Boxing
Why Haney finds himself in an unusual place, heading into the Norman fight
Published
5 months agoon
DEVIN HANEY’S CAREER is potentially at a crossroads.
The fact that the 26-year-old former undisputed lightweight champion found himself in such a situation is unique, considering most fighters Haney’s age have not even come close to his achievements.
But 19 months ago, Haney’s boxing career was changed by a left hook from Ryan Garcia. Haney hit the canvas three times in the fight, which was ultimately ruled a no contest because Garcia failed a drug test.
But the damage was done. Haney’s critics debated his status as one of the best fighters in the world on a pound-for-pound basis, even though he technically had no loss.
On Saturday, Haney will stand across the ring from another youthful fighter with a risky left hook, Brian Norman, who will be looking to close the chapter on the Barclays Center conspiracy in April 2024.
“This fight is very critical because this is a guy they say is my kryptonite,” Haney told ESPN. “They say he has a left hook, he’s powerful, he’s gigantic, he’s everything. So winning is everything for me. I’ll be champion again and that’ll put me back at the top where I used to be.”
Part of the reason Haney finds himself in this situation is because his stock has dropped over the past two years with his performance against Garcia and a lackluster win over Jose Ramirez in May. A victory over Norman, the No. 1-ranked welterweight in ESPN’s rankings, would facilitate distract from the past and put Haney back at the top of another division. However, a defeat would be absolutely devastating to his career, long before he hit his prime.
The worst night of Haney’s career was salvaged when a decision loss to Garcia was ruled a no contest after Gacia tested positive for the performance-enhancing drug Ostarine. But everyone remembers the sight of Haney routinely getting crushed by Garcia’s left hook. Haney now stepping into the ring against a fighter who arguably packs a bigger punch than Garcia is either incredibly brave or terribly misguided.
“I’ll be candid, I don’t understand why he decided to fight Norman,” Sergio Mora, a former world champion turned commentator, told ESPN. “When you have the worst night of your life against Ryan Garcia and then look shell-shocked the next time you fight Jose Ramirez, why would you fight the strongest fighter in the welterweight division? That tells me Haney has something to prove and wants to silence everyone.”
“Honestly, I think he’s in trouble. But if Haney takes care of this guy, everyone will get back on the Haney train. He knows what he’s doing. I just don’t know if I agree with it.”
OVER THE PAST for several years, Haney has faced a constant barrage of criticism, no matter what he does in the squared circle or who he calls to fight. He was assigned the “email champion” tag when, after Vasily Lomachenko decided not to fight him, Haney was elevated to full champion by the WBC in 2019. Mora considers this criticism unjustified.
“He’s not the first fighter to win a vacant title, but he’s faced more criticism than anyone else,” Mora said. “But look what he did next. He went into George Kambosos’ backyard and beat him twice. Then he fought and beat Lomachenko in a close fight against a great pound-for-pound fighter. Sometimes people hate winners, and all he does is win.”
As a decorated, undefeated fighter, Haney should be a target. Instead, he relishes his role as a hunter.
“I practice what I preach,” Haney said. “I just want to fight the best fighters in the world. Everyone I called, when they said they wanted to fight me, the fight is taken… Many of these fighters don’t do what I do. They call out to each other, asking for attention and clout. I call the fighters to make the fights happen.”
And every time his stock seemed to be slipping, Haney rose to the occasion with a performance that put the question to rest. Whether it was the two one-sided beatings he inflicted on Kambosos in Australia in 2022, or the perfect shutout of former champion Regis Prograis the following year, Haney has always managed to silence the doubters.
“I don’t know and I don’t care,” Haney said of the criticism leveled at him. “All I want is to keep beating the best players in the world. I’ve achieved a lot, I’m still youthful, but I’ve been at the top for a while and I plan on staying here for a very long time. They can say what they want and I’ll keep doing what I’m doing.”
However, for every Kambosos and Prograis performance there is the Garcia-Lomachenko fight that once again calls into question his pound-for-pound status and makes people question whether Haney is as good as he claims.
“People love to hate me,” Haney said in a 2023 interview with DAZN. “I don’t know what it is. I accept it now. What can I do? I’m me.”
HANEY is both brash and flashy outside the ring. And while he’s a technically proficient fighter, he doesn’t necessarily excite him in the ring, drawing comparisons to the all-time great Floyd Mayweather. However, this style depends largely on winning and remaining undefeated.
“He has followed the path of Mayweather’s resume over the last few years, fighting champion after champion,” Mora said, referring to Haney’s fights with Joseph “JoJo” Diaz, Jorge Linares and Yuriorkis Gamboa. “Like Mayweather, he’s also more of a boxer than a puncher. He may not be gifted with strength, but he’s willing to deal with hefty punches. Sometimes people hate guys who can box at the highest level. But if you’re going to fight like that, live like that, and look flashy, be prepared to be criticized because people can’t wait to see you lose.”
