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It’s wild, wild Africa, where the streets are the battleground and the training mat for the new-and-coming boxers. The visuals are rare but exciting, engulfing the by-passers and pulling the crowd. It was such a case where the clip of a young female boxer swinging back at her sparring partner broke the internet, even reaching Claressa Shields.

UPDATE:Claressa Shields Q&A: ‘Any weight I am at is very entertaining’

Claressa Shields Vs. Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse Results: KO And Highlight

The clip, posted by African Hub on their X handle, has 38k views and is growing, making it a hot trend. After all, it’s rare that you find a female young boxer almost taking the head of her sparring partner. It even swayed the two-division undisputed champion, who enjoyed the aggression and the perfect blend of defense, patience, and some wild swings.

RELATED:Claressa Shields thanks Shaquille O’Neal contribution after becoming four-weight champion

Claressa Shields: Dominating the Ring Across Divisions

Claressa Shields impressed with some wild swings

In the video, the fans can see the two circling, with the male sparring partner having a tall stature, and seeming older than her. While he tries to come at her, she adjusts her head, takes a step back, catches him with a left hook and uppercut, and follows up with combinations. In a couple of instances, she even catches him lacking, almost knocking him out. But a reach disadvantage comes in her way. Shields, 29, shared the clip on her X handle and captioned, “🥹🥹🥹 gone head mama!!!!!”

Interestingly, at one moment in the clip, a by-passer runs by and gives her some money for her captivating performance and wild and powerful swings. After ‘GWOAT’, the fans took to the comment section and expressed their excitement about the visuals and captivating boxing sequences.

Claressa Shields knocks out Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse: Live analysis

UPDATE:Andre Berto and Andre Ward Rally Behind Claressa Shields Against “Blatant Disrespect” From “Grown Men”

Fans thrilled to watch a street showdown

One fan pointed out that the uppercut was deadly enough to flatline the male sparring partner, which almost happened, twice. They wrote, “That uppercut if connected would have had that man’s head clocked at 180 degrees godamm.”

Claressa Shields enhanced her already fine reputation when on Saturday at Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena she defeated Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse to dethrone her as the WBC heavyweight title and to win the vacant light-heavyweight title of the WBO.

In the build-up to her first fight at 175lbs she discussed her career, that of her friend Shakur Stevenson, and the wider picture of women’s boxing, in an extensive Q&A.*

BoxingScene: You’re preparing to fight for the first time at 175lbs. How are you finding the additional weight?

It’s OK. I don’t have to lose a whole bunch of weight for this fight. I keep eating everything – I [still] force myself to eat healthy – and I’m pretty lean, but I have added on some muscle, and you’re gonna see that muscle during the weigh-in and during the fight. You’ll be able to see my punches – it will linger on my opponent. I’ve added the needed muscle in the places I need it; sparring went completely well, and I’m hitting a lot harder and getting respect from my sparring partners, who are 180lbs; 190lbs. The whole thing of me not being able to punch is a myth – I could punch really hard, and now I’m putting on the right muscle and eating the right food I’m gonna be very strong.

Claressa Shields challenges 'disrespectful' Savannah Marshall to fight her  in America | Boxing News | Sky Sports

READ MORE:Claressa Shields thanks Shaquille O’Neal contribution after becoming four-weight champion

I’m not sluggish at all. If I’ve been sluggish it’s because I’ve been tired from working so God damn hard. My punches are coming off straight and strong; when I land punches, it’s effective punches. I can see them [sparring partners] getting on the back foot. That’s the difference. In fights I’ve hit girls and they’ve jumped on their wheels but now I’m able to hit them, cut off the ring, and hit them with other hard punches. I can tell that there’s power and there’s weight behind my punches, and that’s getting the respect of a lot of the people I’ve been working with.

I have a lot more energy. I’m in Atlanta, and it’s so hot – sometimes the heat is a bit much to deal with. But I’ve been doing a lot of recovery; I’m sweating a lot, I’m working hard, and I do have a lot of energy. The gym’s 80, 90 degrees. Sparring was good – I got everything out of it that I wanted to get out of it. I know [on one occasion] why I wasn’t as sharp as I wanted to be so I made sure that I fix those things so when I got into the fight I’m sharp; strong; fast.

