Boxing
Zab Judah Sees Only One Winner in Devin Haney vs. Keyshawn Davis Fight: ‘No Disrespect’
Published
3 weeks agoon
Rumors of a fight between Devin Haney and Keyshawn Davis have surfaced once again, but if that fight were to happen, two-division world champion Zab Judah admitted he only sees one winner.
After this fight, Davis challenged Haney to fight for Haney’s WBO welterweight world title in January by knocking out Jamaine Ortiz and although the master seemed interested at first, whispers of their potential meeting soon died down.
But after Davis won a unanimous decision in his rematch with Nahir Albright on Saturday, Haney took to social media to renew his interest in facing the Norfolk-born former WBO lightweight champion.
Although talking to MillCity BoxingJudah, who is Haney’s godfather, stated that he does not see Davis beating “The Dream” at welterweight, where the champion’s greater size would make him the favorite.
“I like Keyshawn, Keyshawn is a great fighter. I thought he had a great performance last night, but Keyshawn can’t beat Devin. No way, not now, not at 147 pounds – no way.”
“No disrespect and no looking at Keyshawn, he’s my little man, I rock with him, but based on what we saw last night, I don’t know. [if he can beat Haney]”
“I wouldn’t say it’s an basic job, but I would just say it’s food and we’re going to eat it.”
Haney has been linked to a rematch with Ryan Garcia, who is now scheduled to face Conor Benn instead, making Davis the favorite to make Haney’s first defense since becoming the 147-pound world champion.
You may like
Boxing
Seldon Jr. vs. Popper, in his own words: two undefeated heavyweights from South Jersey, Saturday night at the Tropicana
Published
1 hour agoon
June 9, 2026
Two undefeated heavyweights agreeing to fight each other doesn’t happen often and almost never on a club show. In a sport based on “0” protection, managers and matchmakers typically spend years matching prospects. Boxing Insider Promotions has signed this agreement. On Saturday, June 13, Bruce Seldon Jr. (8-0, 6 KO) and Josh Popper (7-0, 6 KO) will appear at Tropicana Atlantic City, and one of them will suffer his first defeat in his career.
The two men’s names have been linked for months, and the conversation has not been peaceful. Before the evening’s fight, Boxing Insider Promotions gathered them for a face-to-face meeting. He didn’t stay polite for long. Here’s the matchup in their own words.
Coming in
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “He’s probably my fittest opponent at the moment. Other than that, we’ll go in there, do what we need to do and keep moving up the ladder.”
Josh Popper: “Honestly, it’s another fight. The plan is to climb the rankings and put myself in a position where I can outperform my competitors in every fight. It’s just another day at the office.”
How the fight was signed
Josh Popper: “Just out of curiosity, what excuses does he have in mind? His manager came up to me after my last fight, put his hand on my shoulder and said that when Bruce gets his next fight to get stronger, we’ll be ready for you. So I’m not sure what excuses he has in mind.”
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “Nothing came of it on our end. They said our name about three times and each time we said yes. They said send the contract, we printed it, signed it and sent it back right away. We were ready from day one.”
Josh Popper: “When I took this last fight, the so-called tune-up attempt, I just wanted to stay dynamic and I was told the fight was in jeopardy because they didn’t want me to gain more experience. Someone asked me at the press conference about fighting Bruce and I said yes, it would be an amazing fight for the city. Suddenly it turned into a challenge. Now we’re here and I like talking about myself in the ring.”
Hitting a soccer match
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “All I can do is laugh. It’s insignificant to mention a football match from about fourteen years ago. It’s a team sport. What does that have to do with what’s about to happen? If I was that insignificant, there would be no reason for him to keep mentioning me and interviewers would have no reason to mention my name.”
The debate about experiences becomes personal
Josh Popper: “I have learned a lot among amateurs. I have been in the ring with many different skill levels, between amateurs, sparring and what I have already seen as a professional. I plan to show it. Amateurs, baby, it’s all about experience.”
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “I did some research myself. He fought as a novice in the Masters division. He’s not necessarily an open amateur. I wish the man good luck, but I’m not going to sit back and listen to lies. They keep overestimating that he has all this amateur experience and it’s just exaggerated. He has some amateur fights that are more like exhibitions, early fights against novices who don’t know what they’re doing.”
Josh Popper: “Your research is serving you badly. After winning the Ringmasters as a novice, having an open fight and then turning pro. You need to do better research.”
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “These are two brand modern guys in boxing. It’s not one talented fighter against an athlete. It’s two newbies who are professional and undefeated boxers who are on a collision course. The experience level is very similar. I’m thirty-one years ancient, I started at twenty-nine, so I’m learning on the job and we’re still getting better.”
Recent fights and who has been tested
Each attended the other’s final performance, including Popper’s victory over Rodell Booker, which Seldon says he worked on himself.