Former welterweight champion Shawn Porter believes that the way Haney presents himself in public is not consistent with his in-ring performance.
“The criticism comes because he presents himself as someone else and people call him names and demand that he be who he says he is,” Porter told ESPN. “He’s brilliant and presents himself as flawless, but there are still a lot of questions Devin Haney hasn’t answered.”
Haney was anointed as a member of this era’s “Four Kings” along with Gervonta “Tank” Davis, Teofimo Lopez and Garcia (Shakur Stevenson was also around). Their collective development can be compared to the legendary quartet of Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler, Tommy Hearns and Roberto Duran, whose Hall of Fame careers overlapped in the 1980s. Unfortunately, the foursome of that era didn’t live up to that theme like their predecessors, who fought against each other for years. So far, Haney has only fought Garcia. In addition, the “Four Kings” had distinctive features that made them stand out. Despite everything Haney has accomplished, there is no description that can be attached to the youthful champion.
He’s not a defensive wizard like Stevenson, nor does he have the devastating power of Davis. He doesn’t have the reflexes and brilliant counter-attacks of Lopez, and he doesn’t match Garcia’s hand speed. It’s “straight up and down, no special effects,” as Mayweather would say. A jack of all trades and a master of none. However, what is not necessarily observable to the naked eye is precisely what makes Haney unique.
“His greatest quality was instinct, but that may be something he doesn’t have anymore,” said Porter, who sparred with Haney years ago. “His secret power was that he instinctively knew what to throw, when to throw and how to move. He lost a lot of that when he fought the wrong fight with Garcia. His ego got the better of him and he forgot who he was. He has to rediscover that when he fights Norman.”
Haney was a prohibitive favorite to fight Garcia, but admitted he fell victim to mind games due to Garcia’s pre-fight behavior. Although his opponent failed to make weight and was later ejected for PEDs, Haney was unprepared for the one thing everyone knew Garcia would throw: a left hook.
“Not knowing how to properly prepare became his worst enemy, as did his ego,” Porter said. “He has all these tools and he instinctively knows what to do. But what happens when those instincts don’t work? What happens when the basic game plan doesn’t work or when he goes against his instincts and fights outside of the game plan? Greatness is going the extra mile, but I don’t know if he has it in him.”
Mora believes Haney is still “shocked” by the Garcia fight and “afraid of getting hit,” which is a terrible combination ahead of a fight with a powerhouse puncher like Norman. But that danger is what Haney said excites him about the upcoming fight. Haney is not one to run away from a challenge, and the fight with Garcia taught him a valuable lesson about himself.
“You don’t know if a player can take a hit until he actually gets hit, and you don’t know a player’s heart until it’s tested,” Haney said. “And when they examined my chin and my heart, I showed up. I got up off the floor not once, not twice, but three times. And I fought. I didn’t run away. I fought like a warrior and if I was going to go out that night, I was going to face my shield.”
MORA AND PORTER they disagree on whether Saturday’s game will be a crossroads battle for Haney. Mora doesn’t think the defeat will erase everything Haney has accomplished, while Porter believes that how Haney chooses to fight Norman will determine how he is perceived in the future. Both agree that while winning will get the proverbial monkey off your back, the risk may outweigh the reward.
“You don’t want to give people even more fuel to criticize,” Mora said. “If Norman wobbles him but wins, there will still be question marks. He has to be great, almost perfect.”
Porter praises Haney for getting into the ring with a risky champion who isn’t a household name when he could have opted for a gentler touch.
But a gentle touch just isn’t Haney’s modus operandi. Instead of running away from danger, he would rather face it and see what it has to offer.
“A lot of people are afraid of the unknown,” Haney said. “What if I get hit? What am I supposed to do? The world knows what I’m going to do. I know what I’m going to do. It’s like a weight off my shoulders knowing I’m able to get up when I fall, and knowing I have a chin. The way I beat Brian Norman, I think a lot of people will have to give me that credit.”
And if he doesn’t, he will continue to chase greatness to prove them wrong, because that’s just the Devin Haney way.
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It has been announced that Anthony Joshua’s opponent is set to return from his year-end fight with Tyson Fury
Published
55 minutes agoon
April 27, 2026
Anthony Joshua’s next opponent has been revealed ahead of his fight with Tyson Fury scheduled for later this year.
Joshua and Fury have been on a collision course for almost a decade and it seemed their fight would finally be confirmed after “The Gypsy King” defeated Arslanbek Makhmudov at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London earlier this month.
