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Gervonta Davis appears to be targeting a showdown with an unbeaten world champion.

The 30-year-old from Baltimore, Maryland is over 30-fights into what has been an impressive professional career, which began back in 2013.

Tank’ has already won world titles across several weight classes, currently reigning as the WBA world lightweight champion which he captured back in 2019 with a stoppage victory over Yuriorkis Gamboa.

Gervonta Davis Sets Sights On New Division As He Calls Out Undefeated World Champion: “Be Ready”

READ: Floyd Mayweather Flaunts Ultra-Rare $1 Million ‘Toy’ Purchase in Clapback to Bankruptcy Rumors

Davis also holds victories over the likes of Ryan Garcia, Leo Santa Cruz and Jose Pedraza, with 28 of his 30 professional victories coming via stoppage.

He made his most recent ring appearance against Lamont Roach Jr on March 1, fighting to a majority decision draw against the former WBA super-featherweight champion at the Barclays Center in New York City.

The pair are set to face each other in a highly anticipated rematch on August 16 in Las Vegas, but ‘Tank’ Davis looks to have his sights set on a showdown with IBF world super-lightweight champion Richardson Hitchins.

Richardson Hitchins RESPONDS to Gervonta Davis on FIGHTING Shakur Stevenson  & being CRACKED sparring - YouTube

In a social media exchange with Hitchins, Davis sent a scathing message to the 27-year-old from New York as he urges his countryman to ‘be ready’ for him, hinting that a fight between the pair could be made in the near future.

“When I see you be ready.”

Hitchins successfully retained his IBF crown on June 14, stopping Australia’s George Kambosos Jr with a thunderous body shot in the eighth round of their bout at The Theatre at Madison Square Garden.

The 27-year-old is unbeaten in his 20 professional outings since his debut 8-years-ago and will be eagerly awaiting the outcome of Davis’ highly anticipated rematch against Roach, which could prove to be a ‘fight of the year’ contender.

Earlier last month, reports surfaced that boxing icon Floyd Mayweather Jr. had filed a $100 million lawsuit against Business Insider.

The legal action stemmed from an article claiming that a $402 million real estate investment in New York City’s Upper Manhattan, which the 48-year-old former champion had publicly touted, could not be verified in public records. This implied that the real estate deal might be fabricated.

Soon, rumors began swirling on the internet that Money Mayweather was facing bankruptcy. This was furthered by Mayweather’s former friend, 50 Cent, who suggested that there might be some truth to the rumors. In the wake of the news, a YouTube channel called Fighters Corner posted a video titled “Stephen A. Smith EXPOSES Floyd Mayweather For Going BANKRUPT After $402 Million SCAM,” which quickly went viral, racking up nearly 470K views in a month, sparking speculation about Mayweather’s financial health.

Mayweather living the high life

READ: Oleksandr Usyk Admits His Biggest Weakness Two Weeks Before Daniel Dubois Rematch

Amid the swirling rumors, Floyd Mayweather Jr. appeared at The Real Deal’s New York City Forum on May 7, where he addressed the bankruptcy claims head-on. “Everybody is entitled to their own opinion, but if that’s what you call having two private jets, owning 100 buildings, and being able to do what you want, then I’m pretty sure everybody is going bankrupt,” he responded. True to form, Mayweather has since silenced his critics, this time with yet another humongous purchase.

Just a few hours ago, Floyd Mayweather Jr. took to Instagram with a post that read, “When y’all make another video about me being broke, make sure you include this footage.” The video showcased four of his newest car purchases, adding to what’s estimated to be a $40 million car collection. Reportedly, Floyd Mayweather Jr. owns around 100 cars of various makes and models. His all-black fleet is based in Los Angeles, while an all-white collection remains in Miami. And this latest batch of luxury vehicles is just another addition to his ever-expanding garage.

In the video, the 50-0 boxer can be seen inside a showroom alongside his car dealer, Nick, while proudly walking the viewers through his newest purchase. “It’s the money man. I’m back like I ain’t never left,” he begins. Pointing to a blue sports car, he explains, “This is one of my new toys. I like to call this Miami Dolphins or Tiffany Blue, whatever you want to call it.” The clip then shows a Ferrari 488 Spider: “This toy right here, I like to call the Italian Stallion. Kind of reminds me of Rocky Balboa.” Next, he unveils a Porsche 911 GT3 RS, adding, “I like to call this one right here, White Girl Waste.”

