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Stephanie Simon’s Journey from Wrestling to the Marines and Professional Boxing

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Stephanie Simon, a 29-year-old Marine Corps captain, has navigated a male-dominated world from her eighth-grade wrestler days to her time in the Marine Corps. She soon hopes to make her mark in professional boxing.

Simon, who won the 2023 Olympic qualifier but failed to secure a spot on the U.S. team, will make her professional debut on Sept. 27 in Fayetteville, Georgia, in a fight preceding Alycia Baumgardner’s comeback against Delfine Persoon.

For Simon, the Olympic trials in December were the culmination of years of dedication and sacrifice. But despite winning her weight class, her path to the Olympics remained uncertain due to earlier qualifying complications.

“Winning the Olympic qualifier was something I always wanted to do,” Simon said. “But once I did it, I realized it didn’t really mean anything.”

Simon’s victory at the trials did not guarantee her a spot on the Olympic team. Instead, she was invited to the USA Boxing High-Performance training camp, where she would be judged against the top fighter in her weight class, Morelle McCane.

“It’s basically an internal evaluation,” Simon said. “Our performances go into the overall evaluation system, which includes all the other training we do, lifting and conditioning. After that evaluation, they’ll decide who moves on to the next qualifying tournament.”

Simon, who had attended selection camps two years earlier, knew her chances of earning a spot on the team were slim.

“I had already been beaten and felt like the Olympic qualifiers were a dead-end tournament,” Simon said. “I knew the likelihood of someone getting a spot from someone who was already on the team was very slim.”

She was right — she didn’t make the team because McCane qualified for the 2024 Olympics at the 2023 Pan American Games, winning silver. “I wanted to be captain of the USA Boxing team at the Olympics,” Simon said. “That’s what hurts the most.”

As her amateur career drew to a close, Simon, who had moved to Florida, pondered her next move. Although she had a background in wrestling and considered MMA, she ultimately chose boxing, perhaps with a point to prove. Accustomed to being an outsider, Simon recalled her time at the Naval Academy and her early days in the Marine Corps, where she faced skepticism and resistance to her leadership role. Making challenging, solitary decisions was nothing up-to-date for her—now she had to do it in boxing.

“Until 2016, the United States Marine Corps had regulations, rules and restrictions on what women could do, and women were not allowed to hold positions in Combat Arms,” Simon said. “At 23, while my peers were boxing, I was leading Marines, making decisions that could affect people’s lives.”

In 2017, a year after the rule change, Simon took command.

“As a 23-year-old woman, a girl, being in command of 50 guys who had never seen a woman in that position, in itself, in many ways, was traumatic because I was not well-received,” Simon said. “Our job was basically to take infantry from the ship to the shore and from the shore of the beach back to the ship. We had about 20 amphibious assault vehicles, which are amphibious tanks, basically with machine guns.”

After the trials, Simon embarked on a transformational journey from Florida to California, seeking a fresh start in her boxing career. Her journey was not just a physical move, but a symbolic leap into professional boxing. From training with friends in Orlando to meeting her Olympic hero Henry Cejudo in Phoenix, Simon’s path took her to an unlikely destination: Santa Monica.

“I met Milton Lacroix through a mutual friend, and he took me to one of his fighters’ houses, a mansion in Beverly Hills,” Simon said. “He had a whole boxing ring set up on a basketball court in the backyard. So I ended up sparring with a few guys there, and that was literally my second day in Santa Monica. Pretty frosty. Santa Monica, California, was my ultimate destination. That’s where I live now.”

Known for her pragmatic approach, Simon rents a room in Santa Monica that she found on an app and trains at Churchill Boxing Gym. Her decision to move was prompted by a desire to surround herself with the best and make the most of her recent run in boxing.

Recalling her early days in wrestling when teenage men would tell her, “Who the hell is this girl coming in here to the boys’ wrestling team, trying to fight us and compete with us?” This aversion to fighting fueled her determination to defy the odds throughout her life.

“I have this warrior mentality, but I’m also a woman in a man’s space,” Simon said. “I’ve been doing this my whole f**king life.”

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Boxing

Ryan Rozicki is waiting for Badou Jack’s consent to mandatory cooperation with the WBC

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Badou Jack Rozicki Mikaelian WBC

The World Boxing Council (WBC) ordered world cruiserweight champion Badou “The Ripper” Jack (20-1-1, 19 KO) to make a mandatory title defense against Ryan “The Bruiser” Rozicki (20-1), number 1 in the WBC ranking – 1, 19 KOs).

If both camps fail to successfully negotiate an agreement, the WBC will organize a tender on February 4, followed by the Jack vs. Rozicki. Rozicki’s promoter, Three Lions Promotions, immediately sent Team Jacek an offer to promote the fight in Canada last week.

“We are waiting for their counteroffer,” explained promoter Dan Otter of Three Lions Promotions. “Boxing has had a huge resurgence in Canada and Ryan is leading the way. He is one of the most electrifying and hardest-hitting fighters in boxing, definitely in the cruiserweight division. He wants the WBC green belt and ultimately the unification of the division. Ryan will fight Jack anywhere for the belt.”

29-year-old Rozicki, born in Sydney (Nova Scotia) and living in Hamilton (Ontario), fought 22 professional fights against 21 different opponents (twice against Yamil Alberto Peralta), stopping 19 of the 20 opponents he defeated. an eye-opening 95-KO percentage.

