Boxing
Top Rank is gone, but 45 years of ESPN classics remain
Published
6 months agoon
On Thursday, October 30, Top Rank offered US viewers a free show on the promoter’s streaming channel, Top Rank Classics. This reminded me that it’s been three months since Top Rank’s streaming deal with ESPN expired.
Top Rank ESPN broadcasts began in 1980. Many of us thought the Top Rank/ESPN partnership would never end. But it happened. Now we are left with memories. Here are some of my fights – 10 fights out of many that have been watched over the years.
Roger Stafford
Hotel Hacienda, Las Vegas, November 7, 1981
The powerful Mexican Cuevas, former WBA welterweight champion, has been selected to fight Sugar Ray Leonard. Philadelphia’s Stafford tore up the script, winning an upset 10-round unanimous decision.
Stafford, a pointed boxer with a 17-2-1 record, defeated Cuevas in the second round. Cuevas got up, survived, and came back to hit Stafford with substantial left hooks in the fourth round. Stafford survived the round and Cuevas appeared to punch himself.
In the later rounds, it was all about Stafford. Cuevas was cut in the left eye and Stafford was attacking him and making pristine shots. In the last round, Cuevas was injured and almost knocked to his feet.
Donald Curry WON PTS 15 against Hwang Jun-suk
Fort Worth, Texas, February 13, 1983
Curry had to come off the canvas to win this battle between undefeated fighters for the vacant WBA welter title. Hwang, brutal but robust, dropped Curry to one knee in the seventh round with a right hand.
Curry quickly got back to his feet and came back to dominate the proceedings, bloodying the nose of the South Korean slugger with pointed jabs. The hometown crowd roared for Curry to keep going, but the shorter, stockier Hwang kept swinging.
In the later rounds, Hwang’s white shorts turned a crimson shade as blood flowed from his nose, but he was brave and defiant until the end. It was Curry’s 16th straight victory, and he seemed destined for greatness. But although he later unified the world title by knocking out WBC champion Milton McCrory in two rounds, it felt like Curry never quite lived up to his potential.
Tyrone Crawley WON Robin Blake in PTS 10
Levelland, Texas, October 8, 1983
Top Rank was building Blake up as a future star. And the towering, slender, clean-cut Southerner appeared to be on his way to a lightweight title shot when he faced Crawley of Philadelphia.
It was Saturday’s hometown fight in Levelland, with undefeated Blake (22-0, 16 KO) the favorite. But the skillful, speedy “Butterfly” Crawley outwitted the local fighter.
As I reported for Boxing News, while the crowd of 5,000 “watched the fight in stunned silence,” Blake was considered the puncher in the fight. Crawley has only stopped three opponents in its 13-1 record. But when Crawley knocked out Blake with a right hand in the third round, you knew “Rockin’ Robin” was in for a coarse night.
Crawley switched between orthodox and southpaw stance, causing Blake to disappear and look dazed. Blake, just 21 years aged, exceeded his expectations. Crawley won a deserved unanimous decision, although one Texas judge scored the fight only one point.
Terrence Alli and 12 John Meekins
Trump Castle, Atlantic City, January 20, 1991
Alli, born in Guyana but based in Brooklyn, was a regular on ESPN. One of his best wins was a 12-round unanimous decision over the talented John Meekins on ESPN’s Sunday show.
Meekins, who was also an ESPN mainstay, defended his NABF 140-pound title. (Ring analyst Al Bernstein called Alli and Meekins the “poster boys” of ESPN boxing.)
Alli was quick and pointed, throwing punches, disrupting Meekins with his quick movement and at times almost jumping into the action with his punches.
Alli landed occasional right hands, but his jab basically won the fight. Meekins landed good body shots, but Bernstein commented that Alli “used his left hand like a surgeon.”
Tommy Morrison KO 2 Art Tucker
Harrah’s Marina Casino, Atlantic City, May 14, 1992

Heavyweight contender Morrison was struggling to return to form after a loss to Ray Mercer seven months earlier. Tucker, a 40-year-old 6-foot-6 ex-con from Newark, Novel Jersey, had a decent record (20-3-1, 15 KOs) but didn’t take the punch very well.
It seemed that this duel would be “a matter of time”. But the scheduled 10-round match was lively while it lasted.
Tucker landed several right hands and a right uppercut in the first round, but Morrison drove him into the ropes with a left hook.