Finally, Floyd Mayweather walks outside while stating, “They say, save the best for last.” And Nick introduces the crown jewel, a rare Maybach Landaulet G-Wagon, valued at upwards of a $1 million. “One of only 99 in the world,” Nick explains, adding that it had “delivery miles” on it. Mayweather climbs into the vehicle, sits back, and declares, “First class on the ground. Money May, y’all know the rest,” before ending the video. That should be enough to show the former boxer is doing pretty well in life, right?

Regardless, if you still think Floyd Mayweather Jr. went broke, he’s more than ready to offer a few more receipts to prove otherwise.

Floyd Mayweather breaks silence on bankruptcy rumors with a flex

Through his legendary boxing career and sharp business ventures, Floyd Mayweather Jr. has built an astonishing net worth of $500 million. So, when reports surfaced questioning his financial standing, many were taken by surprise. In what appeared to be a direct response to those claims, the 48-year-old shared a bold post on Instagram, writing, “I’m still Cocky, I’m still Flamboyant, I still don’t give a F#ck!”

During his time in the ring, Floyd Mayweather Jr. defeated every opponent he faced. Meanwhile, two of his most notable rivals, Manny Pacquiao and Canelo Alvarez, are preparing for high-profile returns. Pacquiao, now 46, is set to face Mario Barrios for the WBC welterweight title, while Canelo takes on Terence Crawford in a super middleweight superfight on September 13. Mayweather, however, has shifted his focus to business, becoming a serious real estate investor with growing interests in that field.

Still, his boxing skills haven’t completely faded. Recent training footage of Mayweather hitting pads has reignited speculation about a possible comeback. At 48, a return to professional boxing seems unlikely, but he’s remained active through exhibition bouts, having faced the likes of Logan Paul, Tenshin Nasukawa, Deji, and Mikuru Asakura.

On Saturday night September 13th, a mega fight is set to take place as two-time undisputed super-middleweight world champion Saul “Canelo” Alvarez (63-2-2, 39 KOs) will defend his crown against former two-division undisputed champion Terence “Bud” Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs).

This extraordinary world title bout is set to take place at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada, and it will feature two boxers who have both been fixtures at the top of boxing’s pound for pound list for multiple years. Canelo Alvarez has an admirable resume, and on September 13th he plans on adding the distinct accomplishment of placing a blemish on Crawford’s perfect record.

Canelo is a great boxer, but he doesn’t have an unblemished record, which means, there is a blueprint that Crawford can follow.

JUST IN: Oleksandr Usyk Admits His Biggest Weakness Two Weeks Before Daniel Dubois Rematch

CAN CRAWFORD FOLLOW THE BLUEPRINT THAT BEAT CANELO?

Back in September 2013, the unified super-welterweight world champion Canelo Alvarez was defending his titles against Floyd “Money” Mayweather.

Casual fans label Mayweather as a runner, but in the opening round against Canelo, Mayweather was the aggressor. Floyd Mayweather was constantly pressing forward feinting and changing levels with the jab. Mayweather was so sharp to the point that he made the first half of the fight look like a glorified sparring session. In the second half of the bout, Mayweather continued to overwhelm Alvarez with his movement, reflexes, the lead right hand, the left hook, and precise counter punching.

At the conclusion of the match, the scores would reveal that Canelo suffered his first career loss. Nine years later, Canelo Alvarez moved up to 175 to challenge the WBA light-heavyweight champion Dmitry Bivol. The defending world champion displayed an immense amount of discipline as he stuck to his game plan. Throughout the championship bout, Bivol utilized movement, an active jab, and he routinely threw punches in bunches. At the conclusion of the 12-round contest, Dmitry Bivol was declared the winner via unanimous decision.

WHY CRAWFORD’S SKILLS GIVE HIM THE EDGE ON SEPTEMBER 13

Mayweather and Bivol navigated a path to victory against Canelo in their own unique ways. However, both men used some of the same tools such as being defensively responsible, utilizing movement, elite footwork, controlling the distance, having good timing, and precise counter punching.

Terence Crawford is an elite boxer who is capable of utilizing the same tools that Mayweather and Bivol used against Alvarez. On fight night, Canelo will obviously have the size advantage, but Crawford holds multiple advantages. The mega fight against Canelo is a bout that Crawford will win.

