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Canelo Alvarez vs Crawford 2025: Terence Crawford and other possible opponents for May

Canelo Alvarez has established a tradition of having two fights a year: May and September, the latter on the weekend that celebrates Mexico’s Independence.

Since 2022, he has scheduled his fights in these two months and it is expected that he will do so again, so it is more intriguing who will be his next opponent.

Saul Alvarez could choose Terence Crawford as his next opponent

Due to the lack of interest in accepting the challenge of David Benavidez, the mandatory WBC 168-pound challenger, Terence Crawford (41-0) looks like a strong option for Saul Alvarez (62-2-2) and his first fight of the year.

Although it seems that the fight is more media than competitive, as Crawford fights at 154 pounds, the super welterweight, two categories below that of the Guadalajara native.

However, both Crawford and Sheikh Turki Alalshikh are trying to convince Alvarez to accept the fight, for which he was asking for $150 million.

More options for Canelo Alvarez

Given how unconvincing the fight against Terence Crawford could be in sporting terms and the evasiveness against Benavidez, today at 175 pounds, Saul Alvarez could have other interesting options to open 2025 in the ring.

READ MORE : #In Just 3 Words#: Terence Crawford Summed Up How A Fight Against Floyd…

Another name that has been mentioned for Canelo is Christian Mbili, a 29-year-old Frenchman with an undefeated 28-0 record, who in his last fight defeated Sergy Derevyanchenko in August and would be a contender for the World Boxing Council

A possibility that in September was already ruled out was William Scull (23-0), the IBF challenger, an organization that removed the undisputed tag from the Mexican for refusing to fight the Cuban and stripped him of his world title.

Boxing News is keen to propose a couple of natural super middleweight fighters. Diego Pacheco is one of them, who has a record of 22-0 and 18 knockouts. The 23-year-old would be a challenger for the WBC and WBO, although on January 25 he has his next fight against Steven Nelson (20-0) in Las Vegas.

The other option listed by the media is the Cuban Osleys Iglesias, who at 27 years of age has a record of 13-0 with 12 knockouts and is making his career with the International Boxing Organization.

Terence Crawford

While waiting for a date and opponent to be announced, Canelo Alvarez does not seem to have any other options, unless it were for a rematch with Jaime Munguia, but it looks difficult after his defeat to Bruno Surace, with whom he would go for the rematch. In the meantime, all information seems to be just rumors.

#2025#: Anthony Joshua eyes third world title, targets Tyson Fury in 2025

Two-time world heavyweight champion, Anthony Joshua, has set his sights on becoming a three-time world champion by facing off against Tyson Fury in 2025.

The British-Nigerian boxer revealed his ambitions while speaking to journalists during a visit to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu at the president’s Ikoyi residence in Lagos on Wednesday.

“My target is to become a three-time world champion and fight Tyson Fury in 2025,” Joshua stated confidently.

Reflecting on the ups and downs of his career, he acknowledged past setbacks, but reaffirmed his commitment to rising stronger, saying “of course, I should have won [past matches], but I didn’t. I can’t stop now; I have to keep going until I reach my destination.”

Joshua, who is in Nigeria for the holiday season, described the energy in the country as “10/10″, expressing gratitude for the warm reception by President Tinubu and praised the hospitality extended to him and his family.

READ MORE : “Got To Own It” Anthony Joshua’s Trainer Reveals ‘Things Went Wrong’ Before…

“They did an amazing job hosting me. I got to see how the country is organized and run and learn about the big plans for the future,” he said.

Discussing his plans for 2025, Joshua emphasised his determination to seize every opportunity and improve on his past performances.

“Hunger makes you want to work harder because time is limited. When I look back at 2024, I believe I could have done more, and now I have another chance in 2025. I’m going to make sure I take every opportunity,” he said.

Asked about the prospect of facing Tyson Fury, Joshua acknowledged the uncertainty, but welcomed the challenge.

“We’ll see. Let’s get in the ring. Only God knows, but for me, we’ll see in the future,” he remarked.

Joshua also shared a heartfelt message for Nigerians, both at home and in the diaspora.

Anthony joshua

“To all Nigerians in the diaspora, you have a place called home. It’s a beautiful place, and the energy here is unbelievable. I love you all with my heart,” he said, pledging to support local communities.

“Even though I’m in London, I’ll make sure to bring good energy, opportunities, and work back to Nigeria”, he said….