It all ended in the second. A left hook sent Tucker to the ropes, and referee Rudy Battle counted him to eight, and almost immediately after the “on” signal, the left hook ended the show 72 seconds into the round.
Roger Mayweather DQ 5 Livingstone Bramble
“Aladdin”, Las Vegas, March 14, 1993
Mayweather’s DQ victory against Bramble in a clash of former champions was an unsatisfying ending – it really should have been a TKO victory for the “Black Mamba”.
Bramble competed for two rounds in the scheduled 10-round super lightweight contest, but then Mayweather nailed his timing and dominated with his unerring jab and pointed shots.
Mayweather dropped Bramble with a right hand in the fourth round. Bramble was cut and swollen around his right eye and had blood in his mouth.
The fifth puck was more of a target practice for Mayweather, and Bramble’s trainer, Janks Morton, stood up on the ring apron and told referee Joe Cortez that he wanted the fight stopped.
Cortez, however, believed that Morton violated the rules by entering the ring area, and the result was recorded as a disqualification, not a TKO.
James Toney by TKO 7 Anthony Hembrick
Fernwood Resort, Bushkill, Pennsylvania, January 16, 1994

Toney was one of many standout players featured on ESPN. IBF 168-pound champion Toney was moving up to lightweight ahead of the Hembrick fight.
This was considered a good test for Toney, as Hembrick had fought for the lightweight title twice. But Toney picked apart his Michigan teammate and made it look effortless.
Toney countered beautifully as he leaned against the ropes, bloodied Hembrick’s nose, and seemed to be able to punch and hurt his man whenever he felt like it. He dropped Hembrick in the third round and again in the sixth round; Hembrick’s corner threw in the towel in the seventh.
Kevin Kelley via TKO 9 Ricardo Rivera
Mountaineer Race Track, Chester, West Virginia, March 31, 1995
It was one of those fights in which the clear favorite found himself in a fight to the death.
Kelley fought his first fight after losing the WBC featherweight title to Alejandro Gonzalez. Rivera, a skinny Puerto Rican boxer with a shaved skull, didn’t have Kelley’s experience, but he almost won.
Rivera knocked down Kelley with a right hand in the second round. By the fourth, Kelley’s nose was bloody and his left eye was swollen and closing. In the sixth round, Kelley came close to being stopped.
Rivera slammed him into the ropes and the referee stood up and counted the count to eight. However, Kelley began to fight his way back in the seventh set, rocking Rivera with his left hand from the southpaw position.
“If he knocks out Ricardo Rivera, it will be the most dramatic comeback in a fight I have ever seen,” Al Bernstein noted. And Kelley did it! In the ninth round, he dropped his tormentor with a huge left hand and the fight was stopped, with Rivera back on his feet, but out of the fight.
Erik Morales via TKO 11 Rudy Bradley
Arizona Charlie’s, Las Vegas, February 25, 1996
Morales was a 19-year-old rising star (20-0, 16 KO) when he faced Phoenix southpaw Bradley in a scheduled 12-round fight for the NABF super bantamweight title defended by the Mexican fighter.
Morales looked much bigger than Bradley, who made some clever moves but was ruthlessly exhausted. From long range, Morales’ right hand snapped Bradley’s head back. Bradley, 28, tried to pin Morales to the ropes, but even then he had the worst luck.
Bradley was cut in the left eye and was wilting when referee Richard Steele called a break.
Floyd Mayweather Jr WON PTS 10 to Tony Pep
Trump Taj Mahal, Atlantic City, June 14, 1998

Mayweather fought beautifully against the long and lanky Canadian boxer, winning each round on two judges’ cards, while the third judge found the round and gave it to Pep (real name Pipke).
It was Mayweather’s 17th straight victory, and Pretty Boy (as he was known at the time) treated the fight like a gym session: “I’m hitting you, you miss me.”
Pep didn’t give up, but he looked dazed and after the seventh round he told his corner: “I can’t hit this guy.”
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Boxing
Shakur Stevenson denies talks with Haney and calls rumors ‘Cap’
Published
2 hours agoon
April 27, 2026
“I know the fans like to get excited and could play games with you all and easily manipulate you, but this rumor is dead for the second time,” Shakur said on X, reacting to reports of his negotiations with Devin Haney. “I haven’t heard a word about it, I don’t know what they’re trying to cover up or hide, but for me and my team, we haven’t heard any nonsense.”
The denial came shortly after reports spread that Haney and Stevenson were talking about fighting, with weight believed to be a major issue slowing progress. Stevenson’s response directly challenges this version of events and leaves the status of any talks unclear.