Crawford is a switch-hitter who is faster and more athletic than Canelo. Crawford has a high ring IQ, speed, good power, and impeccable timing. Crawford will cleverly use his ring generalship and skill set to pull off the biggest win of his career.

During the first couple of rounds, Crawford likes to download the data and basically gauge the range and distance. At this point of the fight, Terence Crawford is switching between the orthodox and southpaw stance. Once Crawford figures everything out, he will commit to fighting out of the southpaw stance. Crawford will have an active lead hand as he will probe, feint, and utilize the jab. Crawford will dictate the pace of the fight with his footwork and movement.

Canelo likes to use the high guard when he applies physical and mental pressure, but Crawford is aware of the tactic, and he will be prepared for it.

Crawford will neutralize Canelo’s guard with feints and level changes. Bud Crawford will make things easy for himself by boxing from the outside. The brief moments he is inside of the pocket, he will utilize foot work, good punch selection, precise timing, and he will be defensively responsible. On the night of September 13th, Terence “Bud” Crawford is going to execute his game plan by utilizing his skills, being smart, and staying disciplined. Canelo has the size advantage, but skills pay the bills, and Crawford plans on cashing in by winning and becoming a three-division undisputed world champion.

For the past 11 years, 7 months, and 24 days, Oleksandr Usyk has showcased near-flawless mastery inside the professional boxing ring.

The 37-year-old Ukrainian icon remains undefeated in 23 pro bouts, rarely appearing vulnerable or outmatched. Yet, according to the man himself, he does possess a single weakness, which he revealed ahead of his undisputed clash against IBF heavyweight champion Daniel Dubois.

The two titans are set to clash on July 19th at Wembley Stadium in a highly anticipated rematch. Ahead of the showdown, Usyk appeared in an interview with DAZN Boxing, where he may have revealed his greatest weakness. Surprisingly, it has nothing to do with technical shortcomings or defensive lapses—and no, it’s not even a body shot as many have noted.

Boxing: Oleksandr Usyk knocks out Daniel Dubois to end controversial fight  | Marca

JUST IN: Oleksandr Usyk Names The One Opponent He Hated And It’s NOT Tyson Fury

“My weakness—I love people,” Usyk revealed during the interview. “I love my opponent.” However, there’s an exception to this love—he didn’t have it for the former WBO cruiserweight champion Marco Huck. Yup, the only time. The duo squared off back on September 9, 2017, in Berlin, Germany, as part of the World Boxing Super Series cruiserweight tournament quarterfinals.

Usyk, of course, dominated the fight, using his superior footwork, speed, and jab, which overwhelmed Huck from the first round. Even though the German boxer showed resilience, Usyk secured a 10th-round knockout win. Regardless, Usyk doesn’t seem to be a big fan of Huck, as he revealed during the interview, “Only one of [my] opponents I don’t love—It’s Marco Huck.”

When asked whether Huck was a bad guy, Usyk agreed, stating, “Yeah, bad guy. Because this man says bad words for my mama. Listen, it’s bad.” It appears Daniel Dubois might have to up his trash-talking game, but even if he did, it might not bode too well for him, given what happened to Huck.

Whether Dubois uses this weakness or not, he seems determined to do one thing.

With just over two weeks remaining in their showdown, ‘DDD’ has made his intentions crystal clear—he wants to send off the 38-year-old unified champion on a vacation that doesn’t have an end. Usyk has just bid farewell to his long-time promoter Alexander Krassyuk, which sparked much speculation about his retirement, and Dubois just wants to be of help.

“Probably, possibly yes, I’m going in there to do as much damage as possible,” he told Sky Sports when asked if he thought this could be Usyk’s last fight. “These things are happening for a reason, and I’m just going to be ready to take the titles away from him.” The undisputed fight is, of course, Dubois’ shot at redemption after being forced to surrender in 2023.

It’s clear Oleksandr Usyk doesn’t have a lot of time left in the sport at 38. Whether Dubois can retire Usyk or it goes badly for the Brit remains to be seen.

Oleksandr Usyk has had several major rivalries throughout his career. Usyk has fought all comers and his most recent opponent was Tyson Fury, whom he fought twice.

Usyk is set for a rematch against Daniel Dubois next. The winner of that fight will walk away as the undisputed heavyweight champion. Ahead of the contest, the Ukrainian has named the only opponent he hated in his career, naming Marco Huck. Usyk stopped Huck in the 10th round of their 2017 fight.

