Shakur Stevenson said he studied Teofimo Lopez for years, and while he said it casually like a throwaway line, it was anything but. That comment explains more about this fight than any belt graphic or promotional slogan.
Stevenson did not say he studied the division or the champions at 140 as a group; he said he studied Teofimo. That distinction is important because Teofimo was not the strongest looking champion available, but he was the most familiar and the most mapped. He was the champion whose flaws had already been shown in public on big nights against different styles.
By the time Stevenson moved into position for a super lightweight title fight, Teofimo Lopez had already been through enough uneven performances to give any elite analyst a usable blueprint. The 12 round decision loss to George Kambosos Jr. cracked the aura completely, and the narrow decision over Jamaine Ortiz raised questions about control and tempo that the disputed win against Sandor Martin only reinforced.
Even the win over Steve Claggett, a tough but limited pressure fighter, showed how uncomfortable Lopez could look when asked to solve problems round after round.
None of that makes Lopez a bad fighter, but it makes him a documented one whose tendencies had been exposed in ways that could be slowed down, paused, and replayed. His habits had been tested under pressure and televised, and for a fighter like Shakur Stevenson, who builds fights on pattern recognition and control, that kind of information is currency.
The contrast becomes sharper when you look at the fighters Stevenson did not pursue. Richardson Hitchins is still largely untouched at world level, and his flaws have not been stress tested on the biggest stages. Gary Antuanne Russell brings sustained pressure and physicality that does not come with the same catalogue of televised breakdowns, while Dalton Smith is still building and remains opaque in key areas.
Those fighters may or may not be better than Lopez, but the point is simpler: they were harder to study because they did not offer years of visible tells and documented lapses.
This is exactly the reason the quote lands the way it does with ultra hardcore fans. It feeds the belief that Stevenson chose the champion whose weaknesses were already on file rather than the one who posed the most unanswered questions. This is tactical selection, not as an accusation, but as a description of how elite fights are now chosen.
In another era, champions chased uncertainty, but now uncertainty is something to avoid when titles can be won through preparation rather than confrontation. Stevenson’s comment pulls the curtain back on that reality by presenting the fight as the execution of a long running study rather than a clash of the best at 140. That does not diminish the win, but it explains it.
Stevenson did exactly what his career has always suggested he would do by selecting the opponent he understood best and trusting his discipline to carry out the plan.
The line about studying tape was not modesty; it was a quiet admission of how the fight was chosen in the first place. In that sense, the quote is revealing without being dramatic. Stevenson did not stumble into Teofimo Lopez. He arrived there deliberately because Lopez was the champion whose flaws had already been shown to the world, making him the safest problem to solve.

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Last Updated on 2026/02/02 at 1:40 AM