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Terence Crawford picked up ESPN’s ‘Best Fighter’ in 2018, and he’s been unstoppable ever since.

‘Bud’ is considered one of the current generation’s best pound-for-pound fighters, and has yet to be defeated in his incredible career so far.

During his stint in the professional ranks, Crawford has won a whole host of awards and personal accolades but none came bigger than in his hugely successful 2018.

Crawford made a move to 147lbs, where he would begin the year by taking on Australian challenger Horn.

Horn had shot to stardom the year before, having beaten boxing legend Manny Pacquiao in a monumental upset in 2017, so had real credentials going into the showdown.

The American had no time for a fairytale however and dominated the fight from the opening bell, cutting his rival’s eye in the fourth.

Crawford piled on the pressure in round eight, though Horn managed to survive and cling on in desperation.

Horn was finally sent crashing to the canvas in the ninth after absorbing too many punishing shots, having gone down and recovered before being stopped on his feet.

It was a huge statement for Crawford whose seamless transition to welterweight had been successfully completed.

A two-fight year unfolded for the talented star, who went on to defeat Jose Benavidez in a hostile defence of his title in October that year.

Crawford halted the contest in the final round after another powerful assault, and it saw fans call for him to pick up the prestigious ESPN accolade.

He did eventually pick up the award, beating boxing star Vasyl Lomachenko, and UFC greats Rose Namajunas and Georges St Pierre to the trophy.

Since then, the American simply hasn’t looked back and has won every single fight by stoppage since his switch to the division.

Crawford ousted British contender Amir Khan and feared ‘Mean Machine’ Egidijus Kavaliauskas in a successful 2019.

The coronavirus pandemic halted his momentum but he managed to fight once against Kell Brook, who he beat comfortably.

Wins over Shawn Porter and David Avanesyan cemented his dominance, and saw him finally set up an undisputed battle with rival Errol Spence Jr.

There had been so much debate over the pair’s meeting, but Crawford had only one thing on his mind.

He came flying out of the traps and showed he was simply levels above on the night, dropping his rival three times.

It was a punishing display and despite Spence’s resilience, he was left battered, bruised and helpless.

The referee decided to halt the contest in the ninth after seeing enough, and Crawford became undisputed champion in a second weight category.

It is an era of unprecedented dominance for ‘Bud’ who is on track and matching the incredible undefeated KO streak of Floyd Mayweather.

After another commanding display, it was revealed last night that Crawford had won the 2024 ESPY for best boxer.

He celebrated the recognition on social media, and was clearly delighted to have won it over the likes of Oleksandr Usyk and Canelo Alvarez.

Things could get bigger and better for the American now, who will return at 154lbs when he takes on Israil Madrimov on August 3.

It is a huge opportunity for the pound-for-pound star, who can become a four-weight world champion.

Crawford is 36 years old but has the world at his feet, and could set up a huge showdown with Alvarez if he wins.

It would be a mega-fight in terms of revenue and commercial interest and the biggest of Crawford’s career to date.

And his trainer Brian ‘BoMac’ McIntyre believes it will be a fitting end to a stellar career if he was to capture the 168lbs titles from Alvarez in his final bow.

He told Fight Hub: “Bud has got it in him [to defeat Canelo]. I can see him doing it.

“Is it a challenge for him? Of course. Is it a challenge for the whole team?

“Of course, but that’s what we’re in the business for, being great.

“I know that Bud has the tools to beat him. If Bud beats Canelo, we may damn near retire, if you beat the pound-for-pound king. But my mind is on Madrimov.”

Crawford has also said he’s open to the possibility of a rematch with Spence in future.

The possibility is there,” Crawford told Forbes. “He’s [Spence] fighting [Sebastian] Fundora for his titles [WBO and WBC].

“I’m fighting for a title [Israil Madrimov’s WBA 154lbs title], and there is the possibility.

“He wins his fight, God willing, and I win my fight, God willing, and there’s the possibility.”

Shakur Stevenson has been criticised for the second fight in a row for not entertaining enough.

The defensive master and three-weight world champion won the vacant WBC Lightweight belt against hard-hitting Edwin De Los Santos, scoring a unanimous decision by avoiding most of what was coming his way and scoring when he could.

In his first defence against Artem Harutyunyan this month, fans felt he once again didn’t turn up the gas enough whilst coasting to a points win.

In a post-fight conversation with friends Terence Crawford and Andre Ward – two of the best boxing minds to pick apart a fight – Stevenson wasn’t spared an honest assessment from ‘Bud’, who wanted to see more shots thrown. The behind the scenes moment was captured by Top Rank.

Stevenson made his case in return, saying Harutyunyan was in there to survive.

He has received criticism from fans, analysts and fellow fighters but has been keen to fight his corner on social media as well as vowing to keep improving in the gym ahead of his next bout.

As the 27-year-old enters a period of free agency and holds talks with promoters who would like to link up, his next opponent is up in the air. He has welcomed number one contender William Zepeda, but Oscar De La Hoya has said Stevenson must sign with Golden Boy Promotions if he wants the fight.