“Got To Own It” Anthony Joshua’s Trainer Reveals ‘Things Went Wrong’ Before Daniel Dubois Fight: “Got To Own It”

Anthony Joshua took his fourth and most difficult professional loss back in September and it came at the fists of Daniel Dubois.

Former unified heavyweight star Joshua was a favourite going into the fight, which was his chance to become a three-time world champion. It ended in disaster with two knockdowns early on before being stopped once and for all in the fifth round.

The fight was a career-best showing from reigning IBF world champion Dubois, the young British puncher who has had plenty of ups and downs in his career including losses to Joe Joyce and Oleksandr Usyk but solid wins over Jarrell Miller and Fillip Hrgovic.

Joshua’s trainer Ben Davison has been speaking to talkSPORT Boxing and admitted there were issues in the build-up to the fight.

“I know that amongst ourselves we know where some things went wrong. It’s important for us that we don’t look like we are making excuses but there are things that went wrong that we could have done a better job with in and around, and closer to, the fight. You can’t point the blame, we’ve got to own it. We’ve got to wear it. And that’s what we’ve done.”

It was suggested that Joshua might take an immediate rematch with Dubois but he has instead taken time out of the ring to recover from some small injuries.

Dubois has instead moved on and will defend his belt against Joseph Parker on February 22nd out in Saudi Arabia on a card that will be topped by the rematch between undisputed light heavyweight star Artur Beterbiev and Dmitry Bivol.

Tyson Fury rematch, Oleksandr Usyk makes startling admission about ‘Rolex’ watch after getting $86m purse for Tyson Fury rematch

Oleksandr Usyk openly admitted to wearing a bootleg Rolex just days after successfully beating Tyson Fury in their second meeting

While plenty of athletes like to show off their expensive clothing and jewelry, the fan-favorite heavyweight champion shamelessly boasted his fake timepiece in a street interview with United44.

After flashing the watch to the camera, Usyk quickly admitted to the inauthenticity of his accessory.

‘I was boasting a little and showed the cameraman my watch,’ he said, laughing. ‘It’s a Chinese Rolex.

‘I was in Turkey for training and saw guys selling Rolexes on the beach,’ Usyk continued. ‘I thought if I bought one, no one would guess that it was a fake. So I bought it for $100.’

As he pointed out, nobody questioned if the watch was fake considering the substantial amount the Ukrainian fighter has earned throughout his career.

After beating Tyson Fury for the second time over the weekend, Usyk reportedly took home $86million, per Ukrainian outlet Pravda.

READ MORE : Francis Ngannou thinks Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury’s rematch was closer than..

Meanwhile, the Gypsy King bagged an estimated $70m.

The pair of heavyweight titans are also in line to increase their earnings through the pay-per-view revenue from broadcasts on DAZN PPV, Sky Sports Box Office, and TNT Sports Box Office.

Usyk’s startling admission may also be a slight hit at Fury, who is known to be fond of jaw-dropping custom timepieces from brands like Jacob & Co. and Rolex.

His unanimous decision victory over Fury moved Usyk to 23-0 as he retained his undisputed heavyweight titles.

“Something Unfair Happened” Francis Ngannou Explains Why He Won’t Rematch Anthony Joshua

Anthony Joshua and Francis Ngannou met in a big heavyweight clash back in March.

It brought together two men that had sent shockwaves through the division in recent times, but for very different reasons

Anthony Joshua had bounced back following his two straight defeats to Oleksandr Usyk, where he had lost his unified world heavyweight titles.

He had picked up wins over Jermaine Franklin and Robert Helenius since those losses, but had failed to set the world alight with either of those performances.

That changed with his next outing, where he outclassed Otto Wallin a dominant fifth round retirement victory, setting up the fight against Ngannou.

It was a slightly different path for Ngannou that earned him the Joshua bout, with the former UFC heavyweight champion initially making the switch from MMA to take on Tyson Fury in October 2023.

Ngannou shocked the world when he knocked down Fury in the third round, but went on to lose the fight by a close split decision.

READ MORE : Francis Ngannou thinks Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury’s rematch was closer than..

Then came the fight against Joshua, but ‘AJ’ made it a one-sided affair, dropping Ngannou multiple times on his way to a destructive second round knockout win.

While some fans felt that Ngannou may want to avenge his defeat, he told Seconds Out that he wasn’t happy with things that happened throughout fight week and is not interested in running it back.

