Boxing
Tim Bradley questions 12-round test fight against Xander
Published
3 weeks agoon
Bradley said experience could prove to be a factor as Boots did not spend enough time in the final innings.
There is definitely some truth to the notion that we haven’t seen Ennis in a fight to the death, but there is also the risk of punishing a fighter for being too dominant.
“Yeah, I think experience might be a factor here, but I mean Boots isn’t used to going 12 rounds. Boots isn’t used to going 12 rounds either. He usually knocks these guys out before he goes 12 rounds,” Bradley told YSM Sports Media.
Bradley is right that Ennis didn’t spend a lot of time overdue in rounds, but that’s mostly because his shot selection and pocket awareness are so high that opponents tend to crack before they can test his engine.
While we didn’t see Ennis lose any strength, we also didn’t see him be the least bit winded or depressed. “An unanswered question” is not necessarily a sign of weakness; there is simply a lack of data because it was so effective.
Bradley also questioned the level of opposition Boots has faced, saying there is little material in the reports to provide evidence of elite level.
“When you look at the competition he faced, nothing jumped out as crazy.”
This matters because Ennis is moving to a stronger division where size, pace and resistance are more tough than at welterweight. Xander is younger, naturally bigger and at 154 years venerable he has already won titles.
Bradley still thinks Boots has a higher ceiling. He called him “extremely talented” and said he expected Ennis to come in and want to make a statement.
“I’ve got Boots. I just think he’s incredibly talented,” Tim said.
One thing that often gets overlooked in the 12-round experience debate is Ennis’ extensive amateur experience. While professional rounds are different, elite amateurs are accustomed to high-intensity, high-pressure environments. To most observers, Ennis doesn’t strike me as a fighter who panics, which usually causes a fighter to burn through his gas tank in the overdue rounds.
Robert Segal is a boxing reporter at Boxing News 24 with over a decade of experience covering fight news, previews and analysis. Known for his first-hand reporting and in-ring perspective, he delivers authoritative coverage of champions, challengers and emerging talent from around the world.
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Boxing
Robert Garcia says Oscar Duarte will not fight Lindolfo Delgado
Published
33 minutes agoon
May 18, 2026
Oscar Duarte could have lost the easiest path to the world title without even entering the ring for it.
The IBF is trying to fill the vacant 140-pound championship belt after Richardson Hitchins retired and Duarte (31-2-1, 23 KO) was ready to fight fellow contender Lindolfo Delgado. The problem is that Duarte and Delgado are long-time stablemates under trainer Robert Garcia, and Garcia says this fight is unlikely to happen.
“I had dinner with Pepe Gomez and Memo Rocha, Duarte’s promoter and manager, and we are all convinced that Duarte will not continue on the IBF tour against Lindolfo Delgado unless Duarte says otherwise,” Robert Garcia told Ring.
“But I don’t think that will happen because we work closely together. We all agreed that Duarte will follow the WBC route for his next title fight.”
Garcia also suggested that Duarte’s recent split decision victory over Angel Fierro was influenced by months of uninterrupted preparation after Duarte’s scheduled February title fight against Hitchins ended hours before the evening’s fight when Hitchins fell ill.
“What influenced Duarte in the fight against Fierro was the fact that he kept coming back from training camps. He was overtrained and that’s why his performance wasn’t as good as we expected,” Robert said.
“It affected his physical abilities. He tired himself more than he should have. I think that was the problem, but he dug deep, sucked it up and did what he needed to do to get the win.”
The comments came after Duarte put up a tougher-than-expected fight against Fierro earlier this month in Las Vegas. Fierro entered the fight 3.4 pounds overweight, but Garcia said Duarte’s team still moved forward because they didn’t want another cancellation after the unsuccessful fight against Hitchins.
Garcia also made it clear that he believed Duarte would already be a world champion if the fight with Hitchins had happened.
“There’s no doubt in my mind that Oscar would have beaten Hitchins in February and become the world champion, just knowing how prepared he was for that fight,” Garcia said.
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Last updated: 18/05/2026 at 11:05
Boxing
Tim Bradley summarizes David Benavidez’s chances of moving up to heavyweight and defeating Usyk
Published
3 hours agoon
May 18, 2026
Tim Bradley assessed David Benavidez’s chances of beating Oleksandr Usyk, who still holds three of the four major heavyweight titles.
The Ukrainian returns to action at the Egyptian Pyramids of Giza next Saturday, voluntarily defending his WBC belt against Dutch kickboxer Rico Verhoeven.
Besides this next exit, Usyk will likely be ordered to face “interim” WBC champion Agit Kabayelwho has a chance to win the full green and gold belt this year.
