When Eddie Hearn spoke about Shakur Stevenson this week, his comments captured a contradiction that has quietly defined Stevenson’s position in the sport. “I don’t think they are going to be queuing up to fight him,” Hearn said to Ring Magazine. “But they want to test themselves against greatness.”
Those lines point to a fighter who is widely respected, yet rarely treated as a priority in negotiations. That is how the business around Stevenson has settled. Admiration is easy to express. Urgency has been harder to find.
There is no shortage of fighters willing to face Stevenson. Gary Antuanne Russell, Ernesto Mercado, Richardson Hitchins, and Jadier Herrera have all shown interest in fighting him, and those are credible, competitive matchups. What they lack is the kind of payday Stevenson now appears to be prioritising. As his focus has shifted toward money fights, his appetite for lower reward risks has faded.
That pressure has only sharpened since Stevenson’s January 31 win over Teofimo Lopez. The performance reinforced his standing as one of the sport’s most complete fighters, but it did not open doors so much as narrow them. Stevenson looked dominant, controlled, and expensive to deal with, which raised his market value while further reducing the willingness of rivals to rush toward him.
Stevenson’s attention now appears fixed on Devin Haney and Ryan Garcia, bouts that offer visibility and money but are far harder to secure. When negotiations around those fights slow, activity slows with them. That is where the risk begins to grow.
From Stevenson’s perspective, the logic is understandable. At his level, high risk, low reward fights can undo years of positioning in a single night. Protecting leverage is part of modern career management. The danger is time. Inactivity erodes rhythm, relevance, and connection with fans.
That pattern is familiar. Stevenson’s mentor, Terence Crawford, spent long stretches waiting for the right opportunity, preserving status while losing momentum along the way. Hearn’s quote was not wrong. Fighters respect Stevenson’s greatness. The issue is that respect alone has not turned into movement, and the clock continues to move whether a deal does or not.
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Last Updated on 2026/02/04 at 2:26 AM