Having played a major part in guiding British boxing to new heights, Anthony Joshua remains one of the biggest superstars in the sport.

After winning Gold at the 2012 London Olympics, the hometown hero turned over to the pro ranks and won the British title in his fifteenth bout against Dillian Whyte. One fight later he continued his perfect knockout streak against Charles Martin to win the IBF World title.

Unifications against Wladimir Klitschko and Joseph Parker put him one belt away from his goal of being undisputed, but a shock loss to challenger Andy Ruiz Jr set that back a ways. Joshua would win the immediate rematch and defeat Kubrat Pulev next but lose two on the bounce to Oleksandr Usyk – the man who managed achieved that four-belt status this year.

‘AJ’ has spoken at length about his heroes in the sport, the likes of Mike Tyson and Muhammad Ali in the heavyweight division, but it’s a smaller fighter with an undefeated record he says stands in a league of his own.

In a feature with Men’s Health, the two-time heavyweight champ praised Floyd Mayweather as the person ‘everyone in boxing wants to be.’ He then explained why.

Mayweather is now on the exhibition circuit after racking up 50 wins and zero losses as a pro. The biggest box office star boxing has seen, the 47-year-old changed the game in many ways.

With wins over Manny Pacquiao, Miguel Cotto and Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez to name but a few, the American became a beacon many young fighters look towards, although the focus on his undefeated record has, some say, made matchmaking in the sport a little less ambitious.

Joshua returns to the ring on September 21, challenging IBF Champion Daniel Dubois at Wembley Stadium for the chance to become a three-time heavyweight champion.

Terence Crawford insists a rematch with Errol Spence is still on the table.

‘Bud’ finally did battle with Spence in his previous outing last year, dropping and dominating his rival to secure the undisputed titles at 147lbs.

A rematch was contracted between the pair prior to the first fight, though in the end talks failed to materialise with both electing to move up to 154lbs.

Now, Crawford has insisted it could still be a possibility in a unification clash at their new weight.

The possibility is there,” Crawford told Forbes. “He’s [Spence] fighting [Sebastian] Fundora for his titles [WBO and WBC].

“I’m fighting for a title [Israil Madrimov’s WBA 154lbs title], and there is the possibility.

“He wins his fight, God willing, and I win my fight, God willing, and there’s the possibility.”

Neither fighter has fought since that famous night in Las Vegas, with the event attracting huge interest both commercially and with fans.

The pair had built up a sporting rivalry for several years, but it unfolded in extremely one-sided fashion when they finally graced the squared circle.

Crawford will first fight Madrimov in his first tough challenge at 154lbs on August 3, but is expected he could move up in weight again if he becomes a four-weight world champion.

There could wait pound-for-pound star Canelo Alvarez at 168lbs, who currently holds the undisputed titles.

It would be an unprecedented mega-fight between two of the sport’s most talented athletes.

But picking up a win could be an uphill battle for Crawford who will need to close a significant deficit in size.

Crawford’s trainer Brian ‘BoMac’ McIntyre believes it could be a fitting final bow to take on Alvarez in 2025.

He told Fight Hub: “Bud has got it in him [to defeat Canelo]. I can see him doing it.

“Is it a challenge for him? Of course. Is it a challenge for the whole team?

“Of course, but that’s what we’re in the business for, being great.

“I know that Bud has the tools to beat him. If Bud beats Canelo, we may damn near retire, if you beat the pound-for-pound king. But my mind is on Madrimov.”

British boxing legend Carl Froch is not letting up with his criticisms of Anthony Joshua despite once being gym mates in Sheffield.

‘The Cobra’ has been laying into Joshua on and off for a while now. He first took umbrage with Joshua when he left Froch’s former coach Rob McCracken and had some parting criticism of his training methods, as well as making comments about ‘The Cobra”s nose.

Joshua recently called Froch a ‘p***k’ in an interview and then sent Froch a message to say he didn’t like him. Since then former super-middleweight champion turned Hall of Famer has very much gone public.

He has laid into ‘AJ’s CV, his mental state, called his upcoming fight with Daniel Dubois a British level match up, claimed that when Andy Ruiz Jr beat him in 2019 he ‘took his soul away’ and plenty more.

Speaking to BestOnlineSpokerSites, Froch has now continued the beef calling the video Joshua sent him showing off piles of cash as ‘pathetic’.

Next up for Joshua is a tilt at Daniel Dubois’s IBF world title at Wembley on September 21. A win would make him a three-time world heavyweight champion.

Anthony Joshua and Daniel Dubois face off in a world title bout at Wembley Stadium later this year, and heavyweight rival Joe Joyce knows who he wants to win.

Joyce lost to Joshua in his amateur days and hasn’t yet had the chance to right that wrong in the pro ranks, but he has faced and beat Dubois for the British belt.

Following two losses to Zhilei Zhang, he’s out of the world title picture for now but hopes a win over stalwart Derek Chisora this month will change that.