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “My last fight was difficult and I made it difficult on myself. I didn’t do what I was supposed to do. But I just wanted to see that I can survive a difficult fight, that when I have nothing in the tank I can dig deep and make it happen, that kind of thing you can’t show people until you’re in it.”
Josh Popper: “What happened in his last fight? He didn’t know what to say.”
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “I worked the Rodell Booker fight. Nobody came close to Dylan Pumphrey, my friend.”
Josh Popper: “He was carrying me? You’re right. You know what I did? I held on to the jab and fought beautifully.”
Coaching and divided focus
Josh Popper: “Running for Bredwinners gives me the opportunity to be in the box more often. I surround myself with legitimate fighters and coaches who know what they’re talking about. I’m a trainer myself, so I have a coach’s eye and I record videos for my athletes. I train nationally ranked amateurs, top-ranked amateurs in the state and world champion fighters. That pedigree speaks for itself.”
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “That’s lovely. I salute anyone who makes money in sports. But ultimately, I focus all my attention on my own craft. However he divides his focus from the day is his business. My day is solely focused on improving myself and fine-tuning myself.”
A moment between men
Josh Popper: “I have no animosity towards you. Man to man, I have nothing in common with you. When we signed the contract, when Larry and I first talked, I said that me and Bruce were frosty. I told everyone that we were going to fight because we are grown men and that’s what we do, and I promise that we will overcome it later, without losing the love. My first amateur opponent became one of my close friends. We actually traveled together. I thought it would be the same whatever happened after this fighting.”
Josh Popper: “The thing is, your manager and coach are the ones who keep talking. I hear a lot of talk and it’s not coming from you. That’s the funniest thing. All I want to do is fight. We’ll fight on June 13. May the best man win, and then I’d love to shake your hand.”
Master’s name and blank space
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “It’s just me walking into that ring. The name has opened some doors that I can be grateful for, but on fight night it doesn’t do anything to me. I don’t think about it at all. My dad was the heavyweight champion, he’s in town for every fight, but he’s a good father. If he was in the building, I wouldn’t have a single camera on me and he knows that and that’s fine.”
Josh Popper: “Why should I worry about his dad? That’s between me and Bruce.”
What each gives to the other
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “Of all the opponents I’ve faced so far, he’s probably in the best shape and probably the most athletic. But I haven’t seen anything that stands out to me. We’re mostly in the same boat. You can’t really see what a man has until you get in the ring with him.”
Josh Popper: “He’s athletic, we both have an athletic background. He brings power, I bring power. He’ll be in shape, I’ll be in shape. That’s it.”
Forecasts and worst case
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “I’m planning on taking a break. Whichever round I land well in, that’s it. That’s all.”
Josh Popper: “I don’t like to predict. I just know that at the end of the fight I will get my hand raised. No matter what happens, that’s what will happen.”
Josh Popper: “I’m not going to lose. But hypothetically, let’s go back to the drawing board. There’s no sweet answer to this.”
Bruce Seldon Jr.: “We don’t believe in losses. We only believe in lessons. This train doesn’t stop, we keep going. But we don’t think we’re losing.”
Fighters
Bruce Seldon Jr. (8-0, 6 KO) is one of the most recognizable names in sports. His father, Bruce Seldon, was the WBA world heavyweight champion, and his son spent his youthful career building fans in Atlantic City, where he had fought five times. Six of his eight wins came by distance.
Josh Popper (7-0, 6 KO) is an elite athlete whose talent once took him to the NFL. He spent some time in the Modern York amateur system before turning professional, and today he owns and runs the Bredwinners stable in Manhattan, training players while building his own record. Like Seldon, he stopped six of his seven opponents.
They both bring fifteen wins, twelve stoppages and zero losses to the ring.
Get your tickets now → Ticket sales manager
Can’t make it to Atlantic City? The entire card is being streamed live and free on YouTube.
Bruce Seldon Jr. Fight vs. Josh Popper will headline a seven-fight card with Boxing Insider Promotions on Saturday, June 13 at Tropicana Atlantic City. Full card below.
Full card:
- Bruce Seldon Jr. vs. Josh Popper, heavyweight
- Daiyaan Butt vs. Willmank Canonico Brito
- Damian Tinnerello vs. Abdalla Nagy
- Kahshad Elliott vs. Scottie Stockman
- Julio Sanchez III vs. Shawn Rall
- Jahanzeb Rizwan vs. Daniel Keepers
- David Malul vs. Julius Thomas
Boxing
Jamaine Ortiz picks Xander Zayas to defeat Jaron Ennis on June 27
Published
3 hours agoon
June 9, 2026
“Yes, I 100% favor Xander,” Ortiz told MillCity Boxing. “I just see his work ethic and he has a great coach. I think he’ll be able to do it.
“And yes, I fought Boots too. It was a long time ago, but he’s definitely sharp and cunning in the ring as well. So hopefully he’ll be able to. Let’s see if he can get any of those shots back on Xander.”