I’m eating a little bit more. But I can never get tired of seeing food. I’ve had to lose, sometimes, 30 and 40lbs to make 160lbs, so I’m never going to get tired of seeing food. Here in Atlanta it’s so much good food; soul food. I’ve been eating a lot of pho; a lot of mediterranean food. I’ve still been eating my grilled chicken; my grilled fish; rice. I could eat more rice than what I was able to eat when I was in camp; I was able to eat bread this camp. I can maybe double my portions. But I haven’t just indulged like the body builders have. I’m not overeating, because I’d have a fat belly, and I wanna have a six pack at 175lbs.

BS: How else has not needing to make the middleweight limit changed your preparations?

Claressa Shields - latest news, breaking stories and comment - The  Independent

I can concentrate on the actual game plan for the fight, and not running so much. Running – you’re having to lose 30lbs, sometimes you gotta run five times a week, four times a week, and that can be stressful on your body, because you can’t put boxing first. You gotta put losing the weight first. Which is the running; the strength and conditioning; help you lose the weight. I’m still running, but I don’t have to run as much. Usually, when I’m camp, I’m running specifically to lose weight [and this time it’s for my conditioning].

BS: How different a nature of fighter are you going to be?

You’re gonna see me be more calmer, because I have the energy to do so, and I have the punching power to do so. It won’t be as many punches, but the punches will count, and the punches will be effective. That’s what you will see. You will see that if she wants to force me to fight inside the pocket; she wanna come and brawl, you’re gonna see that I’m gonna win that. I’m gonna win the mid-range exchange; I’m gonna win the long-range exchange, and you’re gonna see who’s the true heavyweight in the fight; who has true punching power. I’m hoping she’s prepared for this fight, and comes with the confidence that she came to the press conference with – getting in my face and saying I’m too little. I hope she has that same energy when she gets inside the ring, because I’m gonna punch her lights out.

BS: To what extent does fighting Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse at 175lbs represent your toughest fight?

She’s my biggest opponent, I can say that, but as far as my toughest fight, I have fought against some really great fighters early on in my career. Franchon Crews; Hanna Gabriels; Savannah Marshall; the likes of those girls have been around for years and fought all over the country.

Watch Shields vs. Cornejo (2023) Online | DAZN US

I have been in with the likes of those girls, so I think Vanessa has some attributes that can give me some problems for sure, but I have just fought against the best already and I’ve beaten the best – that’s why I’m here. I know Vanessa isn’t coming to lay down and it’s going to be hard breaking her will come July 27th, but I’m gonna do everything in my power to do so.

We were supposed to fight against Lani Daniels – that was the first person – but then Lani got sick, or something, or injured. So, we went next best and next best was Vanessa, but then it was weird ‘cause when we signed to fight with Vanessa, Lani Daniels started going online saying I ducked her, but she was trying to get the fight with Vanessa. So, I don’t think she was truly injured, she just signed the papers to fight me and then decided, “I think I bit off a bit more than I can chew,” type of deal, and tried to sign a deal to fight with Vanessa – but Vanessa signed a deal to fight with me.

BS: It’s not uncommon for smaller, more skillful fighters to be considered the underdog. Are you at all surprised the same doesn’t apply to you?

UPDATE:The Pioneers of Women’s Boxing According to Claressa Shields

I think the world has caught on to that, “Claressa Shields can do whatever she can put her mind to.” Fighting at heavyweight is a challenge, but it’s no different to all the other challenges. Honestly, what fights have been like, “Clarissa gonna lose this fight?” I really haven’t experienced that; I’m the favorite in every fight. Maybe when everybody was convinced that Savannah [Marshall] was just this knockout puncher and she knocks everyone out, maybe that fight. People were saying that I wasn’t gonna win, but I never thought that.

I never thought that no female that I been matched against was gonna beat me in a fight. So I think I’ll give Vanessa that same respect of thinking that, “You’re a heavyweight champion and you’ve fought as big as 213lbs or 231lbs.” But I am what I am, and that’s the greatest woman of all time – the greatest woman in any weight class.