“A rematch with Joshua? I felt very off and not comfortable in that fight. It’s something that could happen, but what I do know for sure is I want the rematch with Fury.

oleksandr usyk

“I’m not a conspiracy theorist but I didn’t like the Joshua fight. Things weren’t right, and if it would be the same scenario, I’m not interested. Something unfair definitely happened. I don’t have the full picture but I have seen myself what wasn’t right. I was in the locker room for almost four hours, which is not something that happens, so just from there.”

It is not done yet: In ‘The Fire Inside’ Claressa Shields’ inspiring story comes to life, but it’s not done yet

The truth is, the Claressa Shields story is ever-evolving. Yes, she’s already collected an impressive array of accolades, including being one of only four boxers in history — regardless of gender — to have four major

world titles in two weight classes. Plus, she has a pair of Olympic Gold medals, and — quite frankly — she’s the undisputed pound-for-pound greatest female boxer in the world, and perhaps of all time.

A resume like that certainly sounds like what one might read at someone’s retirement celebration, fêting them in front of a crowd of adoring fans, grandchildren, and a host of people there to celebrate what might feel like the culmination of a decades-long career.

But Shields is just 29. She trains at least twice a day. And about six weeks after the biopic about her life, The Fire Inside, hits theaters Christmas Day, she’ll enter the ring again for another fight.

It’s almost difficult to talk about what exactly the Claressa Shields story is because, despite her accomplishments, it’s still unfolding. What you will find in The Fire Inside, penned by Oscar-winner Barry Jenkins and brought to life by actors Ryan Destiny and Brian Tyree Henry, is an ambitious origin story that shows the grimness of Flint, Michigan in the aftermath of the last Buick plant being yanked from the community. It’s an intimate look at a city that was also plagued by an international headline-grabbing water crisis akin to what we might see in a third world country.

As Shields, Ryan Destiny — also a native Michigander, who initially found fame in Lee Daniels’ musically-centered series Star — impressively captures the strength and vulnerability of the prize-fighter, which is a Herculean task within itself.

I really wanted to make sure I got the physical down, but also the mental. She is a human with layers and it was very, very important for me to be able to execute that because you don’t start out that way,” said Destiny. “You don’t start out being this great ‘I know everything and I’m confident and I know I can do it’ type of person. You’re not born like that, you have things that grow you into that, as well as people that are surrounding you that talk life into you that help with that journey.”

Destiny’s hard work has already earned her an Independent Spirit lead actress nomination for the role. But most of all, she wanted to tell Shields’ story correctly.

“[This is] unfortunately another tale of someone who made history and it went completely under [the radar] and was an untold heroic story. I really wanted more than anything to be a part of art in this way and a film in this way,” she said. “Even though it was scary for me, I think that that excited me even more, because I knew it was going to take me to a place that I’ve never had to go.”

READ MORE : The ball has now become a feature film, Claressa Shields: ‘I’m not here for….

The film – much like Shields’ actual story – is unflinching and doesn’t gloss over some of the more painful things that happened to her in real life. Sexual assault as a little girl, unfathomable poverty, and a parent battling alcohol addiction hits you early in the film. Also especially painful for Shields, believe it or not, was the one and only loss she suffered as an amateur boxer.

Shields explained why she took it so hard, understanding that equating the very real and understandable hardships of life with losing a fight may be difficult for most to wrap their brains around.

“It was extremely hard to relive some of those moments, extremely hard to see … when we didn’t have food growing up, to remember when my mom was abusing alcohol, to me remembering when I had my first loss ever and my only loss in boxing in the amateurs. Sometimes when I’m watching that, I want to get up and walk out of the theater. It’s still triggering for me,” Shields said.

“I don’t think people understand when a sport is all that you have, you don’t have anything else. You don’t have the support system, you don’t have the great family, you don’t have the ideal thing of family. You don’t have none of that. And the only thing that I felt like loved me back was boxing, so to lose, it always still hurts the same,” she shared. “And then I didn’t know if I would make it to the Olympics, which meant I was going to be living in poverty forever if I didn’t make it.

Claressa shields

“Boxing was all I had. So every time I see that, I remember … I was so scared. I was worried about my future. I didn’t know what I would do, and I’m just happy I didn’t get a silver medal because I wouldn’t even have wanted it. I watch it and I just be crying.”