Alternatively, the 39-year-old could vacate his world title, perhaps with the intention of facing newly crowned unified champion Benavidez instead – a fight backed by powerful boxing broker Turki Alalshikh.
“The Mexican Monster” became a three-division world champion earlier this month, dethroning Gilberto Ramirez after the sixth round in his first appearance at 200 pounds.
However, despite his dominant performance, the reality is that Benavidez is not yet a full-fledged cruiserweight, and the 29-year-old admitted that he weighed just 202 pounds on fight night.
Because of this, he will likely drop back down to 175 pounds – where he still holds the WBC title – to face Dmitry Bivol for the undisputed crown.
As for Hall of Famer Bradley, this represents the most reasonable option for Benavidez, who effectively stated in his YouTube channel that the American has no chance of overthrowing Usyk.
“Usyk? Stop. It’s okay to have dreams – it’s okay, you can dream – [but] if you feel David Benavidez can beat Usyk, I’ll gladly take your money.
While Benavidez has always expressed interest in moving up to heavyweight, it appears his main target right now is unified airy heavyweight champion Bivol.
First, Bivol must defeat mandatory challenger Michael Eifert on May 30, but he would certainly be eager to get a chance to become a two-time undisputed champion later this year.
Boxing
Don King’s Palm Beach Jai Alai site is headed to foreclosure auction
Published
5 hours agoon
May 18, 2026
A foreclosure auction will be held on May 18 at the former Palm Beach Jai Alai frontage, owned by boxing promoter Don King, with residential developers among the parties eyeing the Mangonia Park property and King’s legal team still searching for a solution.
The site at 1415 45th Street has been vacant for more than three decades. King, 93, bought the property in 1999 for $6.3 million, according to property records cited by King. The real deal. The front itself, a 282,800-square-foot structure built in 1973, closed in December 1994 after Florida’s expansion of gambling offerings and a prolonged strike by jai alai players destroyed the sport’s commercial base.
How the auction happened
Palm Beach County Circuit Court Judge Scott Kerner entered a $42.5 million judgment in favor of an entity related to Taylor Made Lending, a Pompano Beach-based lender, clearing the way for the May 18 sale. Taylor Made serves as a special entity servicing a syndicate of mortgage investors, including Miami-based Winston Capital Management.
Court documents show that King personally guaranteed three loans secured by the property. The first one, redeemed in 2023, was worth $22.3 million at an interest rate of 13.9% per annum and required monthly payments of $260,000 in interest alone. A second loan for $9 million was made in 2024 at an interest rate of 18.5% per annum, as well as a third loan for $800,000 at an interest rate of 2%. Taylor Made alleged in its complaint that in September, King stopped making monthly interest-only payments of $138,750 on a $9 million loan and failed to repay the $800,000 loan in December when it matured.
The website and its limitations
The property is zoned primarily for office, government, ambulatory, educational and manufacturing uses, with as much as 25 percent of its square footage zoned for retail uses such as pharmacies, restaurants and gyms, according to an offering memorandum prepared by listing broker Art Porosoff of Miami-based Porosoff Group.
Development plans face an infrastructural obstacle independent of exclusion. Mangonia Park City Manager Ken Metcalf said in a March 31 interview that nothing could be built on the 53-acre parcel until the city secured a recent, larger reservoir for immaculate drinking water. Developers tracking the site have introduced a mixed-use redevelopment with thousands of recent homes.
Pattern of distressed holdings
The foreclosure is part of a broader spectrum of King’s real estate problems. In July, a subsidiary of Boca Raton-based construction company Straticon paid $11 million for a warehouse King owned in Deerfield Beach that previously served as the boxing promoter’s headquarters. The warehouse was the subject of a separate foreclosure lawsuit brought by a subsidiary of Miami-based Blueprint Capital Partners over the alleged failure to repay a $5.3 million loan.
Lawyers for King and Taylor Made Lending did not respond to requests for comment from The Real Deal, which first reported the foreclosure auction date.
Previous sales attempts
Since the purchase, King has made multiple attempts to sell the Mangonia Park property. His wife, Henrietta King, bought the frontage in 1999 with plans for a sports complicated that never came to fruition. In the early 2000s, a proposed sale of the apartments to a Boca Raton developer fell through, leading to a lengthy DK Arena v. EB Acquisitions lawsuit that ultimately made its way through the Florida Supreme Court. A separate deal with West Palm Beach-based FRI Investors also fell apart ten years ago.
The property was put back on the market in April 2025 with no asking price, although sources told The Real Deal that King’s team was seeking offers in the $100 million range, or about $2 million per acre.
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