I’m pound-for-pound No. 1. I don’t think none of these girls come close to me when it comes to skills. If she was at 160 with the skills that she possesses, I would wash her like I did with everyone else. Her fighting at heavyweight kind of plays to her favour, but she is bigger; she is stronger; she has been fighting girls who are at 231 and 210. Now she’s fighting against a girl who’s coming up, so she may feel like she has some strength advantages, which she might do, but far as skill-wise, I have never questioned if any of these girls are on my level skill-wise. Because we can see that they’re clearly not, but she may have some things that I have to worry about when fighting. That’s her weight; her punching power, and when you got those big old legs, you can take a bit more. In her fights, she fighting against them big girls; she getting punched in the face, but she ain’t backing down. So it’s my job to make her back down and make her quit.

It’s a fight, and she gonna use her attributes to win the fight. She gonna try bully me with her size and put her weight on me and maybe try to tire me out, try to punch me hard and stuff like that. That’s what she’s gonna try and do. She can’t try to outbox me cause she can’t do that – she doesn’t possess those skills. So I know she’s gonna come and really try to tire me out; put her weight on me; punch me hard and hopefully she wants to land a shot that can change that trajectory of the fight. My job is to not allow that, but to let her know that I know what her game plan is, and I have a game plan for that.

I think they’ll be saying, “Damn, I wouldn’t wanna get hit by Clarissa Shields.” I think they’ll be saying that they cracked a couple jokes about pillow fists, but they wouldn’t want to get hit with that pillow. I think that they’ll say that pillow has bricks in it. I think after the fight it’s going to show people that heavyweight women’s boxing can be very entertaining and it depends on who’s there. I think any weight that I am at is very entertaining, it’s a very good fight, you’re going to see skills, you’re going to see power, and you’re going to see a fight. I don’t think that this fight sees the final bell, you’re talking about round 10 – I don’t think that it sees that. I’m going out there to seek and destroy and if Vanessa don’t knock me out, I’m gonna knock her ass out.

BS: You’ve been compared to the great Roy Jones Jr…

I’m jumping up from middleweight to heavyweight – that’s the comparison [with Roy Jones Jr]. Women heavyweights aren’t 200lbs; they’re 190; 180; 177, so that’s the comparison there, and the other comparison is Roy Jones was the best of his time, and the comparison on my side is I’m the best right now of my time. I’m doing the exact same thing, so I plan on being victorious and showing I can fight at any weight class. I really wish that there was some way that my body could make 140 and 147 because I would love to fight against the likes of Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano. I love those girls – I’m saying it from a competitor’s standpoint – I would love to match my skills against theirs and prove I’m the best against them in a weight class that’s fair for us. I think if I was to go down to 147 or 140, it wouldn’t be fair because I would be down there killing myself to get down there but I would still compete at a high level against those girls and win. But they can’t come up to 154 and 160 because their body won’t allow – but to me they’re super fights. If there was a way I could maybe cut off a leg and fight one of them…

BS: The General Entertainment Authority is about to stage Israil Madrimov-Terence Crawford. Would you like to see them invest in women’s boxing?

I’m the first woman to fight in Saudi Arabia, in front of Turki Alalshikh and everything. I would love him to put some money into women’s boxing and show it can be just as lucrative as the men’s, but I think that it’s all about timing. He has to pick the right woman and the right woman is myself of course, but the right woman with the right opponent and the right engine behind these fights. Whenever the time comes – but I think what he’s doing for boxing is pretty great and that he shouldn’t exclude the women.

BS: How do you reflect on the recent criticism of your friend Shakur Stevenson’s performance in victory over Artem Harutyunyan?

He’s a threat. That’s why he get the criticism. He’s a threat to [Gervonta] “Tank” Davis. Everybody wants Tank Davis to just be the top dog, which, hey – he’s a great fighter. I really don’t take nothing away from him. He’s a good fighter – he know how to finish a job; he smell blood, he goes for it. He’s good. But how you gonna knock out somebody you can’t hit?

