Promoter Eddie Hearn confirmed that he’s interested in signing Shakur Stevenson to his Matchroom company after Shakur’s next defense of his WBC lightweight title on July 6th.

Hearn feels that Shakur has been “terribly” promoted and that he should be a “huge star” in the U.S at this point in his seven-year professional career. However, he was short on details about who he would match Stevenson (21-0, 10 KOs) up with to turn him into a superstar if he inks with Matchroom.

Most of the fighters that Hearn has signed with Matchroom around Shakur’s weight class compete at 140. The only guy Hearn has at 135 is Cuban Andy Cruz, and he’s not a big name. Cruz is a risky fight for Shakur because he has the same defensive style and excellent hand speed.

Hearn’s fighters at 140:

Jack Catterall
Liam Paro
Subriel Matias
Richardson Hitchins

Hearn states that he feels that a fight between Shakur and WBA lightweight champion Gervonta ‘Tank’ Davis is the one to make, but his ability to make that match would hinge on PBC and Tank’s interest in doing it.

Thus far, they’ve shown no desire to match Tank against Shakur. Whether that changes or not remains to be seen. It’s a fight that could ruin what little popularity Shakur has if he runs from Tank for 12 rounds.

Losing a battle like that would forever wreck Shaku’s popularity, as he’s already been widely criticized for running nonstop in his fights against Edwin De Los Santos, Jeremiah Nakathilia, Oscar Valdez, Joet Gonzalez, and Robson Conceição.

“For me, the fight to make is Tank vs. Shakur Stevenson. I believe this is his [Shakur] last fight with Top Rank. There’s been a little bit of flirting on social media,” said Eddie Hearn to the media about wanting to sign WBC lightweight champion Shakur Stevenson to his Matchroom Boxing company.

“I think Shakur Stevenson is pound-for-pound top five already; he may be the best fighter in the world, and I think he’s been promoted terribly. Nobody knows who he is, and a man of that stature, that resume, and that ability should be a huge star in America.”

Shakur is not a pound-for-pound fighter because he doesn’t engage with his opponents, which is a requirement for making that list. Fighters who use a safety-first style rarely make the pound-for-pound lists because they’re not popular and don’t prove whether they can fight.

“We’ve got Bam Rodriguez and Jaron Ennis. If we can sign Shakur Stevenson to the roster as well, we’ve got a beautiful thing going in America,” said Hearn.

It would look good on paper if Hearn signed Shakur, but unless he could get a fight with Tank Davis, he would wither away and be stuck fighting no-names or, worse, be forced to move up to 140, where he has no power.

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