It also highlights how quickly boxing rumors can spread when they are linked to two recognizable names. Haney and Stevenson have been mentioned in fan discussions for years, making this matchup an basic target for speculation.
For Devin Haney, the math just doesn’t add up. Why take a technical masterclass against Shakur Stevenson where the risk of looking bad or losing points is high when a $20 million-plus payout against Ryan Garcia is already scheduled for September 5 at Allegiant Stadium?
Dispatching Shakur is a hard task for anyone. Shakur’s hit-and-don’t-get-hit philosophy makes him a nightmare for fighters who rely on timing and size.
If Devin loses a 12-round decision to Shakur, he will lose the WBO welterweight title and his advantage as champion.
Ryan Garcia predicted today that the fight will not happen, posting that neither man is likely to face the other.
“There’s no way Devin would fight Shakur or vice versa. I would bet everything on it,” Ryan said on the X show.
The clearest public statement at the moment is Stevenson’s, and it is blunt: no talks, no contact, no agreement.
Dan Ambrose is a boxing journalist at Boxing News 24, respected for his direct analysis and extensive coverage of the global fight landscape. His reports focus on the most crucial fights, division development and the most discussed stories in sports.
Boxing
David Benavidez says the world champion avoids him because he felt his strength in sparring
Published
4 hours agoon
April 27, 2026
David Benavidez believes one of the sport’s flagship champions is actively avoiding him, claiming there were “plenty of opportunities” for this fight to happen.
The WBC lithe heavyweight champion is widely regarded as a top 10 pound-for-pound operator capable of significantly enhancing his legacy over the next few years.
The next opportunity to do so will come on May 2, when Benavidez will try to become a three-division world champion against WBO and WBA cruiserweight champion Gilberto Ramirez.
Regardless of the result this weekend, the 29-year-old said he will drop down to 175 pounds and enter an undisputed fight with Dmitry Bivol.
The unified lithe heavyweight champion is preparing to defend his titles against mandatory challenger Michael Eifert, who will headline the event at the UMMC Arena in Russia on May 30.
This is his first appearance since defeating Artur Beterbiev in a direct rematch, where Bivol took revenge by majority vote in February 2025.
If he wants to become a two-time undisputed king, the 35-year-old will eventually have to face Benavidez, who insists he defeated their sparring session about eight years ago.
By that time, both fighters had already played multiple rounds, and Benavidez had said Ariel Helwani that Bivol emerged from the last sparring session with significantly less confidence.
“They can say whatever they want… He felt my power up close and personal. I felt his power up close and personal too, but I overcame it. I won better in our last sparring session.”
“I won’t let it go to my head because I know I have to come extremely prepared, but that’s how I feel [sparring session] somehow it stuck in his head.
“We had a lot of opportunities to make this fight happen, but it didn’t happen, so I think that speaks for itself.”
Benavidez was promoted from “interim” to full WBC champion after Bivol vacated the belt last year, but that was mainly due to the Russian having to undergo back surgery.
Boxing
David Morrell stops waiting and returns to fight on May 9
Published
6 hours agoon
April 27, 2026
Last July, Morrell was scheduled to face Smith for the WBO interim lightweight heavyweight title. Since then, the fight has dragged on through lengthy negotiations, a delayed announcement and then a cancellation when Smith pulled out of the scheduled April 18 fight due to injury. No replacement date confirmed.
This is a classic move to save your career by David Morrell. While the path to the WBO interim title with Callum Smith looked good on paper, the reality, with drawn-out negotiations, Smith’s injury-forced withdrawal from the April 18 event and zero clarity about a reschedule, quickly became a trap.
For a 28-year-old Morrell player who should be successful, waiting forever is a form of professional suicide. He is coming off a win over Imam Khataev and should be aiming for significant fights at 175 pounds. Instead, almost a year passed with no real progress. Mandatory positions can support a challenger, but they can also stall a career when the other side can’t move.
Chelli provides Morrell with rounds, classes and a paycheck, but it’s not a destination. This is a sign that Smith’s route has become unreliable.
Smith may still return this year and the WBO may still maintain order, but Morrell cannot spend his prime months on paperwork and recovery schedules that are not his own. Players lose more than dates when they remain idle. In a crowded division, they lose visibility, timing and position.
May 9 isn’t so much about Zak Chelli as it is about Morrell refusing to let 2026 slip away while others were deciding his next move.
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