Speaking to DAZN, he said:

Apratim Banerjee

READ: “If I Come Back: Tyson Fury Give Conditions for Come Back

My weakness, I love people. I love my opponents. Only one of my opponents I don’t love. It’s Marco Huck. Bad guy, this man said bad words about my mama. Listen, it’s bad.

Oleksandr Usyk is a classy character in and out of the ring, so Huck must have said some truly terrible things to make Usyk hate him.

Nevertheless, Usyk is now set for another massive fight against Dubois. He stopped the Brit in the ninth round of their 2023 showdown. However, the fight was controversial as Usyk once touched the canvas from a shot by Dubois, which was deemed an illegal low blow. Dubois still believes it was a fair hit, whereas Usyk is looking to put the rivalry to bed once and for all.

The fight takes place at Wembley Stadium in London, United Kingdom on July 19.

Tyson Fury, meanwhile, today called out Usyk for a trilogy fight on social media, even providing a date and location for the bout.

Fury firmly believes his two decision losses against Usyk weren’t fair and said, “I want a f***ing fair fight, I don’t want any favors, I want a fair fight, a fair result, which I believe and I know, I didn’t [lose].”

Turki Alalshikh has since confirmed that Fury will return from retirement in 2026 and the latest post adds fuel to the fire of a potential Oleksandr Usyk trilogy.

Jarrell Miller has accused Anthony Joshua of rejecting four offers to face him in a comeback this year.

Joshua has yet to pencil in his return date, having yet to compete since his brutal KO defeat to Daniel Dubois last September.

He has recently had surgery but is expected to eye a return before the end of 2025.

JUST IN: “Two Bangers”: Deontay Wilder Offered Fight With Fellow Heavyweight KO Artist

Several options are being explored including clashes with Jared Anderson and Deontay Wilder.

Miller has issued a regular call-out to Joshua, given the pair have clashed on multiple occasions.

The heavyweights were set to meet in 2019, but the American failed a drugs test.

But now ‘Big Baby’ has blamed AJ for the fight not materialising, accusing him of rebuffing new interest.

He told talkSPORT at the IBA conference in Turkey: “I’ve been training for about two and a half months.

“There is a possibility we could be looking at the Canelo vs Crawford undercard.

“AJ turned down the fight four times in the last month, he is looking for a tune-up.

“Sorry guys in the UK, AJ is a real bag of fart dust.”

Miller and Joshua do seem destined to meet given the depths of their personal rivalry.

Miller will now look to compete in a separate bout with a huge deal being eyed

They even reignited their feud in 2023 as they came face-to-face and nearly came to blows.

He is looking to pick up a much-needed victory, having lost to Dubois, before controversially drawing with Andy Ruiz Jr.

Meanwhile Joshua was initially hoping to rematch Dubois himself, but the plan was shelved.

He then intended to face another long-term rival in Tyson Fury, but the ‘Gypsy King’ has now retired.

Joshua is not in training camp right now, but is ready to take the division by the horns when he does return.

“This is my life,” he said. “But what I’ve done is I took a year out for the first time in 12 to 13 years as a professional, not including the amateur stuff.

“I took a year out to get my body right. I’m at a different stage of my career. I can look at time differently.

“I haven’t got all these years in front of me, so I’ve got to make an executive decision over what I do next.

“The minute I come back, I’m coming back with a bang rather than just keep rolling through, going through the motions.

“Let me take some time, and, the time I do come back, I’m coming back fully active and ready to go, take the division by storm.”

Knockout specialist Deontay Wilder recently got back to winning ways and is now being mentioned with all sorts of different opponents.

The once long-reigning WBC champion Wilder had not fought for a year when he stepped into the ring this last weekend against American Tyrell Herndon. Before that, he had lost four of five, including twi knockout defeats to Tyson Fury, one to Zhilei Zhang and a points loss to Joseph Parker.

Wilder did what he was supposed to do against Herndon and got the stoppage in the mid to late rounds, however many in the sport were not impressed by the showing. Regardless, he is now looking to push on once more as he fights towards world honours.