How you gonna knock out somebody who’s just as athletic as you, and just as experienced? Shakur’s the biggest threat to Tank, and he makes all the Tank fans come at Shakur and criticize him and try to say mean stuff to him, just to try to make Tank be bigger. But the only way that we’re ever gonna know who’s the best out of Tank and Shakur is if they fight. Tank is going to need more than just punching power to knock out Shakur – to beat Shakur. But Shakur gonna have 100 different game plans on how he can beat Tank. That’s why the criticism comes – because he’s a threat to Tank Davis. Other than that, they have no other reason to hate on Shakur like that.

Claressa Shields wins an easy decision over Maricela Corenjo | KLRT -  FOX16.com

He is [authentic]. The criticism only bothers him when he can’t respond. Him responding has been a sense of release for him. People telling celebrities to be quiet and just ignore it is why some celebrities crash out. Shakur responding and saying what he needs to say and getting it off his chest is actually good for him, so that makes him care. But if he has to keep up this image and not respond and have to be nice to people that’s being mean to him, that can be triggering.

It’s triggering for me. “Why do you respond to people?” Because it makes me feel better when I respond, instead of letting people say all these mean things about me and I don’t say nothing back. Shakur [is] like that. You come at him; he gonna come at you. I have been shocked to see some people that has actually criticized Shakur, because he does have a better boxing career than a lot of people.

I just can’t believe – I seen Shakur get into it with Andre Berto, who I love to death. I see him get into it with Marcus Browne, my Olympic brother from 2012. Ishe Smith. A lot of people Shakur has got into it with online, I’m actually cool with them people. I just stay out with it because they say mean stuff to him and he just responds – and I think that’s appropriate. It’s appropriate.

Only the greats get criticized like that. People try to find a way to break our will and make us fight a way we don’t wanna fight, or be something we don’t wanna be. The route that Shakur is on right now is beautiful. Everybody like, ‘If he fight against Tank, he’ll just move around the ring,’ but it’s boxing. Anybody who gets in the ring with Shakur, it’s their job to cut off the ring; to have a game plan to beat him. It’s not his job to go in there and get punched in the face. His job is to box, and Shakur has done a great job of that and he’s done really, really excellent blocking out so much of the noise that has come his way, and all of the criticism.

He’s been criticized like Floyd [Mayweather] was; how I was criticized. “She can’t box, she’s just strong.” So I’d go out there and outbox all these girls, and then it’s, “Oh, she just knows how to box, she don’t have no power.” So you really can’t make the fans happy. You just have to go out there and do what you do best to build yourself up as a fighter. Shakur’s gonna fix his weaknesses and just get better. But as far as him being a boxer, he’s a great boxer.

If I have to say anything about his fight – I talked to him about it, and I said, “Bro, you did everything great, except you had the dude gone and you stopped punching. Why you didn’t finish him?” And he gave me his feedback – “I know I had him” – but that’s something he gotta work on. But that was my only thing. I wish he woulda stepped on the gas at that moment. But he was inside the ring and he didn’t smell enough blood to go for it, but he definitely was there for me on the outside looking in, and that was my only criticism of him. “Hey bro – you shoulda punched more during that round to get the stoppage, to make him quit, because you definitely had him.”

Other than that, his defense was on point; his offense was on point; he proved all the naysayers wrong. Everybody that said, “Shakur don’t step to nobody – all he do is move.” Shakur stood there in the pocket; he made that dude get on his wheels. I really have no complaints. I’m just proud of him, because with everything that’s happening to him in his career, he got so many reasons to crash out and just go crazy, posting and saying stuff – kinda like Ryan [Garcia] did. But you don’t see Shakur crashing out. You see him really checking people and letting them know, “Hey man, you can’t just have an opinion about me and get mad when I have an opinion about you; we all got opinions.” Anybody saying that Shakur is a trash boxer is 100 percent wrong.


 

Claressa Shields has achieved another milestone in her illustrious career, becoming a four-weight champion by knocking out Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse.

After moving up two weight classes, Shields claimed the WBC heavyweight title, further cementing her status as the Greatest Woman of All Time (GWOAT) in boxing.

She celebrated her victory on social media, thanking her supporters and sponsors, including NBA legend Shaquille O’Neal, who has been one of her most vocal supporters.

“YEAHHHH GWOAT 15-0, 3KOS Thank you to all my sponsors @SNACsystem, @SHAQ, @area56ent & @ivhydrationandaesthetics,” she wrote on X.