There’s a delicious metaphor to be had here as well. A young girl is fighting to get inside of the ring because fighting may be her only way out of her reality. She’s basically fighting to fight so that she doesn’t have to fight anymore.

But yet, there’s another battle to be had. And as a young high schooler, fresh off of her first Olympic win, the film shares what will absolutely be new information to cinemagoers: Shields fighting for gender equity.

Much of The Fire Inside is a note-for-note pull from the 2015 documentary T-Rex, which told the story of how Shields became a boxing phenom at 17 and won an Olympic gold medal.

Brian Tyree Henry, who last year collected an Oscar-nomination to add to his growing list of impressive film and TV credits, plays her boxing trainer Jason Crutchfield, who actually became way more than a trainer. But he didn’t know much about Shields’ going in.

“There was no awareness of it,” Henry said about his own familiarity with Shields’ life. “And that, in and of itself, put a charge in me to absolutely attach myself to it. When I read it, I was quite pissed at myself for not knowing this story. And then I became pissed with society for not sharing it. I was like, ‘Well, where are the Wheaties boxes? Where are the Nike sponsorships? Where are the stories? Why did I have to dig to find this?’ And it upset me in a way that activated me truly. It made me want to dive deeper.”

Henry paused for before continuing.

“But it was also just crazy to know that it existed this way in this arena such as the Olympics, that we as a country always celebrate. That’s the one time we all are screaming, ‘USA! USA!’ No matter where we’re from. And it just was baffling to me that I didn’t know about it,” he said. “But the gratitude that came, knowing that Barry wrote this, to know that Claressa was willing to share this part of her life, let me know that I had to be a part of it to make sure that no one ever forgot it. Because I didn’t want it to fall by the wayside [like] it had when it came to me.”

In a lot of ways, The Fire Inside feels as if it was just thought of days ago (it was in development for years, then suffered a years-long COVID-19 slowdown while in production). It’s incredibly timely, considering that the biggest headlines this last year in sports have been in celebration of women athletes — largely in the basketball world – while also showing the severe ongoing inequalities between genders in sports.

“Women’s boxing didn’t even exist back then,” Shields said of her advocacy to ensure that female boxers in the Olympic system were paid the same stipend as men. “So now that it exists, there has to be someone who comes [and says], ‘Pay us equal because we fight just as hard. Pay us equal. Pay us!’ It has to make sense. I would talk to the executives and I would tell them, ‘Hey, this is what I saw. I heard you guys said this, but this is what happened.’ And everybody was very understanding because I came with facts and also, I came in … [and] let them know, ‘I’m not here to tell you guys to do it or else, I’m just telling you it’s not right. It’s not equal and this is how it’s not equal and you guys need to change that.’ And I was one of the ones who was able to get things changed, [and] that’s why I was the first woman boxer to make a million dollars in boxing.”

Claressa shields

But here’s what’s most important for Shields – and truly for any of the creatives who poured into this project: anyone consuming this film should focus on her resiliency. Don’t feel sorry for Shields or her struggles or the reality of the life around what you see in The Fire Inside.

Focus instead on the strength. On the tenacity. On the power. On the unwillingness to give up even when giving up feels like the only answer.

Because she didn’t. And she still isn’t.

Shields’ fight is far from over. Even as she prepares to step into the ring on Feb. 2 versus Danielle Perkins in her beloved hometown for a headlining DAZN-streamed fight, Shields still has a long way to go and she’ll keep fighting for more equity and more rights.

But this moment – with a biopic about her life in theaters on Christmas Day before hitting Amazon Prime Video sometime next year — is about hope. And faith.

“Being able to give them hope and faith in places that they didn’t know that they had, to give them some motivation … I think the world lacks that,” Shields said. “Drama sells, all these bad stories sell. We have a story filled with trials, but we have so much triumph in The Fire Inside.  I want people to leave knowing that I did it. If I was able to go through X, Y and Z …I want them to leave knowing that it’s possible for all of us.”

And, because she can’t resist herself, Shields also wants folks to know one more important thing.

“You can still can watch me fight now! You may have missed out back then,” she said, “because you didn’t know nothing about me – and I was great then! But you ain’t got to miss out now. Join the party!”

Just in: Errol Spence Sums Up Terence Crawford’s Power In 4 Words As He Continues To Chase Canelo Fight

Errol Spence saw his undefeated record come to an end at the hands of Terence Crawford.

