Gary Russell Jr. believes Teofimo Lopez has the tools to give Shakur Stevenson real problems, but only if he abandons a single-shot approach and commits to attacking in short, aggressive bursts.
Russell said Lopez needs to throw four and five-punch combinations in spurts, forcing Stevenson to defend rather than allowing him to sit back and pick off individual shots. The goal, Russell explained, is to overwhelm Shakur long enough to disrupt his rhythm and limit his countering opportunities.
“Teofimo can make this difficult if he attacks in spurts,” Russell said to Fighthype. “It has to be controlled chaos, not just chaos. If he goes at Shakur and throws four or five punches, naturally Shakur is going to be on the defensive.”
Russell pointed to the version of Lopez that defeated Vasiliy Lomachenko in 2020 as the model. In that fight, Lopez closed distance with purpose, let his hands go in bursts, and forced exchanges rather than waiting for single openings.
That comparison comes with limits. Lomachenko was smaller, visibly worn, and carrying extensive amateur mileage by the time he faced Lopez at age 32. Stevenson presents a different problem. He is younger, defensively sharper, and far more comfortable neutralizing predictable offense with movement and counters.
The four and five-punch spurt approach Russell described mirrors the style that gave Stevenson difficulty earlier in his career, most notably against Robeisy Ramirez in the 2016 Olympics. Ramirez repeatedly attacked in fast combinations, forcing Stevenson to hold or retreat. Judges took note of the disparity in activity.
“Shakur doesn’t want anybody right there,” Russell said. “He might throw one fake counter, one punch. But if you threw five, you’re touching him more than he’s touching you. Judges pay attention to that.”
Stevenson has shown he can manage pressure when it comes in a straight line. Against William Zepeda, the volume was high, but the attacks were predictable and came at a steady pace. That allowed Stevenson to see shots, counter, and reset. What Russell is describing is different. Short bursts. Sudden entries. No rhythm.
For Lopez, the challenge is not understanding the strategy. It is sustaining it. Throwing repeated four and five-punch bursts against a counter-puncher like Stevenson is physically draining and carries real risk.
It demands a gas tank Lopez has never had to rely on for long stretches. Ramirez was built for that rhythm. Lopez has never shown it consistently. That gap between knowing the plan and surviving the cost of executing it is where this fight is likely to be decided.

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Last Updated on 2026/01/18 at 1:59 AM