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Shakur vs. Zepeda: Tim Bradley gives his expert forecast

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Image: No Running Allowed: Stevenson Faces Zepeda's Aggression Under the Watchful Eye of New York Fans

Tim Bradley wants Shakur Stevenson to stand on earth and fight with William Zepeda in his pocket on Dazn PPV on Saturday, July 12, to show that he has the courage to beat him at his own match at the Louis Armstrong stadium in Queens, Up-to-date York.

Tim wants Stevenson to show his courage by trading with Zepeda (33-0, 27 KO). However, if he does so, he will expose his delicate hands to another injury. He does not intend to defeat the machine like Zepeda from one hand and cannot apply for a controversial victory, as he did against Edwin de Los Santos. Judges do not save him for the second time.

Bradley’s forecasting “Massacre”

Tim Bradley thinks that the lightweight champion of WBC Shakur (23-0, 11 KO) “massacre’ And maybe get Zepeda’s “stopping”.

TIM predicts that Stevenson will overcome Zepeda (33-0, 27 KO) just as bad as the former master of WBO Super Feather Jamel Herring in 2021. He sees Shakur able to do the same with Zepeda, like 35-year-old Herring. I don’t see how this happens, but I saw the fight. Herring is not like Zepeda.

“Shakur intends to fight [of the corner]. He will show us something we have been waiting for since [Jamel] Herring fight [in 2021]- Tim Bradley said about his canalSpeaking of the fight Shakur Stevenson vs. William Zepeda on Saturday. “He defeated the brakes on herron. It was one of his best performances.”

Why Zepeda defeats Shakur

  • Pressure without interruption
  • A vast volume output
  • The highest power
  • Shakura glass hands
  • To force war

Jamel Herring was an antique fossil, slender and faint before Shakur fought him. Unlike this Zepeda, he is younger, larger, stronger and throws all the time. He is a completely different warrior. What then 24-year-old Shakur Stevenson did herring in 2021, he could not do it against Zepeda because of the shots at him.

Stevenson is now 28 years antique, less muscular than at the age of 24, and is fighting in a lithe division, where his power did not move with Super Feather weight.

“I think we can see something like that for Shakur in this fight. I tell you that if his hands are vigorous, It will be a massacreLandslide victory. It could be a stop. Zepeda fights one way. He approaches, that’s all. I will tell you what I like in him. It will attack this body. “

Shakur has to fight in his pocket

Acquiring Zepeda’s stop is practically impossible for Stevenson, because sit on his shot to land enough; He will have to be stationary. He can’t do it with a blow, like Zepeda. Shakur will become in the best interest in their pocket and go to the war with Zepeda, because that’s what Turki Alalshikh wants.

If Stevenson wants Put on Turki To get to his good side, so that he leveled him with the fight of Gervont Davis, which he rejected for, he must fight Zeda in his pocket and go down if necessary. Even if Stevenson is blown up, he will look heroic, and Turks can pity him for being a brave soldier.

“There will be moments when Shakur will have to enter, suppress and work, a bit like what the farmer did. The farmer was successful when he pushed Zepeda. Shakur must stay close and push this man in places. I need the courage to say:” I will stop, go back, go back and I will go back with you.

Alalshikh’s Turkh fight requires

The reality is that Shakur cannot stand in front of Zepeda and avoid hit. It is a blow and Shakura’s head movement will not work to avoid these shots. If he intends to withdraw and withdraw all night, this will lead to the situation of Tom and Jerry.

Turka Alalshikh doesn’t want that. We all saw Shakur’s fight earlier, and he always withdraws when he attacks if he fights someone with power. He stood in his pocket against Jamel Herring, Josh Padley and Arty Harutyunyan because they had no impact strength. Zepeda does.

Last updated 07/08/2025

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Boxing

Break in the match Usyk demands WBC intervention after the bell against Verhoeven

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Image: Usyk Post-Bell Stoppage Against Verhoeven Demands WBC Intervention

So the question is: what options does injured player Rico Verhoeven have to appeal against the referee’s decision? Under the rules of the World Boxing Council (WBC), the sanctioning body for boxing, the Council has the power to correct sedate injustices suffered by aggrieved fighters during major world title fights. Moreover, there is precedent in this case. In 2022, the WBC officially awarded the super featherweight world championship belt to Jeff Fenech, 30 years after his controversial 1991 defeat to Azumah Nelson.

Of course, it would be foolish to suggest that Verhoeven should wait 30 years to make amends and win the world heavyweight title. It can therefore be argued that the WBC Board of Governors should now call a Special Meeting to discuss the Usyk vs. Verhoeven world title fight due to the confusion the result has caused among commentators, fans and even fighters. Everyone is united that this fight was stopped too early.

It is worth noting that current WBC welterweight world champion Ryan Garcia, who was at ringside, claims that the fight was stopped after the end of the 11th round. Others wrote the same on YouTube, with one irate fan even suggesting that the Usyk vs. Verhoeven fight was rigged.

There is a belief, rightly or wrongly, that it would be unacceptable for a professional kickboxer with only one professional fight as a heavyweight boxer to defeat a reigning world heavyweight boxing champion with significantly more heavyweight boxing experience. In tiny, boxing would be seen as a joke in the eyes of many if Verhoeven was allowed to beat Usyk.

But facts are facts. After round 10, the three judges’ scorecards were 95-95, 95-95 and 96-94 in favor of Rico Verhoeven. Round 11 does not count because it was not completed properly and the referee wrongly stopped the fight after the bell.

