Canelo Alvarez, Jake Paul, and Riyadh Season stole the biggest headlines this week in boxing | Photo by Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu via Getty Images

Canelo Alvarez, Jake Paul, and Riyadh Season stole the biggest headlines this week in boxing.

The biggest news of the week, obviously, revolved around Canelo Alvarez, Jake Paul, and Turki Alalshikh, as within hours, we had an absolute mess of news.

First, it was reported that Canelo Alvarez vs Jake Paul for May 3 was all but a done deal. Then, Alalshikh reportedly scrapped plans for Canelo to face Terence Crawford in September because of those reports. And finally, Alalshikh announced that he had signed Canelo to a four-fight deal with Riyadh Season, which struck some boxing fans as a bit funny, feeling that Paul had simply been used by Canelo to drive up his price with the Riyadh team:

DECKANINA
Canelo just welcomed Jake Paul/MVP to boxing in one of the best ways boxing can. Negotiating with someone for the sole purpose of using it as leverage for another contract. Jake/MVP fell for it hook, line, and sinker. Just as good as knocking him out in the ring as far as I’m concerned.

Canelo’s plans include a May 3 fight — which we’ll get to in a moment — then Crawford in September, and fights in February and October of 2026. Many names have been listed as targets, and none of them are David Benavidez, which has led to further criticism of Canelo’s recent resume as one of boxing’s biggest stars.

Alroc718
Not that he cares, but this soon to be 8 fight run of Canelo has to be one of the worst in the modern era of the sport for a fighter who is arguably considered “the face of boxing” . Fighting a collection of fighters lower in weight, one hit wonders and washed up ex champions with substance and mental health issues, all while intentionally ducking the best fighter in your division who was your mando is a sad way to wrap up what once considered the best careers in the sport. I’m ready for this guy to wrap up his career and go away the same way I was with Floyd. These guys were once the saviors of the sport and now they are a big part why the boxing is dying a slow death.

In response to the ordeal, Paul blasted Canelo and Alalshikh, calling his would-be rival “a money-hungry squirrel,” and adding, “The truth is, these sports-washing, shady characters are paying you hundreds of millions of dollars to stop our fight from happening, because they couldn’t fathom the fact that they can’t create a bigger fight than me and you.”

While there is belief that Paul isn’t necessarily wrong in his assessment of the situation, it’s also a little hard for serious boxing fans to take him all that seriously given what his “boxing career” has been to date.

Boxingjim
if Jake Paul’s next fight is against anyone in a legit top 10 (in the year 2025) within 2 weight classes of him, he’ll get the credit he’s seeking. Otherwise it’s more of the same “disrupt boxing” bullshit from a youtubing blowhard fighting non-boxers and AARP members.

We also now know that Canelo’s May 3 fight will be his attempt to go undisputed again at 168 lbs, as he’ll face IBF titleholder William Scull in Riyadh, in what will be Canelo’s first fight ever outside of the United States or Mexico.

Despite being an undisputed title fight, it’s not generating much excitement, because Scull just doesn’t seem a legitimate threat to Canelo on paper.

seefusensei
Canelo getting paid probably close 9-figures to fight Scull is absolutely crazy.
Tomato Can
Lame fight. Scull isn’t terrible but he’s a fringe contender with a paper belt. If Turki gave a fuck about boxing he’d have paid that big money for Canelo to fight Mbilli or Iglesias.

The weekend’s biggest fight saw Derek Chisora dig in and out-fight Otto Wallin, then propose Oleksandr Usyk, Anthony Joshua, and Daniel Dubois as his 50th and potential final opponent.

When proposed to the live audience in Manchester, it was Joshua’s name that drew the biggest roar of approval.

PassingGuest
Applaud Chisora man, this old crazy b*stard is just amazing. Respect, whatever happen respect. Go get the biggest paycheck vs AJ. You deserved that.

Also in the news this week:

  • Patrick Stumberg had a terrific post on Jeison Rosario, a former titleholder who has become PBC cannon fodder over recent years:

Rosario gets dropped often and in alarming fashion, his body twisting and jerking as though someone were randomly flipping breakers in his head. No ragdoll physics moments, no stoic taking of a knee; he goes down like some fundamental part of him broke. … There are different varieties of “shot.” Sometimes fighters still have the technique, but lose too much durability to remain competitive. Sometimes an ingrained, load-bearing flaw becomes common knowledge. Rosario looked the scariest kind of shot against Ramos. Slow, plodding, unable to put weight behind punches or throw a meaningful quantity.

  • Naoya Inoue’s next fight is nearly set, as the undisputed super bantamweight king will face Alan Picasso on June 14 in Las Vegas. It will be Inoue’s first fight in the States since 2021.
  • Janibek Alimkhanuly will defend his middleweight titles against Anauel Ngamissengue on April 5.
  • Regis Prograis is out of his February 15 fight with Oscar Duarte, and Miguel Madueno has stepped in as his replacement.
  • Former heavyweight titlist Charles Martin is taking aim at top prospect Moses Itauma.
  • Heavyweight Delicious Orie, who represented Great Britain in the Paris Olympics, has signed with Queensberry Promotions.
  • KSI and Dillon Danis have again signed to fight, this time in March. We’ll see if it actually happens, and frankly we won’t really care if it does or doesn’t!

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