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Wilder vs. Usyk comes down to one punch

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Image: John Fury Pleads for Tyson to Stay Retired: “I Don’t Want Him Ending Up Like Joseph Parker, Beaten by Father Time”

Usyk’s ascent through the division has barely slowed. He had a few entry fights: Chazz Witherspoon, Derek Chisora, and then went straight through the main fighters. Joshua twice. Rage twice. He stopped Dubois. The work was neat, clinical and complete.

Wilder’s run went the other way. The Fury’s losses exposed true deficiencies in discipline, balance and reaction time. Since then, he has looked weighty and has been slower to reset. The right hand is still cracking, but everything in front of it looks like it’s waiting. He talks about being patient and relaxing, but that’s another way of saying he doesn’t have many tools left. Even he seems to know he’s not winning rounds against Usyk.

Usyk has the advantage, Wilder poses a threat

Usyk’s team claims that the talks are taking place live. US show dates are being considered, with Vegas and Los Angeles being mentioned. Spring seems likely. They want a valuable return, not a layoff. Wilder, for his part, calls it steady progress, code for waiting for financial results. It’s a B-side now. It’s just reality.

The fight is on only one axis: danger versus control. Usyk attacks boxers until they stop taking risks. He presses with movement, not volume, and breaks them with timing. Wilder needs to play early before the rhythm completely locks him down. If he waits, it will just be punishment and fatigue from the third round.

And if something goes wrong, it won’t be just another loss. It’s the latter that counts. Another neat loss turns him into a checkpoint – a name that younger heavyweights throw around to justify their own raise. This is the real danger now.

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Mayweather vs. Pacquiao 2. Date and venue booked in Las Vegas

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Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao face off in a promotional image featuring the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas and Netflix branding ahead of a proposed September 25 rematch

After months of delays, silence and changing plans, the Mayweather vs. Pacquiao 2 fight finally has a date and place booked.

Manny Pacquiao Promotions has placed the Sept. 25 date and the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on the Nevada State Athletic Commission’s official calendar for the proposed rematch, giving the long-talked-about event its most concrete development since Floyd Mayweather publicly stated the fight should be finalized within 48 hours.

Almost a month has passed since these comments and now fans can look forward to Friday night’s world-famous boxing event.

September 25

The stipulation represents another step forward in a fight that has spent most of 2026 waiting for what Pacquiao adviser Sean Gibbons previously described to WBN as “Floyd Time.”

Pacquiao’s team initially revealed plans for a Netflix-backed rematch before Mayweather finally confirmed the project while promoting his Mike Zambidis exhibition.

However, despite approving the concept, Mayweather has offered little publicly since then.

It’s worth noting that Mayweather’s promotions were not mentioned in the latest booking announcement.

T-Mobile Arena

The selection of T-Mobile Arena also marks a departure from the original 2015 competition, which was held at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

A quick check by World Boxing News of the T-Mobile Arena schedule currently shows no conflicting event scheduled for September 25.

That said, boxing fans have seen this story before.

While September 19 was previously linked to the rematch, the date was ultimately set by Hall of Fame rock band The Eagles.

I’m still waiting for Floyd

For now, the booking represents the clearest sign that Mayweather vs. Pacquiao 2 remains on track.

Pacquiao’s team has continued to publicly push for the event, while Mayweather has largely avoided talks since confirming Netflix’s course of action.

Time will tell if Floyd decides to give this fight the same public support he will give Pacquiao’s team.


About the author

Phil Jay is the editor-in-chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a boxing veteran with over 15 years of experience. Read the full biography.

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Anthony Joshua vs Kristian Prenga The venue moves to Jeddah

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Anthony Joshua and Kristian Prenga came face to face for the first time at a press conference in London on Monday, during which organizers confirmed that the heavyweight fight, which will take place on July 25, has been moved to Saudi Arabia. The fight, originally announced for Riyadh, will now take place at the Jeddah Superdome and will be broadcast worldwide on DAZN.