 

Claressa Shields Vs. Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse Results: KO And Highlight

O’Neal, known for his enthusiasm for combat sports, has been a significant backer of Shields, not only promoting her on social media but also sponsoring her through his brand, Shaq.com. His support highlights his belief in Shields‘ prowess and his investment in her career.

The victory was marked by a first-round TKO, with Shields‘ opening combination becoming a viral sensation. Despite being on his Summer of Bass tour in Europe, O’Neal likely celebrated Shields‘ historic achievement, as she joins the elite company of boxers such as Roy Jones Jr., who have won titles in both the middleweight and heavyweight divisions.

Claressa Shields open up on battle with depression and weight gain that led  to body transformation and return

Shields‘ latest accomplishment adds to her already impressive legacy in boxing, and her partnership with O’Neal underscores the strong support she has from prominent figures in sports. Her continued success serves as an inspiration, showcasing her skill and determination in breaking new ground within the sport.

Claressa Shields may be competing for heavyweight hardware this weekend when she takes on Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse, but it’s clear that some of the top female fighters in the sport have caught her attention as she offered words for everyone during today’s final press conference. Here’s some of what she had to say when taking to the podium.

“Vanessa did not train hard enough for this fight,” Sheilds said. “I saw here hitting the pads yesterday, she was like trying to impress me. I was not impressed. Then she was sparring against girls that I done smoked already…you could’ve got some better sparring than that. I sparred against bears for this camp.

“I don’t get it but I’m happy that she’s here and, you know what, I hope she’s hitting like a heavyweight because she’s going to need to. She going to need to hit like a heavyweight come Saturday night because if she not punching like a heavyweight she going to sleep.

Claressa Shields during the weigh in at the Park Inn by Raddison, Cardiff.  Picture date: Friday February 4, 2022 Stock Photo - Alamy

“I’m going to be the heavyweight world champion come July 27 and ain’t nobody going to stand in my way. Nobody…I’ll be a four-division, 15-time world champion come Saturday night and I can’t wait to see what Vanessa gonna do.

Savannah Marshall vs Claressa Shields imminent, as Richard Riakporhe closes  in on world title fight | Boxing News | Sky Sports

“I didn’t come here to be nice, everybody talking about ‘who’s the GWOAT.’ Who’s undefeated?! Who got the most belts?! Who make the million dollars the last couple times she fought without a promoter giving her a handout?! That’s who the GWOAT is. Who fights the best?! Who don’t struggle in fights no matter what style?! Exactly. So all that comparison about who the GWOAT is, I can go to any weight class and win. That’s who the GWOAT is.

“I’ll be winning Saturday night and any of those girls who want to be the GWOAT, all you got to do is make a fight with me: Alycia Baumgardner, Amanda Serrano, Katie Taylor. All you got to do is make a fight with me and then I can show you you’re not the GWOAT for many reasons.”

Rising star Samantha Worthington makes her T-Rex debut against Edina Kiss on July 27th at Little Caesars Arena

Get ready for a night of rising stars! The untelevised undercard for “Big Time Boxing USA: Shields vs. Joanisse” on July 27th at Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena features exciting fights showcasing local and national prospects. New T-Rex Signee Samantha Worthington Takes on Edina Kiss, Husam Al Mashhadi, Cameran Pankey in Separate Duels, Undefeated WBC #1 Danielle Perkins Takes on Scotland’s Christianne Fahey.

JUST IN: Claressa Shields on Lauren Price: ‘We can fight and prove who’s the best Olympic champion!’….

Don’t miss a night of championship boxing on DAZN! Salita Promotions and 313 Presents bring you “Big Time Boxing USA” at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. Undisputed Middleweight Champion Claressa Shields, aka “GWOAT,” makes a historic leap in weight class to challenge WBC Women’s Heavyweight Champion Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse.

World-ranked super lightweight Michel “La Zarza Ali” Rivera clashes with 140-pound contender Hugo Alberto “Nato” Roldan in a 10-round battle. Former world-title challenger Shohjahon “Descendant of Tamerlane” Ergashev squares off against Julian “The Quiet Storm” Smith in a 10-round super lightweight bout.

Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse VS CLARESSA SHIELDS

Topping the untelevised portion of the night is a 10-round super lightweight clash between undefeated knockout artist Ernesto “Tito” Mercado (15-0, 14 KOs) and Hector Edgardo “Pajarito” Sarmiento (21-2, 14 KOs). Both fighters pack serious punch with a combined knockout ratio over 93%. Mercado (15-0, 14 KOs) boasts an impressive three-year professional career, he captured the NABA USA Super Lightweight title in 2022 with two successful defenses.  Mercado remains undefeated, adding three knockouts to his record in 2024, including victories over Cristian Bielma and Colombian veteran Deiner Berrio.

“I know he has experience ” said Mercado of upcoming opponent Sarmiento. “In his last fight, he went the distance with Denys Berinchyk from Ukraine, who is now a world champ at 135 pounds after beating Emanuel Navarrete. So, you know he’s a tough guy. He’ll pressure me to fight, and he throws very unorthodox punches, which will make it hard to counter him. I will have to be mindful and defensively sharp.”

At 22, Ernesto “Tito” Mercado is hungry for a world title shot. He sees this Detroit fight as a chance to shine in front of a big crowd and prove he’s ready for the big stage.

SEE MORE: “Wtf Is Wrong With You”: Claressa Shields Defends Devin Haney Against Slander Over Ryan Garcia Loss…

“I feel like I’m ready to fight for a world title right now. With the experience I’ve been getting, it shouldn’t be too long. I’m also very excited to fight in front of such a big audience. Getting the recognition of being in these big fights motivates me in the gym. I can’t wait and I hope to make a lot of new fans that night.”

Undefeated super lightweight prospect Samantha Worthington (8-0, 6 KOs) looks to extend her perfect record against veteran Edina Kiss (16-20, 9 KOs) of Budapest, Hungary in an eight-round test.

Claressa Shields VS Dmitry Salita

Samantha Worthington (8-0, 6 KOs), the first boxer signed by Claressa Shields’ T-Rex Promotions, brings her undefeated record to Detroit. A decorated amateur with five national titles and a Youth World Championship bronze, Worthington smoothly transitioned to the pros. She recently captured the UBO Super Lightweight Championship with a dominant win in January. Now, she looks to continue her streak against Edina Kiss (16-20, 9 KOs) in an eight-round bout.

“I am so grateful for this opportunity!” said Worthington. “Claressa has believed in me since the amateurs, so it is extremely special to have her backing me now in the pros. And I know that being able to fight on this stage is going to put the world on notice and let the super lightweight division know I’m here to dominate! Edina Kiss is a veteran of the sport and I’m so excited to display my skills against someone who has shared the ring with some of the greats! Training has been going great and I’m ready to show everyone that I deserve to be here.”

ALSO READ: Gervonta Davis vs Vasyl Lomachenko is close to becoming official with November date in sight…

Samantha Worthington (8-0, 6 KOs), the first boxer signed by Claressa Shields’ T-Rex Promotions, brings her undefeated record to Detroit. A decorated amateur with five national titles and a Youth World Championship bronze, Worthington smoothly transitioned to the pros. She recently captured the UBO Super Lightweight Championship with a dominant win in January. Now, she looks to continue her streak against Edina Kiss (16-20, 9 KOs) in an eight-round bout.

CLaressa Shields

Dearborn Heights’ Husam “Lion Heart” Al Mashhadi (9-1, 8 KOs) steps into the ring for a six-round super welterweight clash against Bruno Leonardo Romay (22-13, 19 KOs) from Buenos Aires, Argentina. The 21-year-southpaw, Al Mashhadi, is known for his exciting fighting style. He’ll look to extend his winning streak after a one-round knockout victory over Daulis Prescott in March last year.

“I feel really blessed to get this opportunity in my hometown at Little Caesars Arena. It’s a big deal and I’m looking forward to it,” said Al Mashhadi. “I know my opponent is from Argentina and a veteran with a lot of fights. He’s coming to fight and give me a run for my money, so I’m training hard to ready for him. This will be the first southpaw I fight in the pros, so I’m sparring Ardreal Holmes and a lot of other tough southpaws to get ready.”