Deontay Wilder Offered Fight With Fellow Heavyweight KO Artist: “Two Bangers”

JUST IN: “If I Come Back: Tyson Fury Give Conditions for Come Back

Speaking to Seconds Out, Frank Warren was asked about who he would like top put in against Wilder, and he went with the former Commonwealth and British champion Fabio Wardley.

“Well, if you put him in with one fighter from our stable, it would be someone I want to beat him. I’ll tell you what would be a really exciting fight, him and Fabio. Two bangers.”

Wardley is on the rise right now. The Brit stopped Justis Huni in the 10th round in his last fight after falling well behind on the cards, and before that, stopped Frazer Clarke in brutal fashion in their rematch after going toe-to-toe for 12 rounds in a hugely entertaining draw in their initial bout.

He has also beaten the likes of David Adeleye and Nathan Gorman and has 18 KO wins from 19 fights in all, so he would likely make for a great fight with Wilder. Should the American be looking for a fast-track to the top of the rankings, Wardley holds the WBA Interim title.

Tyson Fury isn’t chasing a comeback. He says he’s done. But when the name Oleksandr Usyk comes up, everything changes.

The Gypsy King’s retirement isn’t as nailed shut as it once looked—and he’s made it crystal clear: there’s only one fight he’d return for. “If I was going to come back, I’d come back for Usyk. In England. That’s the one I want immediately, that would be the fight I want next. In England for sure” Fury told Boxing Scene.

This comes after two fights against Usyk in 2024—both of them losses, the only defeats of Fury’s career. The first, in May, saw Fury lose his WBC heavyweight title by split decision. Usyk became undisputed heavyweight champion.

READ: WATCH: Punch statistics for Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr are simply embarrassing

They ran it back in December, and Usyk got the nod again—this time by unanimous decision.

It looked like Fury was heading into a domestic showdown with Anthony Joshua after that, but he called time instead. And even now, he’s not talking about belts, money, or AJ. Only one name gets mentioned: Usyk.

“That’d be the fight I want next. Immediately.”

Speculation about a third fight with Usyk has never gone away. Now Fury’s said it himself—it’s the only one that would drag him back.

He didn’t hold back on how he views their second fight either.

“My last fight was a clear victory for The Gypsy King. Anybody in boxing can see that. A complete load of dogs***

I want a fair fight, I don’t want any favours, I want a fair fight and a fair result. Which I know I didn’t get. I thought I won it by five rounds. I watched it 250 times. Each way I never see it as a way for him to win. They can do what they want.”

He still trains twice a day. Says he’s happy. But Usyk? That’s still bothering him. It’s unfinished. And he wants it settled in the UK—no neutral ground, no politics, no BS decisions.

Fury’s not begging for the spotlight. He’s living on his terms, as he puts it—training, eating what he wants, doing what he wants. But for one more fight, under the right circumstances, he’d suit up again.

“I’ve achieved everything. Every belt. Made the money. What would I be coming back for?”

Turns out, revenge might be enough.

Usyk is scheduled to defend his belts later this month against IBF champion Daniel Dubois. A third fight with Fury isn’t on the table officially—but the Ukrainian has already said he’d be open to it.

Canelo Alvarez and Terence Crawford never touched each other when they stood face to face Friday night at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Alvarez shoved Crawford the last time they posed for photos following a press conference Sunday afternoon at Javits Center in New York. The undisputed super middleweight champion claimed during the third and final stop on the promotional tour for their fight Sept. 13 that he only pushed Crawford because he aggressively walked forward as promoter Dana White and others tried to separate them.
Alvarez also alleged that Turki Alalshikh, the head of Riyadh Season, instructed Crawford to get physical to attract attention to their second of three press conferences over an eight-day span.
Ring Magazine

JUST IN: WATCH: Punch statistics for Jake Paul vs Julio Cesar Chavez Jr are simply embarrassing

“He tried to walk me back and [that] just was my reaction,” Alvarez said while seated on stage Friday. “That’s it. You know what kind of fighter I am. I always try to respect my opponents. And I think he [didn’t do] it because he really wanted to do [it]. I think Turki Alalshikh told him, ‘You need to do something.’
“And he did. He did. And now, before I respect his word because he say, ‘Oh, I’m not gonna let somebody tell me what I need to do.’ And he did … But you know me. Just I respect everybody, but if you [expletive] with me, it’s gonna be different.”