In an interview with Queensberry Promotions, Joyce said his former opponent’s resurgence in form following losses to him and Oleksandr Usyk is ‘great’ and that ‘he’s doing his thing’ with wins over Filip Hrgovic and Jarrell Miller.

The praise didn’t stop there, with ‘The Juggernaut’ saying Dubois could stop Joshua come September 21, a result he wants to see.

The fight will mark Dubois’ first defence of his recently upgraded IBF Heavyweight World title after Usyk vacated, a chance for him to conduct a changing of the guard or Joshua to remain at the top and become a three-time champion.

Joyce returns to action against Chisora at London’s O2 Arena on July 27.

The all-British heavyweight showdown between Anthony Joshua and Daniel Dubois is fast approaching.

This fight takes place at Wembley Stadium in September Dubois’ IBF world title. Both men are in good form, with Dubois having stopped Jarrell Miller and Filip Hrgovic in his last two fights, while Joshua is on a run of four wins, three by KO, in a little over a year having defeated Jermaine Franklin, Robert Helenius, Otto Wallin and Francis Ngannou.

One man who has sparred both is young heavyweight hopeful Moses Itauma who has won six of his nine fights by stoppage and has already drawn high praise from Tyson Fury.

Speaking to BoxNation, he was asked what he made of the recent verbal altercation between the two.

He was then asked if he thought ‘AJ’ would knock out Dubois.

Itauma returns to action against veteran heavyweight Mariusz Wach on the undercard of Joe Joyce-Derek Chisora this month.

Shakur Stevenson has made it clear that he wants to fight the biggest names in his division, but so far nobody has accepted the challenge.

At just 27 years old, the slick defensive boxer is already a three-weight world champion and the current WBC lightweight title holder. The 135 and 140 divisions have some of the best talent in all of boxing with the likes of Gervonta Davis, Vasiliy Lomachenko, Devin Haney and Teofimo Lopez all plying their trade at those weights.

One thing missing from Stevenson’s resume is a marquee name, and the Newark native wants that in his next fight as he goes chasing a unification against either ‘Tank’ Davis or Lomachenko. However, according to the Ukrainian’s promoter, Lomachenko looks set to land the Davis fight next.

Stevenson’s training partner, Terence Crawford, knows all too well about the struggles of landing that career defining fight. He waited years to until he finally got his undisputed lightweight clash against Errol Spence Jr – a fight he would go on to dominate and catapult his star power to the next level.

In an interview with FightHype, Crawford told his gym buddy that patience is the key to making these fights materialise.

Stevenson is now a free agent having fought the last fight of his Top Rank contract last time out against Artem Harutyunyan, so one major promotional hurdle has been removed from getting the match-ups he wants.

Gervonta Davis was mentored by Floyd Mayweather early in his career. Now, their relationship consists of social media digs.

The 29-year-old from Baltimore is flying high after yet another knockout win, this time over previously undefeated Frank Martin, to retain his WBA Lightweight World Title.

At 30-0 with 28 stoppages, many believe ‘Tank’ is unbeatable in his current division. His team certainly do, and they have in the past said it’s only a matter of time until he beats all-comers.

It appears that, to find a suitable challenge, they’re even looking to past eras. On Instagram, ‘Tank’s co-trainer Kenny Ellis floated the idea of a fight against Mayweather, calling on the 50-0 retired fighter to ‘stop spinning the fans.’

His reference is to George Foreman‘s success as the oldest ever heavyweight world champion, winning the belts at 45. Should Mayweather, 47, ever consider a return for a belt – although it wouldn’t be the one Davis holds as he wouldn’t make 135 – he could break even Bernard Hopkins‘ record of the oldest world champion ever at 46.

In a recent interview, ‘Tank’ said that multi-weight champion Mayweather would give him a tougher fight than any current contender – a rare compliment these days considering the pair’s relationship has turned increasingly sour.

Whilst the post from Ellis may create some debate about what might happen in a fantasy fight, Davis remains focused on making a lightweight unification against Vasiliy Lomachenko.

Meanwhile, Mayweather will indeed stick to the exhibition circuit and his recently announced ‘rematch’ with John Gotti III, the first of which ended in a brawl.

There are a few reasons why Gervonta Davis is one of the biggest draws in boxing, and why Shakur Stevenson doesn’t come anywhere close when it comes to selling out arenas and fighting against big name opponents.

The biggest reason is their contrasting styles. Davis likes to knock people out. Stevenson likes winning fights by avoiding punches, which has made many boxing fans label him as “boring“; so much so that he got booed by the crowd in his hometown last weekend.

Is Tank Davis a one-trick pony?

Stevenson addressed what makes him different than Davis and other boxers in a recent interview with Cigar Talk.

There’s no denying what Stevenson is saying, but it’s why many boxing fans don’t like watching him. He’s a very technical fighter, but sometimes people just want to see hands being thrown.

Stevenson most recently defeated Artem Harutyunyan by unanimous decision, marking the first successful defense of his WBC lightweight title, which he won against Edwin De Los Santos in November of last year. A fight against Davis has been rumored, but it’s far from being a done deal.