No reason for the change was given during the event. The card was loosely related to the Esports World Cup, which had recently been moved from Riyadh to Paris due to the conflict in the Middle East, according to The Independent.. Jeddah is approximately 950 kilometers from Riyadh. Joshua has fought in both cities, including suffering a rematch loss to Oleksandr Usyk in Jeddah in 2022 and beating Otto Wallin and Francis Ngannou in Riyad.

HE Turki Alalshikh, chairman of the General Entertainment Authority and president of the Saudi Boxing Federation, said the fight has attracted increasing global interest since its announcement, pointing to the “increasing global interest in events hosted by the Kingdom.” The card is titled “The Comeback” and is presented as part of Jeddah Calendar in collaboration with Riyadh Season.

The fight will be Joshua’s first appearance since December, when he defeated Jake Paul in six rounds in Miami. About ten days after this fight, Joshua survived a car accident in Nigeria that killed two members of his team, strength coach Sina Ghami and coach Latif “Latz” Ayodele.

Joshua (29-4, 26 KO), 36, enters with a clear advantage of experience. Prenga (20-1, 20 KO), a 35-year-old Albanian based in Englewood, Fresh Jersey, turned professional in 2016 and has stopped every opponent he has defeated.

Joshua concentrates

Joshua started by thanking Alalshikh for taking the fight and said he was focused on one goal. “I have a clear goal and I fully understand the challenge ahead of me,” he said, adding that he believes he is in the best possible shape ahead of the competition. “On July 25, the best man will win.”

He described boxing as “both my profession and my passion” and said working at the camp made him stronger. The fight is widely seen as a build-up to a contracted fight with Tyson Fury later this year, with reports indicating it will take place at Wembley Stadium in October or November. Fury is planning his own warm-up event in August and has said he would like the show to take place in Dublin.

Prenga seizes the opportunity

Prenga, who had never fought in a main event of this magnitude, adopted a respectful tone. “I have great respect for Anthony Joshua and everything he has achieved in boxing,” he said, calling Joshua a “great fighter.” He then referred to the fight as his window. “Everyone has their moment and I believe this is mine,” he said, adding that he had “never trained with this level of focus and determination before.” He vowed to deliver a “statement performance that will surprise the world” in Jeddah on July 25.

Hearn announces return

Promoter Eddie Hearn used the launch event to present Joshua’s return in both a personal and professional context, set against the deaths of his team-mates and his recovery from the accident. “Boxing is his purpose, boxing is his peace,” Hearn said, describing a fighter he believes is more determined and focused than at any previous stage of his career. He called the comeback one of the biggest comebacks in the sport, warning that Prenga has the power to derail the anticipated fight with Fury.

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Chris Billam-Smith says David Benavidez can succeed at heavyweight

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Image: Chris Billam-Smith Says David Benavidez Could Succeed At Heavyweight

“Great win against Zurdo. Something I didn’t expect,” Billam-Smith told Ring Magazine.

“I thought Zurdo would beat him. I thought he had more size and good timing. I thought the smaller gloves would support him more than Benavidez, but Benavidez obviously had more power and kept the speed. So a good performance.”

Benavidez’s victory over Ramirez sparked a debate about the future of the unified cruiserweight champion, including whether he would eventually be able to move up again.

Asked if Benavidez could fight at heavyweight, Billam-Smith said he believed the Mexican star could be successful there.

“He could do it,” Billam-Smith said. “And I’ll probably win a lot of fights, mostly on points, I guess, just because the size would be too substantial.”

At the same time, Billam-Smith noted the challenges of competing with the biggest competitors in the division.

“You look at the photos Wardley took that night and things like that,” Billam-Smith said.

Billam-Smith is preparing for his fight with Ryan Rozicki on June 6, but the former WBO cruiserweight champion made it clear he was impressed with what Benavidez did against Ramirez.

It is unclear whether Benavidez will ultimately decide to move up to heavyweight. For now, his victory over Ramirez continues to spark debate about his place among boxing’s biggest names.

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