The two fighters took part in one of the biggest fights in recent memory when they met at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas back in July 2023

Errol Spence headed into the fight as the WBA, WBC and IBF welterweight champion and with a record of 28-0, while Crawford held the WBO welterweight belt and had a record of 39-0.

It was seen as a 50-50 fight in the build-up, but it certainly didn’t transpire that way, with ‘Bud’ claiming a dominant ninth round stoppage victory to become undisputed and solidify his place as one of the pound-for-pound best in the world.

Having come out on the wrong end of the result, Spence revealed at the post-fight press conference just how hard his rival hit, needing just four words to sum it up.

“He’s a strong dude.”

READ MORE : Who Hits Harder ? The Only Man To Face Both Terence Crawford And….

Spence then explained just why he felt that Crawford was able to dominate so easily.

“I got a feel for his power probably like first, second round. You know, everybody at this top level have some type of power. But I think because my timing was off he was catching me in between shots.”

Spence is still yet to return to the ring since the defeat to Crawford, but has been linked with a move up to super-welterweight to take on WBO and WBC champion Sebastian Fundora.

errol spence jr

As for Crawford, he is still craving a clash with unified super-middleweight champion Canelo Alvarez, and one fighter who has sparred both men has given his prediction for the bout.

The ball has now become a feature film Claressa Shields: ‘I’m not here for people to cry and feel sorry for me’

Claressa Shields was two months removed from defending her Olympic gold medal at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games when an email from Hollywood landed in her inbox. Universal Studios wanted to make a movie about her life story. For Shields, who had spent much of her career fighting for recognition in a sport that marginalized women when they weren’t ignoring them entirely, the offer felt like more than just a career milestone. It was a rare mainstream acknowledgment of her achievements and a chance to amplify to a wider audience the struggles she had endured in and out of the ring.

“I never checked my emails back then,” Shields says with a laugh. “But I saw the subject line, and it said something about a movie. I thought, ‘A movie about my life? OK, let’s see what they’re talking about.’” That email kicked off a series of phone calls and meetings with the Oscar-winning screenwriter Barry Jenkins and other industry heavyweights. “We negotiated for a year. I was only 20, so I made sure I had a lawyer,” she recalls. “I wasn’t going to just sign anything. But once the contract was finalized, the ball started rolling.”

That ball has now become a feature film, The Fire Inside, which opens in the US on Christmas Day. Helmed by the first-time director Rachel Morrison with Ryan Destiny in the leading role, the movie chronicles Shields’s rise from an impoverished childhood in Flint, Michigan, to becoming the most decorated female boxer in history. Shields describes the experience of working with Jenkins as pivotal to ensuring her story was told authentically. “We had a four-hour conversation about my life,” she says of the initial phone call that courted her approval. “I told him, ‘Listen, this isn’t a sad story. I’m not here for people to cry and feel sorry for me. I’m a winner. I’m a conqueror.’”

Not unlike Million Dollar Baby – another female-led boxing drama which swept through awards season exactly 20 years ago – The Fire Inside distinguishes itself from the standard fare by working within and subverting the conventions of a well-worn genre. The crowning achievement of Shields’s career gives way to a devastating final act that highlights the challenges she faced in gaining recognition and endorsements. There’s no money at the end of the rainbow, leading to friction with her longtime trainer (an outstanding Brian Tyree Henry). While Shields is not the first Olympian to discover that a gold medal is hardly an overnight ticket to fame and fortune – the first 15 minutes of Bennett Miller’s Foxcatcher nailed the quiet banality of this comedown brilliantly – her story puts a fine point on the specific challenges facing Black women athletes who don’t fit in to corporate approved conceptions of femininity.

Claressa shields

“I had no idea you had to be a certain way to get endorsements,” the 29-year-old says. “All I cared about was winning the gold medal, and I wouldn’t trade that for anything. But it was tough to realize that being myself wasn’t enough for some people.”

Hardcore boxing fans have been familiar with Shields’s extraordinary backstory for years. By the age of 17, she had already secured her first Olympic gold medal. By 22, she’d become the only American boxer to win a second. But her rise was not without struggles. Shields faced financial hardship, gender-based discrimination and the emotional toll of growing up in a tumultuous household, and the film doesn’t shy away from those darker chapters. In one particularly heart-wrenching scene, a young Claressa scours her family’s kitchen for food, finding none. Shields admits it was tough to watch on the big screen. “When I see the younger me going through that, it’s triggering,” she says. “But it’s also a reminder of how far I’ve come.”