“I think a lot of people underestimate Xander’s skills. I think they focus more on the flashy stuff, what they see in the Boots, and give more importance to the brilliance than Xander’s actual performance.”
Many observers predicted Ennis to win by stoppage, but Ortiz doesn’t think the fight will end that way.
“No way. I don’t think this will be a knockout. No, Boots won’t knock out Xander. I’ll tell you that now,” Jamaine said. “He’s a gigantic kid.”
Ortiz said some fans overlook Zayas’ physical development since turning pro.
“You’re talking about 16 years, these are your growing years. Men, you grow until you’re 26, 28. He’s still newborn. He’s still going to grow.”
The former lightweight also pointed to Zayas’ technical fundamentals as a major strength ahead of the fight.
“I think he’s actually able to move a lot, has good turns and stuff like that,” Ortiz said. “Jaron’s brilliance outshines all of Xander’s work. You know, when you see this whole style, it’s off the basics. His fundamentals are there.”
When asked about his final prediction, Ortiz left little room for doubt.
“I will say it unanimously.”
Ennis and WBA and WBO junior middleweight champion Zayas will fight on June 27 at the DAZN PPV gala in one of the most anticipated fights of the year, and the undefeated rivals will face each other after years of fan expectations for this fight.

Tomek Galm is a boxing journalist covering the global fight landscape since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, industry trends and fighter psychology.
Boxing
David Benavidez’s team says they want to fight a former champion with a 90% KO rate: ‘Let’s do it’
Published
5 hours agoon
June 9, 2026
Last week, claims emerged that David Benavidez had avoided a fight with Artur Beterbiev, which was suggested as one of the reasons for the latter’s passivity.
However, the coach of the “Mexican Monster” rejected this suggestion, claiming that Beterbiev’s team was “lying” and calling for a fight.
Beterbiev, who has 20 knockouts in 22 fights, lost his undisputed featherlight heavyweight world title last February in a rematch with Dmitry Bivol, but the Russian-Canadian has yet to fight since then as talks for a third fight with Bivol continue to drag on.
However, Beterbiev recently told the media that he had agreed to a fight with undefeated boogeyman Benavidez, which would take place in early 2026, but the team of the reigning WBC featherlight heavyweight ruler “changed their mind.”
“Benavidez is the kind of person who talks much more than he says. But it must be admitted that it is conducted very competently. He is already world champion in three weight categories, but his boxing is sullied and of course there are questions about some of his victories.
“He had a fight with Anthony Yard and after that fight I agreed to go out with him. Apparently his team didn’t expect me to agree so quickly, so they immediately changed their mind and chose [Zurdo] Ramirez.
“It was a year ago, it has become the norm in boxing – I will box, I won’t, I will choose my opponents – I like this one, I don’t like that one. I have a different mentality – it is foreign to me.”
Now the trainer of the newly crowned WBA and WBO cruiserweight champion, Benavidez, who prides himself on his willingness to fight any opponent, has responded, and his father/trainer Jose Benavidez Snr refuted the accusation in an interview with Boxing Scene and confirmed that they still wanted the fight with Beterbiev and that it could be done in “five minutes”.
“They lie. We want to fight him. Let’s make this fight happen. Tell us [Beterbiev] manager to contact me and we will arrange this fight within five minutes. Do you have his manager’s number? Let’s go.
“Nothing happened, but we still want to fight him. We are here to fight anyone. If Beterbiev is ready, let’s do it. Who wants to fight? Let’s see. I think everyone is talking about it.”
Benavidez is currently linked to a fight with fellow cruiserweight champion Noel Mikaelian, who has been informed that he must face Benavidez to avoid being stripped of his WBC world title.
Tommy Fury vs. Eddie Hall – massive fight preview and predictions
Seldon Jr. vs. Popper, in his own words: two undefeated heavyweights from South Jersey, Saturday night at the Tropicana
Jamaine Ortiz picks Xander Zayas to defeat Jaron Ennis on June 27
Trending
-
Opinions & Features1 year agoPacquiao vs marquez competition: History of violence
-
MMA1 year agoDmitry Menshikov statement in the February fight
-
Results1 year agoStephen Fulton Jr. becomes world champion in two weight by means of a decision
-
Results1 year agoKeyshawn Davis Ko’s Berinchyk, when Xander Zayas moves to 21-0
-
Video1 year agoFrank Warren on Derek Chisora vs Otto Wallin – ‘I THOUGHT OTTO WOULD GIVE DEREK PROBLEMS!’
-
Analysis1 year agoRobert Garcia discusses the debate on the greatest Mexican warrior in history
-
Video1 year ago‘DEREK CHISORA RETIRE TONIGHT!’ – Anthony Yarde PLEADS for retirement after WALLIN
-
Results1 year agoLive: Catterall vs Barboza results and results card