In a six-round featherweight showdown, Pontiac, Michigan’s Cameran “The Problem” Pankey (9-1, 4 KOs) will take on Mooresville, North Carolina’s Shaileik Paisley (4-4, 3 KOs). Pankey is a 25-year-old slugger who was last seen putting on the fight of the night in his first career loss against Mexico’s Juan Hernandez Martinez via razor-thin six-round decision at Wayne State Fieldhouse, Detroit in February of last year.

“Training is going great,” said Pankey. “I’m hitting harder than ever before and I’m in tip-top shape. I could go 12 rounds today. I know this opponent has never been stopped, but I feel I will be the first to do it.”

The untelevised portion of the event also features intriguing matchups. Houston’s undefeated heavyweight prospect Danielle Perkins (4-0, 2 KOs) looks to stay perfect against Scotland’s Christianne Fahey (2-1, 2 KOs) in an eight-round bout. Detroit fight fans will be treated to a local showdown as once-beaten super welterweights Gordie Russ II (6-1, 6 KOs) and Josiah Shackleford (3-1, 2 KOs) clash in a six-round battle.

“We have a stacked undercard featuring top local, national, and international talent,” said event promoter, Dmitriy Salita. “All eyes will be on Detroit at Little Caesars Arena on July 27, when some of the best boxers in the world look to take the next important step in their careers. Our goal is to be inclusive and work with everyone to give boxing fans the most exciting events, and this card is a testament to that mission statement.”

RELATED: ‘Can’t play boxing’ – Terence Crawford takes notice as Claressa Shields beats up troll in sparring altercation…

Ryan Garcia and Claressa Shields are at war. The two boxers were going at X and unleashed some verbal jibes. But things took a nasty turn when ‘GWOAT’ shared some messages that ‘KingRy’ dropped in her DMS. What’s more? The latter owned up to his deed and accepted that it was “all” him. What happened exactly?

JUST IN: Unapologetic Ryan Garcia Confirms He Crossed a Line as Claressa Shields Leaks NSFW DMs….

Claressa Shields v Ryan Garcia

Garcia, 25, and Shields, 29, have been at loggerheads since she favored Devin Haney as the two childhood rivals tussled over the ostarine saga. The American boxer has openly opened fire on Garcia, as she blasted him for cheating. But she expected it the least when Garcia sent her derogatory messages, which she shared on her X handle. Garcia, at 24-1, went on a rampage and insulted Shields, as he wrote, “I’m saying you said my mom don’t got cancer crack head. Are you f*king an idiot. Dumb a*s crack head read b*tch. Screenshot b*tch.”

After the 14-0 record holder shared the shocking conversation on X, Garcia candidly responded to her claim and accepted, “That’s all me.”

The two boxers hadn’t found a middle ground in these months, with taunts and accusations flying across their social media handles. In addition, they didn’t let any opportunity slide by to make a jibe at each other. But the friction between them is reaching a tipping point, as the Flint native blasted Garcia and called him a “piece of sh*t.” What else did she say?

Devin Haney vs Ryan Garcia VS Claressa Shields

Claressa Shields labels Ryan Garcia as “the problem”

After Garcia labeled Shields as “anti-humans” and slandered her, the latter penned a lengthy note, calling out the Victorville native. The light middleweight champion pointed out that Garcia was using the platform to mislead people. She penned, “Man @RyanGarcia you are a piece of sh*t! You use your platform to lie and mislead the people. It’s sad.”

The undisputed champion added, “And now that your roller coaster is going down you are pointing the finger at everyone else! Go look in the mirror! You are the problem! You are The reason. Stop using God to make excuses for you being a terrible person! The jig is up! GO GET HELP!!” 

claressa shields

Notably, Shields has also floated the idea of a man-vs.-woman boxing match against Garcia to settle their beef once and for all. However, it might not materialize anytime soon because Garcia has to serve a year-long ban after NYSAC slapped him with a year ban, along with a fine and a forfeit of the guaranteed purse.

What do you make of this exchange between Ryan Garcia and Claressa Shields? Do you believe Garcia crossed a line? Let us know in the comments below.

 

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