One of the film’s most powerful moments revolves around Shields’s decision to speak openly about surviving sexual abuse. Jenkins approached her with sensitivity, asking if she felt comfortable including this part of her story. “I said, ‘Absolutely,’” Shields says. “I think me speaking on that helps other women who’ve been through it. It’s about showing resilience, not dwelling in sadness.”

Shields credits Destiny’s portrayal of her as transformative and true to life. Though the 29-year-old actor is best known for lighter projects, including a lead role on the Fox music drama Star for three seasons, Shields trusted her to capture her essence. “Ryan was training hard,” she says. “She’d call me saying she was taking protein and her body was changing and she was sore and all this other stuff from training, I’d just tell her, ‘Take a hot bath, get a massage and recover.’”

The film doesn’t shy away from the toll Shields’s career has taken on her, both physically and emotionally. Scenes of intense training, grueling fights and moments of self-doubt reveal a fuller, unvarnished picture of the woman behind the gloves. Shields hopes these elements resonate with audiences. “Boxing is tough, but so is life,” she says. “I want people to see that even when you’re knocked down, you can get back up and keep fighting.”

Nor does it dodge her complicated relationship with her mother during her teenage years. Shields describes it as strained at the time but notes it has since improved. “Ryan asked me about that part of my life, and I told her the truth: it wasn’t great when I was younger,” Shields says. “But now, things are much better. It’s an important part of my story because it shows growth, not just in my career but in my personal life.”

Throughout an eight-year gestation period which saw the project offloaded to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer amid a series of Covid-related delays and casting changes, Shields continued to focus on her professional boxing career, eventually capturing world championships across five different weight classes from light middleweight to heavyweight. Her journey reflects her unwavering determination – a theme central to the film. “Hard times don’t last forever, but tough people do,” Shields says. “I want people to leave the theater feeling inspired, knowing it’s OK to be yourself and to believe in what you’re doing, no matter how long it takes.”

The fire inside Shields – the same drive that propelled her from Flint’s streets to global fame – is also lighting the way for women’s boxing. She has been a vocal advocate for equal pay and increased visibility, noting significant progress since her professional debut in 2016. “Back then, I wasn’t even fighting on TV,” she says. “Now I’m headlining events, making million-dollar paydays, and inspiring the next generation.”

Her upcoming title defense in February against the heavyweight contender Danielle Perkins, smack in the middle of awards season, will mark a triumphant return to her hometown of Flint. “She’s tall, strong and skilled,” Shields says of her opponent. “But I’m ready. This is my homecoming, and I’m going to put on a show.”

As for her thoughts on influencer boxing – a topic of much debate in the sport – Shields takes a pragmatic tack. “It’s a net positive,” she says. “People like Jake Paul are putting dollars behind women’s boxing and getting more eyes on the sport. That’s a win.” While she acknowledges that the influencer scene invites its share of controversy by platforming novice boxers above fighters who have devoted their entire lives to the sport, she emphasizes the importance of visibility and investment in women’s boxing. “At the end of the day, more people are watching us. That’s what matters.”

In reflecting on her journey, Shields sees the struggles depicted on screen as a necessary part of her growth. “Looking back, I’m glad everything happened when it did,” she says. “I was young, and if I had a million dollars at 17, I wouldn’t have known what to do with it. Now, I’m more mature and better equipped to handle success.”

Claressa shields

For Shields, The Fire Inside isn’t just a boxing movie – it’s a universal story about resilience, perseverance and self-belief. “If I went through all that and didn’t quit, you have no excuse,” she says. “This film isn’t just my story – it’s a message to everyone that you can overcome anything.”

Her hope is that audiences leave the theater feeling inspired. “I want people to feel encouraged, to know it’s okay to be themselves,” Shields says. “It might take longer to achieve your dreams, but staying true to yourself is worth it. Don’t let the world force you to change.”

As she looks ahead to her next fight and the release of the film, Shields remains focused on her mission to uplift others. “The Fire Inside is for everyone,” she says. “It’s about lighting that spark in yourself and pushing through, no matter what.”