Jack, 41, was a 2008 Olympian representing his native Sweden. He is a three-division world champion, as well as the WBC super middleweight and World Boxing Association (WBA) lightweight heavyweight title holder. Jack has a record of 5-0-2 (2 KO) in world championship fights.

“We respect Jack and I don’t want to sound disrespectful,” Otter added, “but he’s over 40 years vintage and has been relatively inactive for two years (only one fight). He brings a lot of experience and respect to the ring, but he will fight a newborn defender with a lot of power. Jack is going to struggle and honestly, I don’t think he’ll make it past the first few rounds.”

Ryan Rozicki is on a mission to become the first Canadian cruiserweight world champion.

The next move is Badou Jack’s.

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Floyd Mayweather’s record is not normal, it can’t happen in 70 years

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Floyd Mayweather 50-0

Floyd Mayweather’s incredible 50-0 record is not normal and cannot be repeated in sports for another seventy years.

This is the view of Saudi Arabian president Turki Alalshikh, who wants to adopt the UFC model in which fighters lose many fights during their career.

In a speech as he hosted the Ring Magazine Awards after acquiring the long-running boxing publication from Oscar De La Hoya, Alalshikh was unequivocal in his opinion.

“Now losing some fights in boxing must be normal,” he explained. “All fighters want a career similar to Floyd Mayweather – no losses. This may happen once every 50, 60 or 70 years.

“We need it [to be] like currently in the UFC model, where champions lose and win,” added the matchmaker during the Riyad season.

Mayweather rose through the sport in the tardy 1990s to become one of its youngest superstars. Mayweather’s professional success came after winning a bronze medal at the Olympics after losing to Serafim Todorov.

Winning world titles in five weight classes, Mayweather was untouchable. The Grand Rapids native only came close to defeat a few times. He dominated Manny Pacquiao and overtook Canelo Alvarez and Oscar De La Hoya after heated debates, with decisions that should have been made unanimously.

Towards the end of his career, Mayweather chose to face Andre Berto and Conor McGregor, easily winning and ending his boxing career at the age of 50 without ever going out. Calling himself “the greatest of all time,” Mayweather earned first-ballot Hall of Fame honors and is widely considered one of, if not the greatest defensive fighter of all time.

However, Alalshikh says this type of career needs to end so that fans can get the most out of boxing, as is the case with the Ultimate Fighting Championship. Boxing needs to become more attractive, and Alalshikh sees the failures of top stars as a way to keep interest at an all-time high.

In this sport, many boxers enjoy undefeated streaks, the most notable of which is Oleksandr Usyk. The Ukrainian Pound for Pound King is 23-0 and has beaten the best he has to offer in his division and cruiserweight classification.

It remains a mystery how Alalshikh plans to make Usyk suffer while he dominates everyone else. By the time his grand plan goes into action, Usyk will be long gone, and Gervonta Davis, Shakur Stevenson and Devin Haney may be more realistic targets.

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Manny Pacquiao remains the favorite to win the title against Mario Barrios

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Manny Pacquiao vs Barrios

WBN understands that despite alternative options emerging, it is more likely that Manny Pacquiao will face Mario Barrios next.

Bob Santos, coach of WBC welterweight champion Barrios, told World Boxing News that he is currently in contact with Pacquiao’s team. Asked by WBN if he had spoken to Pacquiao or representatives of any other challenger, Santos replied: “Yes, Pacquiao’s promoter, Sean Gibbons.” Pressed on whether Barrios vs Pacquiao might happen next, he added: “It’s challenging to say. We’ll have to see how this plays out.”

WBN contacted Santos after Conor Benn emerged as a potential alternative to Barrios. The British fighter, who recently returned from a suspension following two positive drug tests, is keen to return to competition.

Benn showed favor with the World Boxing Council at the recent WBC Convention, the WBC Evaluation Committee and during an interview with the sanctioning body over the weekend. “The Destroyer” is ranked second in the rankings at 147 pounds, despite less than solid opponents during his time in exile, during which Benn competed twice in the United States while his career in the United Kingdom was in doubt.

As he battled to clear his name and with the British Anti-Doping Authority finding no evidence that Benn had intentionally taken ostarine, the 28-year-old’s career took a pointed nosedive. Despite this, he remains highly rated and at least one step away from fighting for an eliminator or one of the remaining championship titles.

However, Pacquiao remains Barrios’ favorite. Now it’s up to the boxing legend and Hall of Famer who got the first votes to secure his shot. WBN believes a July date – most likely at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas – is the most realistic date for a Nevada swan song.

Pacquiao could extend his record as the oldest welterweight champion by six years if he can secure a huge victory over the 29-year-old world champion. At 46 years antique, such a scenario remains unlikely, but he can never be compared to one of the greatest players of this generation.

Unlike heavier boxers and his training regiment, Pacquiao looks in great shape despite his advanced age. Everything is set for a massive return to the boxing capital of the world, provided Pacquiao and his team can manage his political ambitions, which are expected to run from this month until May. After that time, Pacquiao could find himself in the summer finals and become the all-time champion, regardless of the result.

Barrios is based in the city, where he trained with Santos, and would be the perfect opponent to see out the career of one of the greatest fighters in history.

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