An exchange with Joshua then ensued, but ‘AJ’ stood his ground when his team insisted there would likely be a warm-up fight before facing Fury.
Joshua’s last fight was in December when he defeated YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul, but before that his last fight against a legal opponent was in September 2024 when he was knocked out by Daniel Dubois in an IBF heavyweight title fight.
“AJ” was also involved in a tragic car accident just weeks after his fight with Paul, which sadly claimed the lives of two of his close friends, so it is clear why he preferred the next fight to be a warm-up to best prepare for Fury.
A warm-up opponent has now been confirmed following the announcement that Joshua will face relatively unknown Kristian Prenga on July 25 in Riyad, Saudi Arabia.
BACK 👊@anthonyjoshua fight with Kristian Prenga (20-1, 20 KO) on July 25 in Riyad!
Locked in for a great year 2026 👀#JoshuaPrenga survive @DAZNBoxingpic.twitter.com/SGOENuAflb
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Prenga has a 100% knockout record and all 20 of his wins have come within the distance, but the type of opponents he has faced throughout his career are at a level below Joshua’s.
In 2017, in his fifth professional fight, he suffered a 1-2 loss to opponent Giovanni Auriemma, but since then he has won all 16 fights, the last one coming in February, when he knocked out Joe Jones in the first round 16-14-1.
Nevertheless, Joshua is expected to win comfortably before he begins preparing for his long-awaited showdown with Fury, although it has now been reported that ‘The Gypsy King’ could have another warm-up fight of his own.
Boxing
Sergei Gorokhov KO toppled after ring invasion in Turkey
Published
3 hours agoon
April 27, 2026
Gorokhov (16-11-2) had already done damage with large shots, finishing Kalkan (7-0, 4 KO) with a spotless knockout that forced the referee to wave his hand. The task has been completed.
After being detained, Gorokhov walked to the opposite corner, where a fight began. That was enough. The cornermen ran inside, the voices became piercing, followed by punches. Within seconds, many people entered the ring.
The situation got out of the referee’s control. The horns could not be separated. Once the non-fighters make it through the ropes, the result will be written in the record books.
The footage showed flying chairs and people trading on ropes as security tried to take control of the situation. The recording shows objects thrown near the ropes. The announcements to stop the fight didn’t change anything. The ring is already gone.
The sanctioning authority has confined powers and the ruling follows standard procedure. When the ropes are broken and extra hands are involved, the score cannot stand and is removed from the scoresheet.
An investigation is ongoing and suspensions and penalties are expected once reports are submitted. The verdict now comes from the officials, not the blows that ended it.
Kalkan keeps his undefeated record in the books. Gorokhov leaves without the victory he earned. Disciplinary action is expected following the investigation.
Tomek Galm is a boxing journalist covering the global fight landscape since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, industry trends and fighter psychology.
Boxing
Oleksandr Usyk said he “can’t run away” from the newly emerged title challenger: “I will bully him”
Published
5 hours agoon
April 27, 2026
Although Oleksandr Usyk presented his three-fight plan, a recent challenger entered the fight with hopes of taking a shot at the Ukrainian and winning the unified world heavyweight titles.
Next month’s meeting with Dutch kickboxer Rico Verhoeven kicks off what Usyk envisioned as a series of three hand-picked fights before his planned retirement in 2027, with his next dance partner being the winner of Fabio Wardley vs. Daniel Dubois.
However, the WBC is expected to demand that Usyk fight mandatory challenger Agit Kabayel in his next fight, and promoter Frank Warren believes he will be stripped of his belt if he fails to face the undefeated German.
Meanwhile, the WBA and IBF titles are not on the line against Verhoeven, which has fight fans wondering whether Usyk could soon be stripped of those belts as well.
Although if Usyk defends the WBA crown, Jarrell Miller will be waiting for him after him on Saturday evening he defeated Lenier Pero in the WBA eliminator final rise to title contention.
I’m talking to Fighting Hub TV after “Gigantic Baby” won, he told Usyk that there was nowhere to run or hide when fighting him.
“He’s a great fighter, man, but when you’re fighting a bully like me, there’s nowhere to run or hide. Usyk doesn’t really have crazy punching power, and he has trouble with guys who punch to the body and throw a lot of punches.”
This performance [against Pero] it was just a taste of what I could do. So the most essential thing is to go back and get the drawing board back. Let’s work and be ready for everyone.
I want Usyk to come back after the Rico fight and I can spank him.
If Usyk loses the WBA title, Miller could find himself in line for a title fight with current WBA Regular titleholder Murat Gassiew, who expected to be promoted to full champion. Although Moses Itauma would probably get the first shot at the proposed scrap with the Russian.
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