Politics is present in every workplace. It would be a pity if politics also appeared in professional boxing. To counter this impression, the WBC must do the right thing. A No Contest verdict for this fight will not be enough as it will leave Oleksandr Usyk as the WBC champion. Something more radical needs to be done.

The WBC needs to convince the outside world that anyone can become heavyweight champion of the world if given the opportunity. The WBC sanctioned this boxing fight.

Verhoeven won on points. At the end of the 11th round, Verhoeven was still in doubt. The fight was unfairly stopped. The conclusion is therefore straightforward and will mark a progressive step in professional boxing.

Rico Verhoeven is the modern world heavyweight boxing champion. But it would have sounded better if Michael Buffer had been allowed to make this announcement.

Romer Cherubiny
Independent journalist
Great Britain

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Vasily Lomachenko will get an immediate chance to win the world title in his comeback fight

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Vasiliy Lomachenko set to be given immediate chance to win world title in comeback fight

Vasily Lomachenko can win the world title outright, but only if he decides to fight at 130 pounds.

Either way, the 38-year-old is expected to return to action later this year after his contract with Top Rank expired earlier this month.

As a promotional free agent, “Loma” is expected to fight for the first time since May 2024, when he earned an 11th-round victory over George Kambosos Jr.

Lomachenko thus won the IBF lightweight title after previously being a three-division world champion, with his last 10 professional appearances coming at 135 pounds.

While many expect him to return to lightweight, perhaps in pursuit of a showdown with Gervonta Davis, the Ukrainian could potentially be tempted by a chance at 130 pounds.

In other words, he will get an immediate shot at the world title against unified champion Emanuel Navarrete, who is falling from a dominant position Final in the 11th round against Eduardo “Sugar” Nunez.

This, in turn, led to the unification of the WBO and IBF titles, although it is unclear what options the Mexican is considering for his next fight.

However, one of them may be a fight with Lomachenko, and WBO president Gustavo Olivieri will share his thoughts on this matter via social media.

“Lomachenko is back and if he wants to fight at 130 pounds with Navarrete, I’m sure the WBO Executive Committee [will approve their fight].

“In delicate of his professional merits – [two-time] Olympic [gold] medalist, multi-division champion, WBO super champion, future Hall of Famer – I’m sure the acceptance will be unanimous.”

While a fight with Lomachenko could make sense for both sides, super featherweight contender Charly Suarez will be demanding a mandatory shot against Navarrete if he makes his next fight against Manuel Avila on July 11.

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Mike Kimbel: Ready for a wild homecoming

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Author: Sean Crose

When I was a teenage man growing up in Waterbury, Connecticut, in the 1970s and 1980s, sports were king. It seemed like every kid in the neighborhood played on the basketball or baseball team. Fathers, perhaps disappointed that their dreams had not come true, could actually be harsh with their sons and daughters. As a teenage man in Waterbury, I played sports too, but what I loved…what I really loved…was boxing. The problem, of course, was that my mother wouldn’t let me box at the local boys club. If I wanted to box, I had to watch it on TV.

Which I did constantly every chance I got. I really wanted to see boxing live, but as a child my father wasn’t too keen on me being part of the very adult boxing audience. There was no live boxing in Waterbury either. It just wasn’t there. You would think so. Waterbury was a tough town, but unfortunately there was no way to watch professional fights live and in person. Willie Pep once had about 20,000 people in Waterbury Municipal Stadium, but that was long before I was born. There were a lot of boxing fans in Waterbury, but not a lot of boxing fans.

Fortunately, everything will change soon, because on June 6, professional boxing will finally return to Waterbury, and Mike “The Savage” Kimbel will be the main character of the gala at the legendary Palace Theater. To make things even more compelling, Kimbel is from Waterbury himself, so he’ll be performing for a hometown crowd. Of course, the youngster has a lot to lose, but the local player is confident.

“The intensity is still high,” he tells me when I ask how he’s doing as training comes to an end. Originally, one of the opponents was supposed to face Kimbel, but it didn’t work out that way. “He became just like a ghost,” Kimbel says. Fortunately, a up-to-date opponent will step in, which will be good for the teenage athlete hoping to impress his hometown fans.

“I feel amazing,” Kimbel says of the Waterbury fight. He also admitted that the June 6 card was associated with “a bit of the word ‘I told you so’.” Like many teenage children growing up in hard cities and towns, Kimbel had hard times. Suffice it to say, his mother was not joyful with the direction her son’s life was heading.

“My mom was fed up with it,” Kimbel says. Determined to keep her son straight and narrow, Kimbel’s mother took him to the gym. “It kept me out of trouble,” he says. And then some. Kimbel first made a name for himself in mixed martial arts, becoming a Bellator fighter. Eventually, however, he found himself in the squared circle he had always dreamed of.

“It was supposed to be overtime,” he says of his real-life experience in the ring. Needless to say, he fell in love with the sport. “I have always been a huge boxing fan,” he says. Indeed, Kimbel believes that his time in mixed martial arts has done him good. “It carried over,” he tells me. It certainly seems to be the case. Kimbel’s movements in the ring are characterized by natural fluidity. He has an excellent jab that allows him to unleash a powerful law.

However, Kimbel makes it clear that his boxing endeavors are about more than just glory. “I started it for my son,” he says. He also spends time with younger players through the Police Athletic League. “You can see the change in their eyes,” he says of how children, like he once did, began to become familiar with the sport.

While his upcoming performance in Waterbury is satisfying in its own right, Kimbel still feels he still has a lot of growing to do as a professional boxer. “History is still being written,” he says.

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