An incredulous Crawford denied Alalshikh asked him to do anything when he and Alvarez faced off for the second time in less than 48 hours. Their promotional tour began a week ago in Saudi Arabia, where the fellow four-division champions respectfully dealt with each other in what amounted to an uneventful launch to this promotion.
“Turki didn’t ask me to do nothing,” Crawford said. “I didn’t touch him. Listen, first and foremost, somebody was in the room saying that I was scared of him. So, I stepped to him and showed him who was the boss of this fight. I ain’t scared of [expletive].”
Alvarez interrupted and identified Crawford’s “uncle” as the man who suggested he was scared of a fighter he’ll challenge for The Ring, IBF, WBA, WBC and WBO super middleweight titles at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.
“I ain’t scared of [expletive] and you gonna find that out,” Crawford said. “As you seen, the last press conference, when I walked you down, when you was supposed to be the bigger man.”

Netflix will stream their 12-round, 168-pound championship worldwide to more than 300 million subscribers.
Alvarez (63-2-2, 39 KOs) is a slight favorite to defeat Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs), a former undisputed junior welterweight and welterweight champion. Crawford, who will turn 38 two weeks after he challenges Alvarez, will end a 13-month layoff the night he’ll attempt to become boxing’s first three-division undisputed champion.

Jake Paul took on experienced boxer Julio Cesar Chavez Jr in his 13th professional fight in Anaheim, California on Saturday night, and it’s safe to say The Problem Child was barely tested in the 10-round contest, which went the distance and saw the judges score unanimously in Paul’s favour.

The YouTuber-turned-boxer took on former middleweight champion Chavez Jr in front of a raucous crowd that broke the gate record for boxing events at the Anaheim Center. Paul’s last ring outing was a massive money fight with Mike Tyson, while the ex-champion defeated former UFC star Uriah Hall last summer.

The crowd in attendance were not impressed with the fight, however, and ended up booing Paul out of the building afterwards.

READ: After KO Victory, Deontay Wilder Camp Confirms Huge Anthony Joshua News

After very little action to speak of for five-and-a-half rounds, the fight sprung to life at the end of the sixth with both men landing big shots on their rivals. The seventh and eighth were much of a muchness, before a fiery finish to the ninth.

The aftermath of Paul’s victory had him calling out everyone from unified cruiserweight world champion Gilberto ‘Zurdo’ Ramirez, who was victorious in the co-main event, to WBC cruiserweight titleholder Badou Jack, Gervonta Davis, Anthony Joshua, and Tommy Fury.

Jake Paul & Julio Cesar Chavez Jr’s professional boxing records (as of 29/06/25)
Jake Paul Julio Cesar Chavez Jr
Fights 13 63
Wins 12 54
Losses 1 7
Draws 0 1
No contests 0 1

Paul seemed indifferent to the crowd’s reaction, claiming afterwards: “All the boos are words, but actions speak louder than words. It was flawless. I think I only got hit 10 times. He’s been in with [Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez] and all those guys, and I embarrassed him like that. Easy work.

“I’m him. I’m really him. I just beat your boy’s a**. I want tougher fighters. I want to be world champion. [WBO and WBA champ Gilberto Ramirez] looked slow as shit tonight. [WBC champion] Badou Jack. Tommy [Fury], you stop running.”

Jake Paul and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr

Paul vs Chavez Jr Punch Stats

Compubox have released the numbers & they aren’t pretty reading

Paul (12-1, 7 KOs) controlled large portions of the fight with his jab against a listless Chavez Jr, who spent the early rounds following the influencer-turned-boxer around the ring without letting his hands go. Paul landed 140 of 482 punches (29%), with the majority of the offence coming from his jab, with 65 of 302 (21.5%) landing throughout the 10-round fight.

Chavez Jr, meanwhile, landed more than the 10 punches that Paul had claimed, but the effort was still abysmal for a former middleweight champion. The 39-year-old landed only 61 of 154 punches (39.6%) with nine punches landed in the first five rounds.

While the idea of Paul fighting for a world title will baffle many, he is expected to be ranked by the WBA after his win over Chavez Jr, with some rumours saying the WBC will rank him as well, clearing one of the hurdles for someone to cash in on his polarising popularity with a title fight.

“The WBC ratings committee has been following Jake Paul’s career,” WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman told ESPN before the fight. “If he defeats Chavez Jr, and depending on how the fight plays out, the committee will make the decision. It’s very likely [Paul will be ranked] if he wins convincingly.”