Who Hits Harder ? The Only Man To Face Both Terence Crawford And Jaron Ennis Didn’t Hesitate To Name Who Hits Harder

Jaron Ennis missed out on facing Terence Crawford at welterweight but may move up in the future to make it happen.

The two undefeated Americans are at different stages of their careers, however there’s little doubt it is a match-up that would entice fans. Crawford was undisputed at 147 pounds before moving up to 154 to become a four-weight world champion by beating Israil Madrimov

Jaron ‘Boots’ Ennis benefitted by picking up the vacant IBF Welterweight World Title. He has expressed interest in meeting Crawford in the ring when he makes his eventual move up.

One man to face both is David Avanesyan. Crawford controlled their 2022 fight from the start, landing clean punches and hurting Avanesyan throughout. In the sixth round, a devastating left uppercut-right hook combination sent Avanesyan to the canvas, ending the fight.

Ennis also put in a dominant performance against the tough Avanesyan when they met earlier this year. In the fifth, he dropped the Armenian fighter with a counter left hook. Although Avanesyan beat the count, the ringside physician advised the referee to stop the fight before the start of the sixth round due to a cut over Avanesyan’s eye, resulting in a TKO victory for Ennis.

Asked to compare both in an interview by Boxing Scene, trainer Carl Greaves relayed his fighter’s answers on power and prediction.

“I was talking to David and he said that Crawford hits harder but that ‘Boots’ Ennis was a bit sharper and busier … In a nutshell – and after speaking to David – he thinks Crawford beats ‘Boots’ Ennis.”

Whilst Crawford chases a fight with Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez all the way up at super-middleweight, Ennis has confirmed he wants to remain at welterweight to make unification bouts.

After beating both British heavyweights TWICE, Oleksandr Usyk predicts who would win between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua

Oleksandr Usyk has stuck his neck on the line with a prediction for who would win in a fight between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua.

It is the fight that many British fans want to see and with the prospect of a trilogy clash between Fury and the Ukrainian now evaporated, it looks more likely

Usyk beat the Gypsy King 116-112 on all three judges’ scorecards on Saturday night to claim his second win of the year over him and retain his WBC, WBO, and WBA heavyweight titles

And he speaks from a place of authority having also dispatched Joshua twice, beating the Brit on points in 2021 and 2022.

A domestic dust-up has been mooted for the best part of a decade, ever since Fury first became champion when he dethroned Wladimir Klitschko in November 2015. But the stars have not aligned thus far with both Fury and AJ reaching the twilight of their careers.

Usyk was asked two questions by Boxing King Media: Who was a harder overall opponent, and who would be the favourite between the two if they fought?

e could find out in 2025, with Wembley Stadium beckoning for what remains arguably the biggest commercial fight in world boxing.

Both men would be entering the bout off the back of defeats after Joshua was dominated by Daniel Dubois in September.

In his post-fight press conference, Fury was asked what the future holds.

‘You might see me fight again, you might not,’ he cryptically answered.

Fury could finally walk away once and for all. The two-time heavyweight king has climbed to the top of the mountain, beating the likes of Klitschko and Deontay Wilder along the way.

But according to a report in The Sun, the 36-year-old hasn’t reached the end of the road yet.

A source told the publication that after returning to the UK, Fury told close friends: ‘It’s not over.’

And speaking following Saturday’s showdown, promoter Frank Warren insisted that Fury vs Joshua is the fight to make if the Gypsy King elects to continue fighting.

He told The Sun: ‘It’s what people will want to watch.

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‘The Fury/Joshua fight is a great fight and if it happens it will be a mega fight, it will be brilliant.

‘But it will only happen if Tyson wants to do it and that’s a big if. And if he doesn’t want to do it, then so be it.’

Matchroom Boxing head Eddie Hearn agreed: ‘The reality is there’s only one fight for Tyson Fury and that’s Anthony Joshua.’

‘It’s the biggest fight probably in the history of British boxing, everyone will always want to see it.

‘For me, AJ against Fury is the one, it’s the one at Wembley, I’m going to be pushing His Excellency [Turki Alalshikh] to make the fight.’

tyson fury

Fury and Joshua had been scheduled to clash in 2022, while the former was still the WBC heavyweight champion.

Negotiations had been ongoing for a bout in December of that year before collapsing, with Fury instead defending his title against Derek Chisora at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

Joshua’s last fight came in September when he was stopped in the fifth round by Daniel Dubois for the IBF title.

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