fans at Wembley, but the image of him badly injured and exhausted in the middle rounds remained in people’s minds.
The aura of invincibility disappeared.
Even as Joshua continued his march towards an undisputed title shot and added the Joseph Parker belt to his collection, concerns about his durability never completely disappeared.
Then came the night that changed everything.
Andy Ruiz Jr.
When Jarrell Miller failed multiple drug tests ahead of Joshua’s American debut at Madison Square Garden, Matchroom began looking for a replacement who could keep the event alive.
Several names were discussed before Andy Ruiz Jr. was called.
By then, Ruiz had lost to Parker, whom Joshua had already beaten, and few gave the Mexican-American much of a chance to pull off the upset.
This decision backfired spectacularly.
Joshua dropped Ruiz early on before completely breaking down as the challenger exposed huge weaknesses in the champion’s squad. Ruiz dropped Joshua four times and took the unified heavyweight titles in one of the biggest shocks of the up-to-date era.
Joshua regained the belts six months later in Saudi Arabia, but the rematch never fully repaired the damage done to his reputation.
Ruiz entered the fight significantly overweight after admitting he had barely trained, and many viewed the second fight as little more than a controlled recovery mission.
From that point on, Joshua’s vulnerability became part of every major fight discussion surrounding him.
Broad kryptonite
Oleksandr Usyk then presented a completely different problem.
Joshua was chasing greatness against one of the most technically gifted fighters of his generation, but stylistically it always looked like a nightmare fight for the Briton. Usyk’s movement, timing, footwork and IQ repeatedly set Joshua up for two defeats.
Then Dubois came.
Unlike Usyk, Dubois did not defeat Joshua. It overwhelmed him.
Dubois repeatedly dropped Joshua and smashed him in devastating fashion at Wembley as all the senior concerns about Joshua’s durability and return immediately resurfaced.
Questions surrounding Joshua’s heavyweight reign have persisted over the years due to circumstances surrounding several of his championship wins and opportunities. The Dubois debacle has only intensified these conversations.
Tyson Fury aims for ten
Now Fury has reignited the entire debate ahead of the long-awaited showdown later this year by openly attacking Joshua’s biggest weakness.
If Fury finally defeats Joshua, he will become the tenth fighter to do so.
No one can question Joshua’s ambition, professionalism or desire to become one of heavyweight boxing’s biggest stars.
But every time Joshua hit the canvas, the perception around him changed a little more.
When heavyweight boxing senses weakness, it never forgets.
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.
Boxing
David Benavidez Claims Zuffa Boxing Is Preventing Him From Fighting ‘The Biggest Fight In The World’
Published
2 hours agoon
May 13, 2026
David Benavidez believes he is being denied the chance to fight the biggest fight in boxing.
Benavidez became the world champion in three weight categories he stopped Gilberto Ramirez and won the WBA and WBO cruiserweight titles.
While “The Mexican Monster” is currently expected to drop back down to 175 pounds, some boxing fans want to see a cruiserweight bout with fellow undefeated star Jai Opetaia.
Opetaia was the IBF cruiserweight champion but was stripped of his belt after signing with Dana White’s Zuffa Boxing and taking part in an unsanctioned fight with Brandon Glanton.
Benavidez revealed after the fight that he would love to face Opetaia, but believes that the decision to sign with Zuffa prevents that fight from happening.
“It’s the biggest fight in the world, especially in this weight class. It’s definitely the fight I want. I’m not afraid of anyone. If he wants to get the fight, we can get it.
“I don’t know why he went to Zuffa. We could have had that fight right after that one… I’m not going to go there and fight for the Zuffa title.
“It would be a great fight for the future. I respect Jai Opetaia, he is a great fighter, but he has to come here for these fights to happen because we cannot organize any fights in Zuffa.”
Benavidez went further and claimed that those who sign with Zuffa are missing out on greater opportunities.
“[Fighters] they are definitely losing power. There’s a lot of politics involved. Dana White showed that he does not want to fight with PBC, DAZN.
“I don’t want to sound like I’m disrespecting them, but that’s what it looks like from the outside. If we can come to an agreement and have a large fight, let’s do it.”
If a fight between Benavidez and Opetaia were to occur, Hall of Fame inductee Tim Bradley has already revealed who he will return to win.
David Benavidez Claims Zuffa Blocks Jai Opetaia
Tyson Fury targets Anthony Joshua’s tenth knockdown
Rankings Explained, April 2026
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